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Dokumentasi Webinar MAXIMIZE YOUR SERVICES USING CREATIO SERVICE- 25 Agustus 2021
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ICT for Climate Change: Power Usage Effectiveness
Magic Quadrant for IT Service Management Tools 30 Aug 2021
Magic Quadrant for IT Service Management Tools
Published 30 August 2021 - ID G00738191 - 36 min read
Market Definition/Description
- Basic ITSM tools that have core ITSM capabilities such as incident, request and change management, and limited integration with ITOM solutions.
- Intermediate ITSM tools that have broad ITSM capabilities such as configuration, problem and service-level management, and provide some basic ITOM functions or integrate with intermediate third-party ITOM solutions.
- Advanced ITSM tools that have a full range of ITSM capabilities, provide advanced workflow support, and, increasingly, AITSM (that is, the optimization of ITSM practices to enable the application of artificial intelligence [AI], automation and analytics) and collaboration capabilities. They also provide broad integrated advanced ITOM functionality natively or integrate with advanced third-party ITOM solutions.
Magic Quadrant
Source: Gartner (August 2021)

Vendor Strengths and Cautions
Atlassian
- Agile ITSM: Atlassian leverages its Jira issue-tracking product roots to deliver a differentiated approach to ITSM that centers around DevOps and agile support. Gartner’s analysis of social media conversations identified interest around Atlassian’s DevOps automation for ITSM to reduce multistep processes and address workflow gaps.
- Transparent Pricing: Customers can configure and price Jira Service Management through Atlassian’s portal, including discounts for specific license volumes, without going through a complex sales engagement process. This pricing transparency along with a free licensing tier for three or fewer agents make it easy for prospective customers to test the product and budget before purchase.
- New Customer Growth: Jira Service Management is the fastest growing product by new customer count in 2020 among the vendors within this evaluation, with customers spanning small businesses to those with more than 1,000 licensed users.
- Disjointed Product: While Atlassian has acquired a number of its partners to improve its product’s functionality, it has yet to fully unify the platform into a single cohesive offering. As a result, customers will need to tie in multiple Atlassian products for features including advanced reporting, knowledge management and enhanced workflow design.
- Limited Emerging Market SaaS Infrastructure Presence: Atlassian has limited local office presence and SaaS data center infrastructure in emerging markets, in particular Latin America and the Middle East.
- End of On-Premises Server Offering Support: Atlassian’s announcement to end sale of and support for its Jira Service Management on-premises server offerings will require that customers migrate to the cloud or use the Data Center offering. This removes a competitive advantage when selling to existing Atlassian customers that leverage existing server investments to save money.
Axios Systems
- New Ownership: IFS’s acquisition of Axios provides Axios with greater cross-sell and integration opportunities across IFS’s broad portfolio of enterprise resource planning, enterprise asset management and field service management products.
- Emerging Markets: Axios has a growing presence in emerging markets, including Latin America and the Middle East, with a broad distribution of revenue across the major geographies.
- Customer Engagement: Axios has maintained strong relationships with its customers by leveraging numerous customer communication channels to foster user communities and build advocacy, leading to high retention and product upgrade rates.
- Lack of Differentiation: Axios’ messaging largely focuses on functional components and its combined platform and lacks strong differentiation compared to many of its close competitors.
- Low Advanced Feature Adoption: While Gartner regularly receives calls from clients about virtual support agents and AITSM, relatively few assyst customers have implemented these newer features on their product.
- Churn Risk: While IFS has the opportunity to sell assyst into its broader installed base of both midmarket and enterprise customers, Axios’ current strategy of focusing on a smaller number of enterprise customers, rather than on the midmarket, exposes it to higher risk in the case of renewal challenges with these customers.
BMC
- Advanced ITSM: The BMC Helix ITSM product is an advanced ITSM solution that supports the needs of highly mature I&O organizations with strong ITSM process enablement and a robust configuration management database (CMDB).
- Deployment Flexibility: BMC is one of just a few ITSM tool vendors that provide container-based infrastructure, enabling diverse implementation options both on-premises and in the cloud.
- Long-Term Roadmap: BMC has a robust long-term product roadmap for Helix, which includes further addition of AI to support its ITSM processes, enhanced product integration, expanded digital workplace capabilities and improved collaboration.
- Product Complexity: Despite the acquisition of Alderstone to support customer implementation and migration initiatives, customers still find the product to be complex, requiring substantial resources to support the platform and slowing down the enablement of new features.
- Confusing Marketing Strategy: BMC does not consistently drive a simple and compelling outcome-based message in its marketing, instead providing long and sometimes technical lists of product features. As a result, some prospects struggle to understand the value that can be achieved through BMC’s solution.
- FootPrints and Track-It! Deprioritization: BMC has reduced investment in its ITSM products other than BMC Helix ITSM, but is still offering them to customers. This is hurting its brand image in the eyes of those legacy customers.
EasyVista
- Ease of Use: EasyVista provides tools to support customer growth on its product, including wizards and customer success teams. Customers on Gartner Peer Insights have referenced the tool as being easy to use and manage.
- Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): EasyVista Service Manager is competitively priced against other intermediate ITSM products, offering both concurrent licensing and bundled asset management.
- Active Marketing: EasyVista demonstrated commitment in the ITSM market by running frequent targeted marketing campaigns in 2020 to drive awareness of its solution in the market and adoption among existing customers.
- Lacking Emerging Features: EasyVista lags behind competitors in the integration and adoption of machine learning technologies to augment IT staff and integration into common DevOps tools, as well as the use of live collaboration to enable new support models.
- Limited Global Presence: EasyVista’s market presence and partner network are much weaker outside of its target regions of France, Southern Europe and North America.
- Lower Customer Retention: Despite modestly growing its overall ITSM revenue, EasyVista had an increase in customer defections and fewer major product upgrades by customers in 2020 compared to 2019.
Freshworks
- High Revenue Growth: Freshworks is the fastest growing vendor within this evaluation by revenue percentage growth rate both for its ITSM product and as a company overall for 2020.
- Increased Product Maturity: Freshworks has been developing its ITSM product at a rapid pace, taking it from a basic ITSM tool at launch in 2014 to an upper-intermediate ITSM tool in less than a decade. Its ongoing roadmap suggests that the product will continue to evolve quickly, which is driving a high number of new customer wins.
- Strong Mind Share: Freshworks has established strong mind share among midsize organizations along with growing visibility among enterprise customers. This is reflected in both client inquiry and Gartner’s analysis of social media conversations.
- Limited SaaS Presence: Available only as a SaaS product, Freshservice has limited global data center presence composed of data centers in its three major markets of the U.S., Europe (Germany), and Asia/Pacific (India and Australia).
- Upmarket Aspirations: Freshworks’ expansion into larger enterprise customers risks increasing the cost and complexity of its product beyond its predominantly small and midsize business (SMB) and midmarket customers’ ability to maintain, as it devotes support and development resources to go after the more advanced needs of the enterprise.
- Limited Partners: A significant portion of Freshservice sales is direct rather than through partner channels, and it lacks a network of major global reseller and implementation partners for this product. This limits its ability to sell to customers who want to leverage existing partner relationships.
Ivanti
- Differentiated Product Roadmap: Ivanti’s roadmap highlights differentiating features that leverage its experience with endpoint management to offer AITSM features that will provide a more proactive support experience for business consumers.
- Good Market Fit: Neurons for ITSM has several advanced features but remains suitably priced for the midmarket, which is well matched for the majority of Ivanti’s customers who are running smaller implementations.
- Acquisitions: Ivanti’s aggressive acquisition strategy over the past 12 months included major acquisitions in each of its focus areas (security, endpoint and service management). This will provide Ivanti with new cross-selling opportunities as well as additional integration points for ITSM, with new use cases for automation.
- Limited Emerging Market Presence: Ivanti has a lesser presence in emerging markets, such as those countries with emerging market economies in the Asia/Pacific region, Latin America and the Middle East, challenging its growth ambitions in those regions.
- Competing Products: Ivanti has acquired many customers who originally purchased Cherwell Service Management (CSM) as an ITSM tool. While Ivanti has stated that Neurons for ITSM will be its primary ITSM product moving forward, it is still selling CSM as an ITSM tool. CSM customers and prospects have expressed uncertainty around the long-term support of Cherwell’s product for the ITSM use case, along with the impacts of the convergence roadmap between products.
- Confusing Rebranding: Rebranding the ITSM tool as “Neurons for ITSM” and the decision to brand several other products and component features also as “Neurons” can confuse customers.
ManageEngine
- Broad Product Portfolio: ManageEngine offers a broad portfolio of complementary products, including endpoint management, network monitoring, application monitoring, low-code development and Active Directory management solutions that integrate into ServiceDesk Plus and provide cross-selling opportunities.
- High Revenue Share: ManageEngine’s focus on targeting midmarket customers at lower maturity levels continues to generate impressive revenue for the company at high volume, placing the vendor into the top five for ITSM tool revenue market share.
- Customer Awareness: ManageEngine ran a high number of targeted marketing campaigns in 2020 aimed at IT practitioners and SMBs, which have generated good awareness for the brand at those levels. This is reflected in both client inquiry and Gartner’s analysis of social media conversations.
- Lack of Innovation: Innovation has lagged behind the competition targeting similar customers. Many of the newer enhancements continue to require integration with other Zoho stand-alone tools (ManageEngine is a division of Zoho).
- Lower Maturity: While ManageEngine has improved capabilities, it still lacks advanced support in several areas such as change management, knowledge management and AITSM. This inhibits it from positioning its product for customers with more complex environments.
- Lacks Feature Parity: ManageEngine lacks feature parity between the SaaS and on-premises versions of its ITSM product. For example, on-premises customers do not have access to release management support and have limited knowledge management features; and not all out-of-the-box integrations are available across both on-premises and SaaS offerings.
Micro Focus
- Pricing Flexibility: Micro Focus makes it easy for its SMAX customers to switch between named and concurrent licensing midcontract with a flexible unit-based model. Micro Focus also added a limited number of Operations Orchestration, Software Asset Management, and Universal Discovery licenses at no cost.
- Codeless Configuration: Micro Focus has designed its product around a codeless workflow configuration. This addresses a key challenge of buyers to reduce implementation and upgrade time and ongoing administrative resource requirements.
- Global Support: Native support for 19 languages and a free toolkit for creating other translations, along with broad global sales and partner presence, position Micro Focus well for global customers.
- Decreased Revenue: While SMAX as a new product is gaining customers, both Micro Focus and its overall ITSM portfolio had decreased revenue from 2019 to 2020.
- Limited AI/Machine Learning (ML) Development: While Micro Focus has AI and ML embedded within its SMAX product, its recent development of new AITSM features has lagged others in the market. This puts Micro Focus at risk of falling behind where its competitors are more heavily investing in areas such as self-healing or change risk identification.
- Few Marketing Campaigns: Micro Focus ran only one global targeted marketing campaign for its SMAX product in 2020. While that campaign was extensive, this was the lowest number of targeted campaigns of the vendors in this evaluation and limits Micro Focus’ ability to raise awareness of its SMAX product to both new customers and customers on its legacy ITSM products.
ServiceNow
- Broad Geographic Presence: ServiceNow has global reach with local sales and support organizations, and strong brand recognition. It dominates customer shortlists and it has maintained an ITSM tool revenue market share that is more than four times that of its closest competitor.
- Investments in AI/ML: ServiceNow’s acquisition of several AI- and ML-focused companies provides it with not only native IP to engineer into its platform, but also in-house expertise to innovate these features over time. ServiceNow was also the first vendor in this Magic Quadrant to introduce native process mining (available via ITSM Enterprise licensing) into its ITSM offering.
- High Platform Adoption: ServiceNow effectively markets and sells across its broader platform and extended ITSM capabilities to its customers. Gartner saw a strong increase in ITSM Professional license purchases in 20202, and ServiceNow reported having more than 1,000 customers as of the end of 2020, with more than $1 million in annual contract value.
- Low Value Realization: Given financial pressures caused by COVID-19, in 2020 there was an increase of interactions with Gartner clients that have not yet achieved high levels of I&O maturity and that struggled to demonstrate substantial value from their ServiceNow investments. Without further investment into value realization and ROI, particularly for low-maturity customers using ServiceNow’s base product, there is a higher risk of churn to lower-cost alternatives.
- Product Packaging Challenges: ServiceNow lacks the license model and product packaging flexibility of many of its closest competitors. Customers with large numbers of occasional users struggle to justify purchasing its role-based named-user licensing model, and Gartner has observed low adoption of its all-user licensing model alternative because it often comes at a cost premium rather than a savings.
- Renewal Leverage Concerns: Some Gartner clients are concerned that ServiceNow’s market position is hurting their ability to negotiate their contract or reduce their footprint without heavy impacts to their current discount.
SysAid
- Midmarket Focus: SysAid has a clear focus on the midmarket where it can best position its low overhead, ease of configuration, and features such as basic patch management and remote desktop support.
- Low Cost: SysAid has one of the lowest licensing costs of the products evaluated and includes bundled admin training assistance for new customers.
- Creative Marketing: SysAid utilizes a broad marketing approach including raffles and music videos across multiple campaigns to raise brand awareness and build relationships with its largely midmarket user community.
- Lacks Advanced Capabilities: While SysAid positions itself as an ITSM tool for all maturities, it lacks support for advanced capabilities in several areas such as change management, configuration management and AITSM. This limits the appeal of SysAid to customers with lower I&O maturity.
- Small Vendor: SysAid has the smallest market share of the vendors in this Magic Quadrant, and growth in customer numbers and revenue has lagged behind the company’s midmarket-focused competitors.
- Limited Sales Channels: A significant portion of SysAid’s sales are direct rather than through partner channels. This, combined with having local offices in the U.S. and Israel, will limit its global outreach, particularly outside its core markets of North America and EMEA.
USU
- Broad Product Portfolio: USU offers a broad portfolio of complementary products, including software asset management, monitoring and cloud management solutions that integrate into USU ITSM and provide cross-selling opportunities.
- Deep Customer Relations: USU’s deep regional focus has led to high customer retention rates in 2020. It also offers regular maturity checks and a user community for its customers.
- Customer-Driven Roadmap: USU has a very collaborative approach to its product roadmap that is developed in cooperation with its customers. It solicits input through a number of channels including its conference and direct conversations with product management.
- Limited Global Presence: Outside its local market, USU primarily markets and sells ITAM and knowledge management tools rather than its ITSM product. Outside the region of Germany, Austria and Switzerland (DACH), USU has very few customers, partners and local offices.
- Nontraditional Pricing: USU’s standard pricing model requires that all users, including business users and IT users, have a license for its product, rather than the more traditional approach that only licenses for the IT users. This pricing model will be less appealing to some buyers as it requires them to pay a license fee for business users who may have limited use of the tool.
- Product Gaps: While USU positions its ITSM tool for advanced I&O maturity, it lacks some support for advanced capabilities in several areas such as change management and AITSM. Some Gartner Peer Insights customers have also noted that the product can be difficult to maintain. These limitations will be inhibitors as USU positions itself for customers with more complex environments.
Vendors Added and Dropped
Added
- Atlassian meets the inclusion criteria for this Magic Quadrant this year.
- SysAid meets the inclusion criteria for this Magic Quadrant this year.
- USU meets the inclusion criteria for this Magic Quadrant this year.
Dropped
- Broadcom did not meet the inclusion criteria for this Magic Quadrant.
- IBM did not meet the inclusion criteria for this Magic Quadrant.
- Cherwell was acquired by Ivanti.
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
- Actively sell and market an ITSM product that includes native functionality for:
- IT incident management
- Problem management
- Change management
- Configuration management
- Release governance
- IT user self-service (for knowledge and request management)
- IT knowledge management
- IT service support analytics and reporting
- SLA management with regard to incident and service requests
- Must have run at least one marketing campaign for the product in 2020. The marketing campaign must have defined objectives, target audience, content and channels.
- Have demonstrated ongoing development of the product with at least one major update/release (not including security updates and minor feature update) over the past 12 months (since 1 April 2020).
- Have at least 35% of customers using versions of software across the ITSM product portfolio that are less than 18 months old (released after 1 October 2019).
- Have at least $40 million in annual revenue derived from ITSM products during the calendar year of 2020; or at least $30 million in annual revenue derived from ITSM products during the calendar year of 2020, with at least 20% year-over-year growth when compared to 2019:
- All ITSM revenue counted for this must be derived outside of bundled outsourced and managed workplace service agreements.
- All ITSM revenue counted for this must be solely derived from sale of a stand-alone ITSM product.
- Have at least six new customers added during 2020 with either a contract value of $250,000 for purchase of perpetually licensed ITSM tool software or an annual contract value of $125,000 for subscription to ITSM tool software.
- Have a sales presence or partner network that includes at least two offices (regional office or reseller partner) and new customers in 2020 in each of three or more of the following regions:
- North America
- Latin America
- Europe (Western, Eastern and Eurasia)
- Middle East and North Africa (including Sub-Saharan Africa)
- Asia/Pacific (mature, emerging, Greater China and Japan)
Evaluation Criteria
Ability to Execute
Table 1: Ability to Execute Evaluation Criteria
Product or Service | High |
Overall Viability | Medium |
Sales Execution/Pricing | High |
Market Responsiveness/Record | Medium |
Marketing Execution | High |
Customer Experience | Medium |
Operations | NotRated |
Completeness of Vision
Table 2: Completeness of Vision Evaluation Criteria
Market Understanding | High |
Marketing Strategy | High |
Sales Strategy | High |
Offering (Product) Strategy | High |
Business Model | Medium |
Vertical/Industry Strategy | NotRated |
Innovation | High |
Geographic Strategy | Medium |
Quadrant Descriptions
Leaders
Challengers
Visionaries
Niche Players
Context
- Higher focus on employee experience management with embedded sentiment analysis, satisfaction surveys and experience-level agreements (XLAs).
- DevOps initiatives that require a deeper integration into the DevOps toolchain.
- Product teams that are driving the need to federate ITSM process execution and allow I&O visibility and governance across these new service providers.
- Enablement of more flexible and agile IT service management processes.
- Broader AITSM support with investments into artificial intelligence and machine learning to drive the application of context, advice, actions and interfaces of AI, automation and big data.
- Omnichannel and multiexperience support that create more consistent and engaging experiences across different support channels (for example, walk-up, roaming or peer-to-peer [P2P] support) and interfaces (for example, mobile and web).
- Support for highly collaborative support models (for example, swarming).
- Expansion into other business workflows, capabilities for processing workflows such as HR, facilities, and project management (see The Reality of ITSM Tools as Enterprise Service Management Tools).
Market Overview
- Virtual Support Agents: While adoption of these is still generally immature, providers are increasing natural language processing capabilities and adding out-of-the-box intents to improve time to value and user adoption.
- Remote Collaboration: Given the impact of COVID-19 in supporting a distributed environment of both IT and the business consumers, vendors are enhancing collaboration capabilities to include both native channels (e.g., live chat, forums, wikis) as well as integration into common platforms like Microsoft Teams and Slack.
- Swarming: Interest in breaking from the traditional tiered support models is driving more collaborative support. ITSM vendors are investing in better capabilities to identify and connect the right subject matter experts into a live collaborative channel with deep integration into their ITSM solution.
- Experience Management: As I&O organizations increase focus around experience management, ITSM tool vendors have been challenged to evolve their solutions to meet this change. This includes not only providing enhanced experiences delivered by the platform itself to both the business and IT users who access it, but also providing better ways of measuring and improving the customer sentiment around the experiences.
- DevOps Support: As I&O leaders increasingly adopt agile and DevOps practices, ITSM vendors are providing bidirectional visibility and integration between native and third-party development and ITSM tools.
- AITSM: Several ITSM vendors are partnering with AIOps platforms and investing in developing or acquiring native machine learning and big data analytics technologies to provide I&O leaders and practitioners with greater insights around their environments.
- Containerized Deployments: SaaS is still the most commonly desired model for ITSM vendors, but some larger vendors have adopted containerized deployment approaches over public cloud infrastructure to provide additional flexibility and more choices for their customers.
- Line-of-Business Support: A growing number of vendors are developing, marketing and, in some cases, rebranding their products to support enterprise workflows such as HR and facilities management. This potentially creates stagnation in their ITSM roadmaps as these companies spend limited R&D and marketing budgets outside of their core market.
- Product Adoption and I&O Maturity: As customers look for a product to grow and mature their ITSM process on, some vendors are implementing functionality and services such as implementation wizards, customer success teams, improved graphical design capabilities and process mining.
Acronym Key and Glossary Terms
AITSM | AITSM is not an initialism. It is a term that refers to the application of context, assistance, actions and interfaces of AI, automation and big data on ITSM tools and practices to improve the overall effectiveness, efficiency and error reduction for I&O staff. AITSM is important for intermediate and advanced use cases to automate and support complex environments. |
Evidence
Evaluation Criteria Definitions
Ability to Execute
Completeness of Vision
Ikuti Webinar Building Your Helpdesk Operations Center 06 Oktober 2021
Kami mengundang kehadiran bapak/ibu untuk mengikuti Webinar Bangun Helpdesk Operation Center (HOC)
Di masa pandemi, customer menjadi faktor penting untuk diperhatikan. Keterbasan akses di kantor dan semua beralih ke media online, maka mengharuskan perusahaan dan instansi memiliki HOC.
Pelajari solusi Helpdesk Operation Center bersama DCM MONITORING pada 06 Oktober 2021
Jam : 14.00 - 16.00 WIB.
Registrasi peserta webinar di: https://s.id/me06okt
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Ikuti Webinar ICT for Climate Change: Save Your Data Center Energy 07 Oktober 2021
Salah satu sumbangsih besar penggunaan daya adalah dari datacenter, atau ruang server di kantor, perusahaan dan instansi. Maka penghematan daya energy di lingkungan data center menjadi hal penting yang bisa dilakukan. Ikuti webinar ini untuk tahu lebih banyak cara monitoring dan melakukan penghematan untuk data center dan ruang server anda.
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Daftar segera .....!!
Dokumentasi Webinar PRTG PARTNER ENABLEMENT - 15 September 2021
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Dokumentasi Webinar PRTG FOR RETAIL INDUSTRY - 22 September 2021
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Dokumentasi Webinar CREATIO CRM SALES - 29 September 2021
Webinar Building Your Helpdesk Operation Center- 6 Okt 2021
Building Your Helpdesk Operation Center
Daya Cipta Mandiri Group mengundang kehadiran anda dalam webinar 6 Okt 2021, jam 14-16 WIB membahas implementasi Helpdesk Operation Center. Apa yang akan kita pelajari ?
1. Pentingnya helpdesk bagi perusahaan dan instansi
2. Standard ITSM yang harus diikuti
3. Infrastruktur Helpdesk Operation Center dengan produk solusi
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#aptiknas #eventcerdas #dcmsolusi #dcmmonitoring #manageengine #helpdesk #operation #center #noc #soc #infrastruktur
Dokumentasi Webinar Building Your Helpdesk Operation Center 6 Oktober 2021
Dokumentasi Webinar Building Your Helpdesk Operation Center 6 Oktober 2021
Dokumentasi Webinar ICT for Climate Change: Save Your Data Center Energy
4.0 Reasons Why Edge Computing is Relevant for Industry 4.0
4.0 Reasons Why Edge Computing is Relevant for Industry 4.0
Adopting Industry 4.0 practices could be critical for your business. And edge computing could be critical for your Industry 4.0 adoption plans.
Are you ready for the revolution? If your business involves manufacturing or other industrial processes, you should be. The fourth industrial revolution, or Industry 4.0, is on its way. And its impact on the industry will be as profound as mechanization, mass production, or automation. Industry 4.0 is a blanket term describing a tsunami of technology advances and new business models that are transforming industrial processes.
These advances, ranging from the Internet of Things (IoT) to cyber-physical systems, will break down silos, enable personalized manufacturing, and see robots taking on many human tasks. This will all benefit manufacturers. But deploying edge computing will be essential for Industry 4.0’s success. Here is why.
The next industrial revolution is being defined by one thing: cost.
1. Edge computing will keep you safe
In contrast to what most of the tech-industry is touting, in self-interest, the cloud is not a hard requirement for Industrial IoT. You don´t necessarily need a cloud IoT platform.
Industry 4.0 is all about connecting machines, so your manufacturing processes can react more quickly and intelligently to changing factory floor conditions. Connecting assets will help you achieve greater levels of agility and automation. But it will also increase your risks. A more connected organization is one that offers many more attack surfaces and a much higher degree of vulnerability to cyber attacks. Your Industry 4.0 strategy can minimize the risks, though, with edge computing.
If as much data as possible gets processed at the edge, rather than being sent to the cloud, there is a much lower risk of it being intercepted or tampered with. Robust edge computing systems will let you keep the bulk of your IT and operational technology systems on your secure network.
2. Edge computing will make your Big Data small
Bringing intelligence to your manufacturing operations means collecting data from sensors in your equipment and analyzing data to make real-time decisions and predictive maintenance. But even in a modest Industry 4.0 project, the amount of data could overwhelm existing and new systems and add a significant cost of bandwidth, data storage, computing and data science.
Processing most of that data at the edge, to filter out signals from the noise, can help make sure you only focus on the information that is most important and dramatically reduce the cost of data.
3. Edge computing will give you ultra-low latency
Sending data to a remote cloud datacenter for analysis gives long and unpredictable latency. The opportunity to act on the data might be gone for time-sensitive use-cases.
Edge computing gives a predictable and ultra-low latency ideal for time-critical situations including any use-case where the operation is either mission-critical or where things are in motion. Moving vehicles, machines, parts, people or fluids are examples where delays could equal missed opportunities, high costs or security threats.
With edge computing, you can easily connect machines from different manufacturers with an independent and resilient logic layer running local triggers ultra-fast.
This means you can foster innovation in operational-level areas such as yield optimization or enhanced worker safety, without having to worry about big data analysis in the cloud.
4. Edge computing can be the integration layer between your factory floor data and your ERP system
Just as edge computing can help you connect devices and processes without having to send data to the cloud, so it can also provide cloud-free integration of factory floor data with your enterprise resource planning (ERP) system.
Enterprises are quickly moving towards an event-driven architecture and expectations on real-time automated digital processes. In fact, Gartner reports that event-driven IT will be a top three priority for the majority of global enterprise CIOs by 2020.
Edge computing can be the real-time, event-driven integration layer between your factory floor data and your enterprise systems that will help you speed up and automate business processes and digital insights.
What next?
According to a 2016 report on Industry 4.0 by BDO, the global accountancy firm, “The next industrial revolution is being defined by one thing: cost.”
What is clear is that companies embracing Industry 4.0 will be able to unlock immense savings through increased automation, agility, and resilience. At the same time, however, Industry 4.0 can prove problematic for enterprises expecting to be able to export all sensor data to the cloud. Such companies could face challenges in terms of IT security, high cost, network latency, innovation capability, and system integration.
To make sure your Industry 4.0 stands the best chances of success, therefore, it is important to deploy edge computing as an enabling technology. IoT edge computing will help your business embrace real-time processing and smart data collection by triggering local actions with ultra-low latency.
This article was written by Göran Appelquist, currently CTO at Crosser. Goran has 20+ years of experience of different leading positions in high-tech companies. Originally the article was published here.
sumber: https://iiot-world.com/connected-industry/4-0-reasons-why-edge-computing-is-relevant-for-industry-4-0/
Piilih Pendingin Untuk Server : Room, Raw atau Rack - Based
Berapa luasan ruang server atau data center anda ?
Berapa banyak rak dan perangkat di dalamnya?
Itu selalu dua pertanyaan dasar yang kami berikan ke customer waktu mereka bertanya terkait pendingin untuk ruang server mereka. Mengapa kedua hal itu penting ?
Perangkat kita umumnya menghasilkan panas di belakang, hampir semua perangkat. Mulai dari server dalam bentuk PC Server, hingga rack-mounted server, serta semua perangkat jaringan dan storage. Semua sama, menyedot udara dingin dari depan, dan membuang udara panas ke belakang.
Maka bila perangkat anda tidak ditempakan dalam RACK, maka tentu dingin akan kalah oleh panas yang dihasilkan oleh perangkat. Dan titik panas dalam ruangan akan menjadi muncul di banyak titik (hot spot).
Untuk menanggulangi ini, cara pertama tentu harus memastikan semua perangkat masuk ke dalam rak, sehingga titik panas dapat terkumpul di dalam rak bagian belakang.
Dalam pendekatan penempatan perangkat secara keseluruhan dikenal juga model berbaris (RAW). Sehingga muncullah tiga jenis seperti berikut
Room-Based Cooling
Bila kita melihat pendekatan umum, setelah semua perangkat masuk ke dalam rak, maka kita akan melihat model ini yang paling banyak diterapkan, yaitu room based cooling.
Dengan metode ini, semua udara dingin disalurkan via bawah rak melalui raised floor, dan diserap di bagian depan dari rak, umumnya dengan menggunakan perforated rak dan udara dingin keluar melalui perforated panel raised floor (warna panah biru), dan diserap kembali oleh sistem pendingin di bagian atas rak (warna merah).