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In the realm of IoT applications, wireless technologies can be categorized into local area networks (LANs) and wide area networks (WANs). LAN technologies primarily include 2.4 GHz WiFi, Bluetooth, and Zigbee, while WAN technologies encompass 2G/3G/4G, NB-IoT (2G), and LoRa (2G). Each of these wireless technologies has distinct advantages and disadvantages, summarized as follows:
Also known as a simplified version of a mobile module, NB-IoT connects to wide-area networks using SIM cards from mobile operators like China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom. The connection is established through a module/antenna/SIM card integrated unit. Key features include:
Narrowband IoT (NB-IoT) supports low-power devices with cellular data connectivity in wide-area networks, also known as Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN).
NB-IoT boasts four main characteristics:
Typical topology: Multiple terminals + 1 gateway. Terminals do not require SIM cards and are placed at the IoT site. The gateway connects with terminals and can directly access home broadband or use a SIM card for wide-area network connectivity with the cloud. A single gateway can support over 10,000 connections with a range of 5-10 kilometers. Suitable for applications with many dispersed yet dense monitoring devices, such as watershed monitoring. Features include: long-distance, low power consumption (long battery life), multi-node, and low cost. Operates on global free bands: 433 MHz (banned by MIIT document 52), 868/915 MHz.
Both LoRa and NB-IoT are IoT technologies but have significant differences:
Zigbee, also known as Z-Bee, is a new short-range, low-speed, low-power wireless network technology, positioned between wireless tagging technology and Bluetooth. It operates at a bandwidth of 20-250 kbps on the 2.4 GHz band. Zigbee networking has two notable features:
Zigbee’s target markets include PC peripherals (mice, keyboards, game controllers), consumer electronics (TVs, VCRs, CD/DVD players), home automation (lighting, gas metering, alarms), toys (electronic pets), healthcare (monitors, sensors), and industrial control (monitors, sensors, automated equipment).
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