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January 06, 2010

Arrayent Connects Products Wirelessly to Smartphones


Arrayent has announced a new turnkey Internet connect system designed for electronic product brand owners.
 
With the new Arrayent Internet-Connect System, users can cost effectively and reliably connect their products wirelessly to Web applications hosted in the Internet cloud.
 
Consumers can use these Web applications for monitoring and controlling their electronic devices from any smartphone or Web browser.
 
According to Arrayent’s CEO, Shane Dyer, his company wants to leverage the rapid acceleration of smartphone sales, the mainstream adoption of cloud computing based applications, and the preference of Internet connected products over unconnected counter parts.
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Arrayent Server is a scalable communication server platform designed to manage the simultaneous connection to hundreds of thousands of endpoints at very low cost. The offering includes three components: Arrayent’s turnkey System: Arrayent Server, Arrayent Embedded and an Ethernet gateway reference design and can deliver an Internet “dial tone” to consumer endpoint products, and brokers’ transactions between product endpoints and Web-based applications hosted in the cloud.
 
Officials with Arrayent note that it is not easy to connect electronic products to Web-based applications and there are difficulties involved in designing and building a scalable data center with low operating cost as often times product companies don’t have the required communication expertise to wirelessly connect their products in a low cost and reliable manner.
 
Dyer also said that their offering is a solution to these problems as it has delivered a turnkey end-to-end communication system with a very low operating cost so brand owners can avoid charging their customers a recurring fee.
 
 
The M2M Evolution Conference to be held Jan. 20 in Miami and collocated with ITEXPO East 2010, will focus on how telemetry has been changing to take advantage of the Internet, where WAN and LAN systems were points of aggregation in the past today’s machines benefit from the ability to connect worldwide. And as the machines continue to look to network the wireless world represents a large growth opportunity for data communication. Don’t wait. Register now.

Anuradha Shukla is a contributing editor for TMCnet. To read more of Anuradha’s article, please visit her columnist page.

Edited by Stefania Viscusi
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