Harald Haas Announced as Guest speaker at LuxLive 2018
LuxLive 2018 is Europes biggest annual lighting event. This year’s event is due to be the largest and busiest event of its series, with over 50% more visitors already registered to attend.
The event offers lighting professionals to explore the latest trends and innovations with a packed-schedule of expert talks and inspirational case studies.
LuxLive features eight inspiring FREE conference tracks and over 100 expert speakers, covering crucial topics including emergency lighting, safer cities, lighting for transport and infrastructure, workplace and wellbeing lighting and much more.
Click here to learn more about this year’s event
Harald will be discussing at this years LuxLive event which is taking place in London this November the potential of LiFi and how it can support our ever-growing demand for wireless connectivity.
What is the spectrum crunch? The spectrum crunch refers to the lack of sufficient wireless frequency spectrum needed to support a growing number of consumer devices,along with various government and private sector uses of radio frequencies within the current spectrum allocation. Spectrum crunch is a risk in telecommunications and wireless networking with profound implications for the future.
LiFi can enable any lighting infrastructures to become a wireless network offering secure data communication. Light can be the nervous system to our digital future.
With LiFi we can utilise spectrum more than 1000 times greater than the entire spectrum utilised for radio frequencies. LiFi is unlocking unprecedented data and bandwidth.
An expected growth of 20 billion connected devices by 2020 worldwide
31% of data demand unmet by 2020
The future
Mobile data traffic will reach the following milestones within the next 5 years
• Monthly global mobile data traffic will be 49 exabytes by 2021, and annual traffic will exceed half a zettabyte
• The average global mobile connection speed will surplus 20Mbps by 2021
• By 2021 there will be 1.5 mobile devices per capita. There will be11.6 billion mobile-connected devices by 2021,
exceeding the world’s projected population at that time (7.8 billion)