Tiny Bosch Sensors for the Connected Life


Real and virtual worlds come together

Senses for the internet of things and services

Bosch CEO Denner: "It's simply a question of when"

Every second smartphone worldwide uses Bosch sensors



Stuttgart/Las Vegas — Bosch is helping to build the internet of things and services one tiny sensor at a time. In future, many objects will report their status over the net, and this makes a rage of new functions and business models possible. At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Bosch will be presenting its tiny building blocks for connected living, along with possible applications. Known as MEMS (micro-electro-mechanical systems) sensors, they are no more than a few millimeters in size but hold enormous potential. They contain microscopic structures that are capable of measuring acceleration, air pressure, sound, temperature, or the earth's magnetic field. Fitted with a miniature battery and a tiny radio interface, these MEMS sensors can for instance send their readings over the internet to a user's smartphone. In theory, they allow any object in everyday use to connect to the internet so it can report on its status at any time on request – an ability that holds out plenty of promise for future applications.



Bosch sensors enable smartphones to feel

MEMS sensors have long been the sensory organs for many of the mobile devices that are presented in their thousands at the world's biggest consumer electronics show. Bosch sensors enable modern electronic devices such as smartphones to "feel" and "hear" – so a smartphone "knows" how it is being held and whether it needs to rotate the image on its display. Meanwhile tiny MEMS microphones can record sounds and speech. The sensors are also applied in notebooks, tablets, smart watches, games consoles, or sports watches. Freight forwarding companies also stand to benefit, since such sensors will allow parts in storage in the warehouse to announce their number and location over the internet. Meanwhile, acceleration sensors affixed to delicate machinery will be able to confirm at any time that there has been no exposure to vibrations during transportation. What is more, if a crate fitted with such a sensor falls to the ground, the sensor can send out a warning email to a company headquarters anywhere in the world thanks to the internet.



"It's simply a question of when"

"The question now is not whether the real and virtual worlds will merge thanks to sensors such as these. It's simply a question of when," says Dr. Volkmar Denner, chairman of the board of management of Robert Bosch GmbH. "Sensors, batteries, and transmitters can now be combined in a single unit that is so small, energy-efficient, and inexpensive that they can be put to work in their billions. At the same time, mobile data and radio networks are accessible from almost everywhere. This means the foundations are already in place for the internet of things and services."



Bosch supplies sensors for a wide range of applications in the automotive and consumer electronics industries. Bosch has been at the forefront of MEMS technology since it first emerged, and today it generates more sales in this market than any other supplier. Since the start of production in 1995, the company has manufactured well in excess of three billion MEMS sensors. In 2012, some 600 million sensors emerged from its state-of-the-art wafer fab in Reutlingen – or 2.4 million each working day. Now every second smartphone worldwide uses Bosch sensors.



"These networked sensors make it possible to recognize and interact with the surroundings. A whole range of new solutions will emerge, offering more comfort, safety, and energy efficiency – and saving users' time and money," says Dr. Dirk Hoheisel, who sits on the Bosch board of management. "As of today, there's no limit to the new applications, functions, and business models that our sensors will allow. We see huge potential here."



Connected to the world

MEMS sensors were originally developed for use in cars, for instance in skid detection for the ESP® electronic stability program. Today each modern vehicle is home to up to 50 of MEMS sensors. They support significant safety and comfort functions such as "Adaptive Cruise Control" (ACC) or softer gear changing of automatic gearboxes. All these sensors have turned cars into suppliers of data for what is known as the automotive cloud, which is already providing drivers with valuable additional information in various situations and connecting them ever more closely to the world in real time.



Security and comfort anywhere, anytime

At the CES, Bosch will be presenting how sensors are a key enabler of the Internet of Things and Services. A network of wireless sensors will constantly gather and report information about the immediate environment. Users can learn which doors are open or closed, how loud it is, and how the temperature, air pressure, and humidity at various points around the booth changed over the course of the day. An automatic vacuum cleaner featuring MEMS sensors and an integrated WiFi module continuously reports its position. Thanks to these combined sensors, the Bosch booth will showcase how devices connected to each other via sensors continuously exchange and provide useful information. Bosch recently announced that it will work together with ABB, Cisco and LG on an open standard to support a software platform for the smart home of the future.



In-vehicle infotainment, electric vehicle charging, and more

In addition to MEMS sensors, Bosch will demonstrate technologies enabling the connected vehicle, including next-generation telediagnostics, electric vehicle charging, in-vehicle infotainment and driver assistance systems. Bosch is sponsoring the "Driverless Car" experience at CES 2014, where the milestones toward driverless mobility will be explored and demonstrate technologies such as automatic park assist, predictive emergency braking and "mySPIN" smartphone integration in a designated area outside the fair. The company will also illustrate several areas of competence, including eBikes to inverters for energy storage, start-stop vehicles to HD video surveillance and intrusion control to net-zero enabling thermotechnology.



Bosch booth at the 2014 CES

Las Vegas Convention and World Trade Center (LVCC),

South Hall 1, Stand 20812



Bosch events at the 2014 CES

Press conference with Bosch board of management member

Dr. Werner Struth: Monday, January 6, 2014, 8 a.m. (Las Vegas local time),

Hotel Mandalay Bay, South Convention Center, Level 3, South Sees Ballroom E, 3950 Las Vegas Blvd. South



Panel discussion with Bosch board of management member Dr. Dirk Hoheisel:

"Road to Driverless Mobility": Dienstag, 7. Januar 15:00 Uhr (local time), Las Vegas Convention Center, North Hall, Room N262.



Speech by Dr. Stefan Finkbeiner, Managing Director, Bosch Sensortec:

"Hardware-software co-design: the secret to sensor fusion" (as part of the "MEMS sensor fusion – revolutionizing the internet of things" session,

Wednesday, January 8, 2014, 2:00-2:25 p.m. (Las Vegas local time),

Las Vegas Convention Center, Room N261, North Hall



Automotive Technology is the largest Bosch Group business sector. In 2012, its sales came to 31.1 billion euros, or 59 percent of total group sales. This makes the Bosch Group one of the leading automotive suppliers. Its roughly 177,000 Automotive Technology associates worldwide mainly work in the following areas of business: injection technology for internal-combustion engines, alternative powertrain concepts, efficient and networked powertrain peripherals, systems for active and passive driving safety, assistance and comfort functions, technology for user-friendly infotainment as well as car-to-car and Car2X communication, and concepts, technology, and service for the automotive aftermarket. Bosch has been responsible for important automotive innovations, such as electronic engine management, the ESP® anti-skid system, and common-rail diesel technology.



Bosch Sensortec GmbH is a fully owned subsidiary of Robert Bosch GmbH. It develops and markets micro-mechanical sensors for consumer electronics, mobile phones, safety systems, industrial technology and logistics. The product portfolio includes triaxial geomagnetic and acceleration sensors, triaxial gyroscopes, barometric pressure sensors and a comprehensive software portfolio for various applications. Since its foundation in 2005, Bosch Sensortec has emerged as the technology leader in the addressed markets. The Bosch Group has been the global market leader for MEMS sensors since 1998 and has to date sold more than 3 billion MEMS sensors.



For more information, go to www.bosch-sensortec.com



 Akustica is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Bosch Group and a top supplier of silicon microphone products that are improving voice-input quality in a host of voice-enabled applications, from mobile handsets, tablets, and headsets to internet telephony on notebooks and PC camera modules. The company offers worldwide customer support services, from design-in services to post-production quality assurance. Akustica is a global organization with corporate headquarters in Pittsburgh, PA, regional offices in Taiwan and Shanghai, and a worldwide team of distributors.



For more information about Akustica, go to: www.akustica.com.



The Bosch Group is a leading global supplier of technology and services. In fiscal 2012, its roughly 306,000 associates generated sales of 52.5 billion euros. Since the beginning of 2013, its operations have been divided into four business sectors: Automotive Technology, Industrial Technology, Consumer Goods, and Energy and Building Technology. The Bosch Group comprises Robert Bosch GmbH and its roughly 360 subsidiaries and regional companies in some 50 countries. If its sales and service partners are included, then Bosch is represented in roughly 150 countries. This worldwide development, manufacturing, and sales network is the foundation for further growth. Bosch spent some 4.8 billion euros for research and development in 2012, and applied for nearly 4,800 patents worldwide. The Bosch Group's products and services are designed to fascinate, and to improve the quality of life by providing solutions which are both innovative and beneficial. In this way, the company offers technology worldwide that is "Invented for life."



Additional information is available online at www.bosch.com, www.bosch-press.com, http://twitter.com/BoschPresse.

This information is available for download here:

http://www.bosch-presse.de/presseforum/detail/en-US&txtID=6593

Best regards from the Bosch press department

http://www.bosch-presse.de




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