I recently wrote an article for my website about technology complexity within industrial technology. Engineering managers have stood at conferences pleading with the standards and technology developers to find ways to simplify interfaces and connectivity.
OPC Foundation keeps adding layers of companion specifications. ODVA members listened to engineers who need help implementing EtherNet/IP (or just ethernet networks) and proceeded to ignore the plea. Paul Miller, an analyst at Forrester reported from a survey where 90% of executives reported data problems from their digital transformation. 71% reported measurement related data problems.
Mattias Stenberg, head of the new software company spinning out from Hexagon called Octave, reported from another survey his group has performed that only one in five executives thought they were getting any value from digital transformation.
The Vice President of Product Development of the company where I worked in the 1970s (back in the day before layers of vice presidents) offered a job to me to leave manufacturing and become his data manager. He was prescient. 45 years later, companies are still trying to manage data. Solutions have become more complex, technology has advance exponentially, yet we still have problems gathering, refining, contextualizing, and using data.
These thoughts were generated from the Hexagon Live Global Conference I attended this week in Las Vegas. I have a lot of trouble wrapping my head around just who Hexagon is. Evidently, I’m not alone. But the company is making it easier by splitting off four groups into Octave.
The simplest definition, yet also most definitive, came from Ola Rollén Hexagon Chairman recounting the company’s 25-year history of growth. “Hexagon is the world’s most sophisticated measuring tape.” Indeed, several of my interviews delved into the world of accurately measuring the very large and the very small. This year’s slogan, “When it has to be done right.”
The new ATS800 laser tracker can easily capture complex shapes with up to micron precision. The company released Autonomous Metrology Suite, software developed on its cloud-based Nexus platform that is designed to transform quality control across manufacturing industries worldwide. By removing all coding from coordinate measuring machine (CMM) workflows, it helps manufacturers speed up critical R&D and manufacturing processes as experienced metrologists become harder to find.
Hexagon and several partners are solving what has been an intractable and troubling problem—data locked into paper-based formats such as pdf files. Several demonstrated the ability to read text and pdf documents that are unstructured data, use a form of AI to tag the data, and then extract to a useable database. This is truly a great advance. Several workforce solutions designed to give companies the ability to attract younger workers into technical positions were demonstrated on the show floor.
Stenberg talked of another problem executives cited—data silos that prevent people from using data to make good decisions. I have been writing about solutions designed to break through data silos for 25 years. I’m beginning to wonder if it is not a technology problem. Perhaps it’s a people problem.