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The History of eSIM: Then, Now & in the Future

2023-03-21 22:52:16
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The History of eSIM: Then, Now, and In the Future
Illustration: © IoT For All

New technology developments can take time to get a foothold in the market, and eSIM has been one of many when it comes to IoT – and for several reasons. Carrier support, longevity concerns, and others have tempered the trajectory of eSIM, but analysts are estimating that eSIM is well on the rise. Let’s take a look at the history of eSIM, why eSIM was developed, the challenges this technology seeks to overcome, and where it and similar developments are evolving.

“Carrier support, longevity concerns, and others have tempered the trajectory of eSIM, but analysts are estimating that eSIM is well on the rise.”

-KORE Wireless

eSIM: Then

The SIM card has been essential to mobile communications for more than 25 years and has seen several iterations as it has shrunk in size but expanded in capabilities. The eSIM, or embedded Universal Integrated Circuit Card (eUICC), is helping mitigate some of the challenges that have risen due to traditional SIM cards, both in the consumer and the Internet of Things (IoT) sectors.

Think back to not very long ago when smartphone activation required the insertion of a SIM card. No matter the mobile operator used, the SIM card was configured to that operator’s network – making it carrier dependent. If a smartphone user wanted to switch carriers, it meant a new SIM card.

Apply that same logic to IoT, where hundreds or thousands of devices need to be configured to a network by physically inserting a SIM card. If an event or decision prompted the need for new carrier connectivity, those devices had to be removed from the field, and the old SIM cards needed to be replaced with the new carrier-specific SIM cards.

Add in the difficulty of roaming, where non-native devices could only connect to “foreign” networks for short periods, and the traditional carrier-dependent SIM card approach became a stumbling block for widespread IoT with longevity.

The Beginning of eSIM

As for the history of eSIM technology, it was originally developed by the GSMA in 2012 and started in the consumer sector with use cases in automotive, smart home devices, smartphones, tablets, and wearables. Apple most notably began widely using it in its suite of products in 2018 and 2019.

For IoT use, growth has been less explosive as the return on investment has taken more time to prove in certain use cases. It is an upfront investment, and carrier adoption was initially sluggish. However, carrier adoption has increased to a reported 200 carriers, and IoT is estimated to be the fastest-growing sector globally for eSIM adoption.

Why eSIM?

IoT is not a new segment of the technology industry and many solutions have fared well without leveraging eSIM. There are significant opportunities in eSIM:

  1. Global Connectivity: Global connectivity has always been a challenge for IoT because the carrier ecosystem is so fragmented. With the ability of eSIM to connect to different carriers, lock-in is avoided.

  2. Future-Proofed Connectivity: Many IoT solutions are deployed in the field for a device’s entire lifecycle – which can be up to 10 years in some low-complexity devices. With eSIM, there is no need to physically swap SIMs in the event of a network turndown or carrier change.

  3. Maximize ROI: With eSIM, organizations can minimize the total cost of ownership and maximize returns on IoT investments through a consolidated operational model. This is a direct change from having to manage multi-network technology across an IoT ecosystem.

  4. Carrier Agnostic: The eSIM is completely carrier agnostic, so making an MNO choice at the beginning of deployment does not have long-lasting consequences. Embedded or removable, IoT-grade and ruggedized eSIMs are remotely programmable based on GSMA eSIM specifications, with the option to integrate eSIM applets for secure authentication and network monitoring.

  5. Streamlined Logistics: Streamlining logistics and manufacturing processes is possible through eSIM. This is because the need to physically swap SIMs has been eliminated, and the eSIM is capable of hosting multiple network carriers or technologies, such as 4G and 5G.

  6. Zero-Touch Provisioning: Zero-touch provisioning is another way of saying remote provisioning or Over the Air (OTA) provisioning. This is a key function in eSIM that allows for the SIM to connect to different networks without a physical SIM swap. The ability to switch to different networks, or even network technologies, is what makes eSIM a highly attractive option for global and future-proofed IoT use cases. Not only is this beneficial to IoT solution providers, such as those leveraging IoT for business efficiency, but it is also highly useful for OEMs manufacturing IoT devices to be distributed globally.

eSIM: Now

Organizations are seeing the ROI of eSIM and skepticism about whether this technology will be widely adopted is beginning to abate. Throughout its history, use cases leveraging eSIM successfully span smart energy, drone logistics, mobile Personal Emergency Response Systems, agriculture, electric vehicle charging, and many more.

The possibilities for eSIM can be endless – with the global installed base of eSIMs estimated to be 3.4 billion by 2025. The 5G era opening up new use cases in Massive, Critical, and Ultra-Reliable IoT is an opportunity for eSIM to enable organizations access to global, perpetual connectivity.

eSIM: Future

While currently being brought to market, supporting technologies for eSIM can help make this network technology a mainstay with integral value-adds. One of those is IoT SAFE. The GSMA IoT SAFE initiative helps establish chip-to-cloud security because it begins with a SIM that is compatible with all SIM Form factors (SIM, eSIM, iSIM).

This enables security at the hardware level and helps protect IoT devices, which are often a less secure entry point into an IoT ecosystem, especially in deployments that utilize massive amounts of devices or are in hard-to-monitor areas, like bridges or underground utilities.

The SIM is used as a mini “crypto-safe” from within the device to securely establish a session with the corresponding application cloud or server. That way communications from the device to the cloud or server and back are secure.

Developments of the iSIM (integrated Subscriber Identity Module) will be the next iteration of the SIM, but not a replacement for eSIM. The eSIM is not anticipated to evolve into iSIM but simply serve as another connectivity technology choice.

A few important things to note on the iSIM – the greatest distinction will be that it is an integrated eUICC, which means chip manufacturers can design system-on-chip (SOC) infrastructure that integrates the SIM functionality.

This is not intended to be a replacement for eSIM, and it is not a soft SIM, which means software based. It will still be a hardware technology and one of the main benefits it boasts is the size and lack of space it requires in a device. As devices reduce in size, the iSIM can support that greater than other SIM form factors.

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参考译文
eSIM的历史:过去、现在和未来
插图:© IoT For All --> 新技术的发展往往需要一定时间才能在市场上站稳脚跟,而物联网领域中的 eSIM 就是众多技术之一,其发展也受到了许多因素的制约。运营商支持、设备寿命担忧等因素减缓了 eSIM 的发展步伐,但分析师预测,eSIM 的应用正在稳步上升。让我们一起来看看 eSIM 的发展历程、eSIM 技术的产生原因、该技术所要解决的挑战以及它与类似技术的发展趋势。“运营商支持、寿命担忧等因素减缓了 eSIM 的发展步伐,但分析师预测,eSIM 的应用正在稳步上升。”-KORE 无线公司 eSIM:SIM 卡是移动通信中至关重要的组成部分,已经有超过 25 年的历史,并经历了多次演进。虽然尺寸不断缩小,但功能却越来越强大。eSIM(嵌入式通用集成电路卡,eUICC)在消费者市场和物联网(IoT)领域,正在帮助缓解传统 SIM 卡带来的一些挑战。回想一下不久之前,智能手机的激活仍需插入 SIM 卡。无论使用哪家运营商的服务,SIM 卡都会绑定到该运营商的网络,因此具有明显的运营商依赖性。如果智能手机用户想要更换运营商,就必须更换新的 SIM 卡。在物联网领域,同样的逻辑也适用。成百上千的设备需要通过物理插入 SIM 卡的方式来配置网络。如果某个事件或决定要求更换运营商的连接方式,那么这些设备必须从现场取出,并更换为新运营商的 SIM 卡。再加上漫游困难这一问题,非本地设备只能短暂连接“国外”网络,传统依赖运营商的 SIM 卡模式成为阻碍物联网大规模应用、延长设备寿命的重要障碍。eSIM 的起源 eSIM 技术最早由 GSMA 于 2012 年提出,并最初在消费者市场中推广,应用领域包括汽车、智能家居设备、智能手机、平板电脑和可穿戴设备。2018 年和 2019 年,苹果公司在其产品线中广泛采用 eSIM 技术。在物联网领域,尽管 eSIM 技术的推广速度较慢,但一些用例的投资回报率需要更长时间才能显现。eSIM 是一种需要前期投资的技术,运营商的采纳最初较为迟缓。然而,目前已有报道指出,已有 200 家运营商采用了 eSIM 技术,并预计物联网将是 eSIM 全球范围内增长最快的领域。为什么选择 eSIM? 物联网并不是一个新兴的科技领域,许多解决方案在没有使用 eSIM 的前提下也取得了良好的应用效果。然而,eSIM 依然带来了巨大的机遇:- 全球连接性:由于运营商生态系统的碎片化,全球范围的连接性一直是物联网领域的一大挑战。而 eSIM 能够连接不同运营商,避免了运营商锁定的问题。- 未来可扩展性:许多物联网解决方案部署后需要在整个设备生命周期内持续运行,一些低复杂度设备的寿命甚至可达 10 年。通过 eSIM,无需物理更换 SIM 卡,即可应对网络关闭或运营商变更等变化。- 最大化投资回报:通过 eSIM,组织可以优化运营模式,降低总体拥有成本,从而最大化物联网投资回报。这与过去需要管理多个网络技术的 IoT 生态系统相比,是一种根本性的转变。- 运营商无关性:eSIM 完全与运营商无关,因此在部署初期选择某一运营商(MNO)不会带来长期后果。无论是嵌入式还是可拆卸的 IoT 级 eSIM,都可以根据 GSMA eSIM 标准进行远程编程,并可选择集成 eSIM 应用程序,以实现安全认证和网络监控。- 简化物流:通过 eSIM,可以简化物流和制造流程。这主要因为不再需要物理更换 SIM 卡,同时 eSIM 可以支持多个网络运营商或技术,如 4G 和 5G。- 无接触配置(零接触配置):无接触配置(Zero-touch provisioning)也称为远程配置或空中下载(OTA)配置,是 eSIM 的一个重要功能,它允许 SIM 卡无需物理更换,即可连接到不同的网络。能够无缝切换到不同网络,甚至不同网络技术,正是让 eSIM 成为全球和未来物联网应用的理想选择。eSIM:现在 越来越多的组织开始看到 eSIM 的投资回报,对这项技术能否大规模应用的怀疑也逐渐减少。在其发展历程中,eSIM 成功应用的用例已涵盖智能能源、无人机物流、移动个人应急响应系统、农业、电动汽车充电等众多领域。eSIM 的可能性几乎是无限的——据估计,到 2025 年,全球已部署的 eSIM 数量将达到 34 亿。随着 5G 时代的到来,eSIM 为组织进入大规模、关键型以及超高可靠性物联网应用市场提供了新的机遇。eSIM:未来 目前,支持 eSIM 的相关技术正在不断推向市场,这些技术有助于使 eSIM 成为一种具有核心价值的主流网络技术。其中一个关键技术是 GSMA 的 IoT SAFE 计划。该计划旨在建立从芯片到云端的安全体系,因为它从兼容所有 SIM 形态(SIM、eSIM、iSIM)的 SIM 卡开始,从而实现硬件级别的安全防护,保护物联网设备,这些设备往往是物联网生态系统中较为脆弱的入口,特别是在大规模部署或难以监控的区域,例如桥梁或地下设施。SIM 卡可作为设备内的一个“加密保险箱”,通过它安全地与对应的应用云或服务器建立会话连接,从而确保设备与云或服务器之间的通信安全可靠。iSIM(集成用户识别模块)的发展将是 SIM 卡的下一代演进形式,但不是 eSIM 的替代品。eSIM 不会演变为 iSIM,而是会继续作为另一种连接技术选项。需要特别注意的是 iSIM 的几个关键特点:最显著的区别在于,它是一种集成的 eUICC,这意味着芯片制造商可以设计系统级芯片(SOC)架构,将 SIM 功能集成到芯片中。它并不是 eSIM 的替代品,也不是基于软件的“软 SIM”。iSIM 依然是一种硬件技术,其主要优势之一是占用空间小,这对于设备尺寸不断缩小的趋势来说,具有明显优势。TweetShareShareEmail CellularCloud 软件 连接性 eSIM iSIM
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