From Coke to the cloud and beyond

Remote monitoring and control operations continue to evolve.

How It Works
How It Works

While remote monitoring and control operations have become increasingly commonplace in the packaging and process industries, it’s still somewhat astonishing to think that the technology has been around for decades. It has existed since at least 1982, when four graduate students from Carnegie Mellon’s School of Computer Science connected a Coca-Cola vending machine to the Internet. Each one specialized in one of the necessary component technologies to accomplish this groundbreaking task: server software, user software, hardware, and interfacing. The end game was simple—to see if the machine had product in it and if that product was cold, without leaving their desks. We’ve come a long way since popping the top that bottle. 

“Today’s technologies allow connectivity without the collaboration of multiple, highly trained specialists,” notes Mark Ruberg, director of corporate business collaboration at Loveland, Ohio-based Pro Mach, Inc. “Remote monitoring has found its way into everything from patient care to industrial manufacturing. The intersections of documented value creation and accessible technology have resulted in an explosion of quantifiable benefits.” 

It’s clear that this intersection will further accelerate the adoption of remote monitoring and control technology, which has substantially increased in demand in recent years.

According to Brent McDonald, CEO of New Brunswick, Canada-based Xiplinx Technologies Ltd., the reasons for this increase have less to do with market pressures that require more remote monitoring, and more to do with savvy
technical employees. 

“Before Web-connected control systems or the advent of modern mobile devices, a CPG had to rely on a dated human machine interface, difficult-to-use software, and a series of paper worksheets to gather intelligence—all of which typically required a significant amount of training to interpret,” says McDonald. “A variety of hardware and software systems evolved, leveraging the Internet to stream data to a personal computer. But, legacy-installed bases of equipment historically made this extremely difficult to do. This trend continues today.”

Yet the trend is changing with the advent of cloud-based technology. According to Steve Pavlosky, equipment insight business leader at GE Intelligent Platforms, maturing technologies and the cloud are driving down the cost of solutions, so that smaller and mid-sized OEMs can take advantage of technology that used to be outside their reach.

The early adopters of remote monitoring and control operations technology were billion-dollar companies (e.g., GE, Caterpillar, Siemens) that leveraged it to deliver improved asset performance for their customers. 

But the emergence of the cloud and Web-based applications have leveled this playing field. Whereas before deployment costs (i.e., licensing, servers, server deployment) were a risk, now systems can be configured for customers without those costs. What once was a significant capital expense is fast becoming an operating expense, and in doing so extending the reach of the technology. 

“Over the last 10 years, advances with respect to mobile, wireless, and cellular technology, batteries, and data storage—including cloud-based storage—have completely changed the landscape for remote monitoring and operation,” notes MacDonald.

The benefits of this new landscape are considerable, regardless of company size. They include:

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