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|a Nath, Shyam.
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|a Architecting the Industrial Internet.
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|b Packt Publishing,
|c 2017.
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|a 1 online resource
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|a Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Authors; About the Reviewers; www.PacktPub.com; Customer Feedback; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: The Industrial Internet Revolution; How today's Industrial Internet came about; Earlier generations of the Industrial Revolution; Why is it time for the Industrial Internet?; Challenges to IIoT; The architect's roles and skills; Architectural approaches for success; Reference architectures for the Industrial Internet; The multi-tier IIoT architecture; A security framework for the Industrial Internet; A connectivity framework for the Industrial Internet.
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|a The industrial data analytics frameworkCloud and user experience considerations; Business strategy framework for the Industrial Internet; Summary; Chapter 2: Architectural Approaches for Success; Architectural framework; Architectural viewpoints; Business viewpoint; Security considerations for the business viewpoint; Usage viewpoint; Security considerations for the usage viewpoint; Functional viewpoint; Control domain; Operations domain; Information domain; Application domain; Business domain; Cross-cutting functions and system characteristics; Computational deployment patterns.
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|a Security considerations for the functional viewpointImplementation viewpoint; Security considerations for the implementation viewpoint; Data and analytics; Data management; Analytics and advanced data processing; Integrability, interoperability, and composability; Connectivity; Intelligent and resilient control; Dynamic composition and automated interoperability; Using PoCs to evaluate design; Scope definition; Business case considerations; Solution definition; Building the PoC; Prototype scale; Evaluate/modify; Production scale; Architecture; Components; Continuing engineering; Summary.
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|a Chapter 3: Gathering Business RequirementsInitial business discovery; Getting ready for business discovery; Gathering CSFs; Gathering KPIs; From data sources to KPI delivery; Prioritizing the building of solutions; Building the business case; Components of backend infrastructure cost models; Smart device and networking costs; Estimating implementation costs; Documenting future benefits; Financial justification of our supply chain project; Selling the project; Summary; Chapter 4: Mapping Requirements to a Functional Viewpoint; The control domain; Basic edge device capabilities.
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|a Smarter edge device configurationsSelecting sensors and edge devices; The supply chain optimization control domain; The operations domain; The information domain; Solving information domain functional requirements; A supply chain optimization information domain; The application domain; Assessing business analysts and user skills; The supply chain optimization application domain; The business domain; DevOps and the agile movement; Agile approaches; Using microservices and containers to speed DevOps; Summary; Chapter 5: Assessing Industrial Internet Applications.
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|a Learn the ins and outs of the Industrial Internet of Things through subjects ranging from its history and evolution, right up to what the future holds. About This Book Define solutions that can connect existing systems and newer cloud-based solutions to thousands of thousands of edge devices and industrial machines Identify, define, and justify Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) projects, and design an application that can connect to and control thousands of machines Leverage the power and features of a platform to monitor, perform analytics, and maintain the Industrial Internet Who This Book Is For Architects who are interested in learning how to define solutions for the Industrial Internet will benefit immensely from this book. Relevant architect roles include enterprise architects, business architects, information architects, cloud solution architects, software architects, and others. The content is also relevant for technically inclined line of business leaders investing in these solutions. What You Will Learn Learn the history of the Industrial Internet and why an architectural approach is needed Define solutions that can connect to and control thousands of edge devices and machines Understand the significance of working with line of business leadership and key metrics to be gathered Connect business requirements to the functional architecture Gain the right expectation as to the capabilities of Industrial Internet applications and how to assess them Understand what data and analytics components should be included in your architecture solution Understand deployment trade-offs, management and security considerations, and the impact of emerging technologies In Detail The Industrial Internet or the IIoT has gained a lot of traction. Many leading companies are driving this revolution by connecting smart edge devices to cloud-based analysis platforms and solving their business challenges in new ways. To ensure a smooth integration of such machines and devices, sound architecture strategies based on accepted principles, best practices, and lessons learned must be applied. This book begins by providing a bird's eye view of what the IIoT is and how the industrial revolution has evolved into embracing this technology. It then describes architectural approaches for success, gathering business requirements, and mapping requirements into functional solutions. In a later chapter, many other potential use cases are introduced including those in manuf ...
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590 |
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|a eBooks on EBSCOhost
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650 |
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|a Industries
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|a Internet des objets.
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