By Jennifer LeClaire
March 28, 2014 11:08AM
The Industrial Internet Consortium's goal is
to deliver best practices, reference architectures, case studies and
standards requirements to ease deployment of connected technologies for
the Internet of Things. The open-membership group also plans to
influence the global standards development process for Internet and
industrial systems.
The concept of the Internet of Things has been making plenty of headlines lately, but this one is huge: Cisco,
IBM, GE and AT&T have launched the Industrial Internet Consortium,
an open membership group that aims to break down technology silo
barriers and drive better big data access with improved integration between digital and physical worlds.
The IIC plans to lead the charge in establishing interoperability across
various industrial environments for a more connected world. The idea
is to help organizations connect and optimize assets, operations and
data more easily and with more agility. The expected result is unlocked business
value across all sectors and greater adoption of industrial Internet
applications, which is a baseline factor for speeding up the reality of
the Internet of Things.
"Ninety-nine percent of everything is still unconnected," said Guido
Jouret, vice president of Internet of Things Business Group for Cisco.
"As the world looks to connect more things over the Internet, it is
creating the next industrial revolution. Cisco is collaborating with
industry-leading companies to break through the barriers of connecting
things in industrial environments safely and securely, and paving the
way for the Internet of Things."
More the Merrier
Part of the consortium's goal is to deliver best practices, reference
architectures, case studies and standards requirements to ease
deployment of connected technologies. The group also plans to influence
the global standards development process for Internet and industrial
systems, facilitate open forums to share practical insights, and build
confidence around security innovations.
"IBM's vision of a smarter planet is being realized as we connect more
of the physical world with the Internet, pairing the Internet of Things
with advances in analytics, mobile and cloud
computing in ways that lead to new insights and efficiencies that can
be harnessed for competitive advantage," said Ron Ambrosio,
distinguished engineer and CTO, Smarter Energy Research at IBM. "Smarter
cities, utility grids, buildings and machines are becoming more
instrumented, interconnected and intelligent, and through this
consortium we will accelerate both innovation and technology
advancement."
Any group with interest in accelerating the Industrial Internet can join
the consortium. Members will raise visibility of their projects and
play a role in developing relationships with technology, manufacturing,
academia and the government on working committees. Object Management
Group, a nonprofit trade association in Boston, is managing the
consortium.
Streamlining Adoption
We caught up with Zeus Kerravala, a principal analyst at ZK Research, to
get his take on the new consortium. He told us Cisco has been working
to bring standardization to the Internet of Things, and this initiative
can help.
"You could almost say that the Internet of Things has been growing at a
grassroots level. A lot of the technologies used to connect things today
are proprietary," Kerravala said. "Almost every vendor that
manufactures technology connects over some sort of proprietary
connectivity method."
He said Cisco was moving to gather enough large industry players to
collaboratively decide on standards that make connectivity easier. He
explained there are two keys to the Internet of Things where standards
could streamline adoption: connecting the unconnected and analytics.
"Proprietary standards won't work. If you can't connect something then
it is not part of the larger Internet of Things," Kerravala said. "Even
if it is connected, if the standards are proprietary -- which means the
formats for the data are all different -- that makes the analytics
difficult. This consortium can first standardize connectivity in the way
data is collected."
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