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Hong Kong (CNN) -- When architect James Law looks in
the mirror each morning his reflection is not all that greets him -- he
can also see the weather report, e-mail messages and his heart rate.
"The biggest game changer
of the past 25 years has been the Internet," said Law, whose
Cybertecture Mirror is an offshoot of his Hong Kong architectural firm's
focus on integrating technology in design.
"In buildings, the
Internet has become ubiquitous but it hasn't caught up in the products
that inhabit buildings -- chairs, doors, tables and mirrors."
Law's company
-- and a raft of new government-funded projects in mainland China -- is
looking to change that. Law's $5,000 mirror began as product his firm
designed for a high-tech residential building in Dubai. "The Internet of
Things began to become more real for us as a project," Law said. "We
started to take these things out of our building designs to make them
independent products, and try to impregnate them with as much technology
as we can."
If there's a race to lead
the Internet of Things (IoT), China aims to set the pace. Since Chinese
Premier Wen Jiabao identified IoT as an "emerging strategic industry"
in an interview on state media, Beijing has focused on developing
technology by which devices can communicate via infrared sensor, Radio
Frequency Identification (RFID) and other Machine-to-Machine (M2M)
technology.
Beijing plans to invest 5
billion yuan ($800 million) in the IoT industry by 2015. The Ministry
of Information and Technology estimates China's IoT market will hit 500
billion yuan ($80.3 billion) by 2015, then double to 1 trillion yuan
($166 billion) by 2020.
The government has
established state-owned enterprise zones such as the Chengdu Internet of
Things Technology Institute in Sichuan province, which is developing a
health care system in which rural villagers can step into a telephone
booth-sized "health capsule" to get a diagnosis and prescription from a
doctor in a distant hospital.
"With the capsules and
clinics, people do low-cost checkups and choose an online doctor for
further diagnosis, then print prescription and purchase medicine from
the capsule," boasts the program's web site.
The larger goal of
China's focus in IoT, analysts say, is to win a fight Beijing has long
been losing -- setting international standards for new technology.
After leading losing
fights to use Chinese standards in 3G technology and wireless mobile
standards, China is trying to get out front early on IoT. "In technology
China has come from a position of follower, adopting foreign standards
on which it has to pay royalties," said Mark Natkin, director of
Marbridge, a technology consulting firm in Beijing.
"China is very
interested in turning that model around, and create the standards by
which other countries are paying it royalties," he said. "It's a new
area, and as such, a place where China can be at the starting line or
ahead of the starting line."
Law sees three other
factors at play in China's IoT thrust. "China is in a position to invest
more than other economies in the world at this period of time," Law
said. "And China still has a internalized, walled Internet because it's
trying to monitor, control and censor -- so it's in its own interest to
develop these kind of products.
"But I think the third
thing is China has matured to a point where it is no longer a low cost
center of labor ... in cutting edge businesses, it wants to really
develop its own brand and its own next generation of technology, to walk
into the fight with your own swords by investing in the next Google,
the next Apple," Law said.
"From a state
perspective, there is everything to gain in nurturing their own brands
... the country wants to define the market rather than play catch-up,"
Law added.
Law's company has sold
500 of the Cybertecture Mirrors and is now developing a chair that
recognizes the user and records individual health data. "I really feel
that the next paradigm for product design will be changed by the
Internet and the new range of materials we now have," he said. "We
shouldn't be building things in the same way as the past."
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/11/28/business/china-internet-of-things/index.html?hpt=hp_c2
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