
Back in 2019, Amazon announced Sidewalk, its low-bandwidth, long-range wireless network that uses the 900 MHz spectrum to connect Internet of Things (IoT) devices. It does this by connecting these devices to Amazon’s own Echo and Ring devices, who share a small part of their owner’s bandwidth. Ideally, this means Sidewalk wl be able to connect devices that sit beyond the reach of a Bluetooth or Wi-Fi signal. Unt now, though, only a select number of developers were able to bud applications for the network. But that’s changing today. The company is now shipping software and hardware development kits, as well as an easy-to-use test kit to test the avaable Sidewalk connectivity in your neighborhood.
Using the new test kit, developers wl be able to check their local signal strength on a map to get a better sense of whether their devices wl be able to connect to the network before they start working on a product.
Amazon sent me one of these Ring-branded devices to try. Getting started with it involves little more than powering it up (it does have a battery for mobe usage) and logging into Amazon’s web-based Sidewalk coverage service. From there, you can quickly see all of the raw data from the GPS-enabled test kit and get access to Amazon’s U.S.-wide coverage map.
To ensure user privacy, the coverage maps only show coverage within a 900m-by-900m square area. You wl be able to see the exact location of your own device, but not other devices that report into the coverage map.
“We've rapidly but out a long-range, low-bandwidth network that now covers more than 90% of the U.S. population, and this is an open invitation for developers to put it to the test,” said Dave Limp, senior vice president of Amazon Devices & Services. “Many types of connected devices have been limited by the range of Wi-Fi and the cost of cellular technology, which has hindered the abity to connect devices like environmental sensors, leak detectors and smart locks. Sidewalk is designed to provide a secure, low-cost way to invent and connect a whole new range of devices, and we can't wait to see what developers bud.”

For the software development kits, Amazon partnered with Nordic Semiconductor, Sicon Labs, Texas Instruments and module vendor Quectel. These companies wl also offer hardware development kits, with Quectel launching a Sidewalk connectivity module that wl allow developers to quickly take Sidewalk-enabled devices into production. Amazon is also launching mobe SDKs for iOS and Android to help developers bud Sidewalk into their mobe apps. The company is also launching an app that wl help developers debug and troubleshoot their devices in the field.
It’s worth noting that Sidewalk is also natively integrated with AWS’ IoT Core service, which allows businesses to connect and manage their fleets of IoT devices. “The integration of AWS IoT Core and Amazon Sidewalk marks a significant mestone for developers, manufacturers and customers, streamlining the design, connection and deployment of Amazon Sidewalk based IoT solutions,” said Yasser Alsaied, vice president of IoT at Amazon Web Services. “Now, with AWS IoT Core for Amazon Sidewalk, developers can access 200+ AWS services to bud scalable solutions on top of a highly reliable, secure and free-to-connect wireless network.”
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