武汉理工课程设计格武汉理工课程设计格式.doc
文本预览下载声明
/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/VINT-Sogeti-Internet-of-Things-Report-3.pdf
/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/VINT-Sogeti-Internet-of-Things-Report-3.pdf
Contents
Four new vint reports on digital things 3
1 Digital technology links blue and white collar 4
2 Triple profit 7
3 The Fourth Industrial Revolution 11
4 Marrying it, ot, the Internet and things 16
5 The benefit of m2m:
machine interaction as the basis of speed and intelligence 20
6 The benefit of better maintenance:
preferably Predictive Maintenance 25
7 The benefit of engagement or client interaction:
the human being and the machine in Smart Factories and beyond 28
8 Beware of security loss 32
9 Summary and conclusion 33
10 Three recommendations 36
Literature and illustrations 38
The Industrial Revolution is a concept and a development that has fundamentally
changed our society and economy. The term “development” may seem to indicate
some tardiness in the context of a “revolution,” which really signifies a rapid and
fundamental change, but there is no doubt that major alterations occurred within a
relatively short period. Industries arose and replaced small-scale workshops and craft
studios. Textile and pottery factories were the first to recognize the new dawn, and a
new infrastructure of canals and railway lines enabled efficient distribution. It was the
transition from industrious to industrial, and the start of a boom for both.
From the first mechanical loom, dating from 1784, exactly 230 years ago, we can
distinguish four stages in the ongoing process called the Industrial Revolution. That is
the way we currently look at it. The first “acceleration” occurred toward the end of the
18th century: mechanical production on the basis of water and steam. We place the
Second Industrial Revolution at the beginning of the 20th century: the introduction
of the conveyor belt and mass production, to which the names of icons such as Henry
Ford and Frederick Taylor are linked.Number three is the digital aut
显示全部