The first pioneers have been working together with Swisscom to develop and test new applications. The Findme tracker of Mobiliar insurance company locates objects like keys, bicycles and luggage. Migros is testing a platform that allocates meeting rooms more effectively based on actual occupancy rather than bookings alone. The system uses additional sensors to ensure that lighting and ventilation are switched on only if somebody is actually in the room. VonRoll hydro is testing LPN sensors for carrying out tasks such as checking manhole covers or detecting leaks in shafts. Start-up company Tecsag from Central Switzerland is testing a tracker for livestock (www.alptracker.com) which makes it possible to find every individual animal, even on an outlying mountainside, and provides a more accurate picture of herd behaviour by means of monitoring. Entsorgung & Recycling Stadt Zürich is tracking the locations and transport routes of large containers. localsearch, a platform of Swisscom Directories AG, is testing over 250 smiley boxes with Feedback-now in Lausanne and Zurich to record customer satisfaction regarding restaurants and other services in real time. These are just a few examples of the pilot projects, of which there are more than 30. The pilot projects show – as do other digitisation strategy projects – that there is no standard solution to suit everyone. In many cases, however, fast prototypes help to develop more ambitious ideas. Jaap Vossen, Head of Product Management Mobile Business Services and IoT, explained: “When discussing the Internet of Things, many customers wonder whether it is really an issue for them. A few months later, they are launching their first networked products. With LPN they are able to significantly reduce the phasing-in period.”