Industry 4.0 is More than Hype
Industry 4.0 (or the Fourth Industrial Revolution) was the central focus the World Economic Forum earlier this year. As usual, the WEF tackled a topic with enormous potential to change the world
In this blog, we discuss cognitive computing and other technologies with a focus on supply chain management and innovation. Other topics of discussion include digital enterprise transformation, marketing, the Internet of Things, and smart cities. Our goal is to advance the public discussion about how cognitive computing and other advanced technologies affect the world in which we live.
Bradd C. Hayes is the active editor of this blog.
Industry 4.0 (or the Fourth Industrial Revolution) was the central focus the World Economic Forum earlier this year. As usual, the WEF tackled a topic with enormous potential to change the world
Amid all the hype about the Internet of Things (IoT) one fact is beginning to come clear — there are still a lot of challenges to be overcome before its full implementation can
There is a lot of talk today about the Internet of Things (IoT) and how it will connect with individuals (e.g., wearables, smart thermostats, connected appliances, etc.). Jennifer Baljko, for example, writes,
A million years ago manufacturing was a very personal business. Individuals constructed their own tools and weapons. Those items, however, represented the latest technologies available to mankind. People who possessed them had
In the past few years, stories about machine learning, artificial intelligence, cognitive computing, automation, and robots have flooded media outlets and raised fears about the rise of the machines. Change is certainly
“By 2020,” Bob Violino (@BobViolino) reports, “more than half of major new business processes and systems will incorporate some element of the Internet of Things (IoT), according to Gartner Inc.”[1] Frankly, that
Back in 1933, MIT Professor Dugald C. Jackson wrote, “Those who allege that the general introduction of machinery has been the cause of an unfair, disparate distribution of wealth and an overall
“As an industry,” writes Kimberly Knickle (@kimknickle), Research Vice President at IDC Manufacturing Insights, “manufacturing is ‘hot’.”[1] She reports that manufacturers are expected to spend upwards of $323 billion on external IT
“With disruptive forces of change so pervasive around the world,” writes Jeff Dobbs, Global Sector Chair for Industrial Manufacturing at KPMG, “it would be easy to believe that the manufacturing sector is
“Imagine a world,” writes Mary Shacklett (@MaryShacklett), President of Transworld Data, “where smart systems, Internet of Things (IoT) sensors, and robotics combine to automate large areas of manufacturing, linking wired and wireless
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