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Universal gateway

A universal gateway is a device that transacts data between two or more data sources using communication protocols specific to each. Sometimes called a universal protocol gateway, this class of product is designed as a computer appliance, and is used to connect data from one automation system to another.

Last revised
Jul 16, 2026
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A universal gateway is a device that transacts data between two or more data sources using communication protocols specific to each. Sometimes called a universal protocol gateway, this class of product is designed as a computer appliance, and is used to connect data from one automation system to another. 123

An early (or perhaps the earliest) invention of a device which specifically facilitates "universal" inter-device communication was 2010 within AT&T. 4

See also

See also

References

References

  1. "Universal Industrial Gateway Product Description". Allient. Industrial environments generate vast amounts of valuable operational data, but that data is often locked inside disconnected systems like modern Ethernet-based equipment, legacy serial devices, and proprietary controllers that were never designed to communicate with one another. - Universal Industrial Gateway solves this problem by creating a unified communication layer across an array of industrial systems.
  2. "Salus Universal Gateway Control UG600". kiasa. This enables you to connect devices so that they can link up and communicate with one another.
  3. "Universal Gateway – Solution to enable IoT in Building Automation". Arrow Electronics: einfochips; San Jose. a device that transacts data between two or more data sources using communication protocols specific to each of them. The Universal gateway is also termed as a universal protocol gateway.
  4. Andrew C. Fuller. "Advanced gateway device US10785225B2". patents.google.com – via patents.google.com/?q=(Universal+gateway)&oq=Universal+gateway. BACKGROUND Many devices are specially designed to communicate with proprietary networks, servers, portals, or nodes to provide various services or functionality. Each electronic device in a home, office, or other location may communicate using varied protocols or standards that are incompatible