16 November 2006
Honeywell talks wireless
Wireless technology is having a major impact at Honeywell’s EMEA User Group meeting in Seville, Spain.
While it is not the only topic at the meeting, wireless mesh networking continues to get heavy play.
“What happens when a company gets serious about technology—look at what happened when Microsoft got serious about the Internet,” said Paul Orzeske, Honeywell’s vice president and general manager for Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA). “Honeywell has been in the wireless business for many years. We have taken wireless technology and applied it to industrial wireless. We have 30 million installed sensors today. We have more than 400 dedicated engineers working on wireless technologies. We have been in the wireless industry for many, many years.”
What is the next generation for wireless? Orzeske sees two areas: One will be complying with wireless standards, and the other will be the development of the next wireless infrastructure. “There are those that would say wireless will be for data acquisition and not control. Not at Honeywell. We don’t feel like something is able to be used in absolute control; we don’t think it is ready for a sensor.”
Part of that infrastructure is building a wireless mesh network, which Honeywell has a version that it is pushing hard. “This is a self healing, self propagating, growing mesh you can lay over your operation or a portion of your operations,” Orzeske said.
There are six critical features of the mesh network:
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Single integrated mesh network
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High speed, ready for control
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Control enabled architecture
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Predictable long battery life
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Scalable—up to 30,000 sensors in a network
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End-to-end industrial security
For related information, go to www.isa.org/productivity.
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