Renewable natural gas (RNG), solar, wind and other sustainable resources are at the core of decarbonisation and energy transition strategies. To support their large-scale adoption, it is necessary to ensure dispatchable generation and predictable supply to the grid.
2022 marks 10 years since the beginning of Raspberry Pi, the most successful computer ever to come out of the UK.
According to TechJury, each person on Earth created 1.7MB of data every second in 2020. Thanks to smartphones and tablets making the everyday digital, the volume of data collected has skyrocketed — so, when will the same be universally true in manufacturing?
A report by Mulesoft found that the IT teams of just 37 percent of organisations completed all of their assigned projects last year. Digitalisation can gather valuable data insights and optimise processes, but progress is often held back by the large IT workload such projects create.
There are very few of us who aren’t already using the cloud in some form. If you own a smart phone, use email, stream music, videos or TV, then the chances are that data is stored in the cloud. From a manufacturing viewpoint, what do we need to know about the cloud?
One of the biggest challenges that enterprises face in their digitalisation efforts is having too many complex data silos and applications that don't follow a common architecture. The promises of the Fourth Industrial Revolution are significant, but there are several traps that companies need to avoid in order secure the long-term outcome of their digitalization projects.