Jamie Moss

Jamie Moss

Research Director

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Jamie Moss In The News

Enterprise IoT Insights (2022-08-04)
Retention of the Cinterion brand, incidentally – which has already survived acquisitions by Gemalto and Thales – is also logical. “To rename it would have been to lose brand recognition,” reflects Jamie Moss, research director at ABI Research. He comments: “It makes good business sense, and combines different but complementary competencies. Thales is strong in (LTE-M forebear) LTE Cat.1… [and] Telit is strong in LTE-M and the 5G future of cellular LPWA.” He goes on: “This creates a company that can lead the way with breakout current-gen cellular IoT tech and emerging next-gen cellular IoT tech. As 2G and 3G networks are shuttered, 2G and 3G module shipments are falling dramatically, and LTE-M is taking their place. 2022 will be a strong growth year for LTE-M, which complements and does not at all replace the still-growing LTE Cat.1 market.”
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Computer Weekly (2022-02-02)
“The largest CMP vendors such as Cisco and Ericsson, and their products, have always acted as gateways for third-party partnerships to jointly sell through to the same IoT enterprise customers,” said Jamie Moss, research director for M2M, IoT and IoE. “IoT platforms are famously modular, with enterprises and service providers piecing together what they need from a variety of suppliers.
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Tech Target (2021-06-24)
"Global connectivity has never been more important. It allows a service provider to provision customers that need national connectivity, anywhere in the world, as well as those that explicitly need cross-border connectivity," said Jamie Moss, research director at tech market advisory firm ABI Research.
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Mobile World Live (2020-12-10)
This explosive growth means carriers are facing more specific and diverse demands for guarantees from IoT customers, especially when roaming. “More smart devices are being deployed, and more types of devices are becoming smart,” says Jamie Moss, M2M, IoT & IoE Research Director at ABI Research. “It is clear the ability to connect diverse IoT device types, with different needs, at massive scale, and with global coverage is needed now. “Next-gen Connectivity Management Platforms (CMPs) and global connectivity coverage solutions are key to accomplishing this task.”
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Everything RF (2020-12-07)
According to a report published by ABI Research, there will be 6.6 billion active Internet of Things (IoT) devices worldwide by the end of 2020. Out of these, only 840 million of them will use cellular networks, which is just under 8% of the total. At the end of 2014, there were 180 million cellular IoT devices active worldwide, and that number increased by over 4.5X in the six intervening years. According to ABI Research, in another six years’ time, there will be further near-7X growth in cellular IoT devices, bringing the global total to 5.7 billion. This explosive growth means carriers are facing more specific and diverse demands for guarantees from IoT customers, especially when roaming. Jamie Moss, M2M, IoT & IoE Research Director at ABI Research said that smarter devices are being deployed, and more types of devices are becoming smart. It is clear the ability to connect diverse IoT device types, with different needs, at massive scale, and with global coverage is needed now. Next-gen Connectivity Management Platforms (CMPs) and global connectivity coverage solutions are key to accomplishing this task.
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IoT Business News (2020-11-18)
At the end of 2020, 6.6 billion Internet of Things (IoT) devices will be connected and active worldwide; 840 million of them will use cellular networks, which is just under 8% of the total. At the end of 2014, there were 180 million cellular IoT devices active worldwide, and that number increased by over 4.5X in the six intervening years. In another six years’ time, there will be a further near-7X growth in cellular IoT devices, bringing the global total to 5.7 billion, finds global tech market advisory firm, ABI Research. This explosive growth means carriers are facing more specific and diverse demands for guarantees from IoT customers, especially when roaming.
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Fierce Electronics (2020-06-04)
ABI Research recently forecast an 18% decline in new Internet of Things devices deployed for all of 2020 thanks to COVID-19. The combination of manufacturing shutdowns, supply chain interruptions and changes to connected product availability and demand are the main reasons for the decline, the research firm said. Some applications will see overall shipment declines while some will see a temporary stall and others will experience “fundamental shifts in demand, both positive and negative, for years to come as consumer and enterprise priorities shift in light of COVID-19,” Jamie Moss, research director for IoT at ABI, said in a statement.
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TechRepublic (2019-12-30)
IoT platform markets, unlicensed proprietary LPWA, and edge technology will face obstacles in 2020, ABI Research found.
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