Showing posts with label ge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ge. Show all posts

Monday, 7 September 2015

The Industrial Internet What it means for industry

                        By GE Look ahead Posted April 10, 2015/The Economist/ Blogger Ref http://www.p2pfoundation.net/Transfinancial_Economics






Industrial Internet, economy, supply chain, efficiency, manufacturing, McKinsey & Company, healthcare, remote monitoring, chronic disease, energy, transport, sensors, strategy, cyber risks, data flows, network,


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              


Source  http://gelookahead.economist.com/post/
                                                                                                                                                           Imagine an economy in which goods, machines and people interact with one another to improve production, increase safety and optimise supply chains based on data gleaned from thousands of sensors. In such a world, engineers analysing the data from these sensors would be able not to make processes and engines run more smoothly. They would also know in advance when to replace a part before the system breaks down, thereby saving time and money.These prospects for increased efficiency, productivity and better allocation of resources are the underlying motivations for engaging in what many are now referring to as the Industrial Internet. The potential for gains is strong indeed.


According to McKinsey & Company, total operational costs in manufacturing could nearly double by 2025 to reach $47trn by 2025. If this is true, even a 1% improvement would deliver up to half a trillion in annual savings. Recommended for you Making crude oil cleverAs oil production shifts to deeper and more complex reservoirs, there is growing... Small is powerfulFrom hydrogen production to solar cells, nanotechnology could help boost efficiency and cut... How scientists hope to cure breast cancerFrom diagnostics to theragnostics to metatsasis, researchers are developing novel ways of attacking... The benefits could in fact extend well beyond the sector to encompass nearly 40% of global economic activities. A particularly important sector would be healthcare, where remote monitoring could let a patient when to go to the hospital, which hospital to go to and book the appointment in advance. Along with a optimized hospital throughput, this also would lead to reduced patient care costs, something particularly important in chronic diseases, where patient care accounts for 85% of total costs (in developed countries). Overall, annual savings from the Industrial Internet in healthcare could reach $1-2.5trn by 2025 according to the same McKinsey & Company study.




Other sectors from energy to transport could also be transformed, delivering smarter grids, more efficient wind turbines and smoother and safer road and air transport.How close are we to this faster, better, more efficient world?Change is already under way, driven by the reduced cost of monitoring, increased computing power and a more interconnected world. Advanced sensors now cost less than $10 apiece, computing power and efficiency have increased nearly 10,000 times since the 1990s, and there are now nine billion machines connected to the Internet—a number Cisco expects to double by 2016. These developments have given birth to pilot projects in the fields of health, manufacturing, energy and transport. Using remote sensors on 1,000 cars, for example, a pilot project in the UK managed to cut fuel bills and maintenance costs by 20% and 25%, respectively. Similarly, the use of mobile technology has brought the lab to the patient, delivering test results on the spot instead of in weeks.Leveraging these opportunities at the scale of an entire economy will require careful management of the tensions that result from applying these concepts on a large scale— including finding the balance between increased information flow and the need to respect privacy and minimizing cyber security risks.Finding network solutions that can accommodate the increase in data flows will also be key. A single gas turbine sensor, for example, creates 500 gigabytes of data daily. With approximately 40,000 gas turbines operating worldwide—and assuming three sensors per gas turbine—60 quadrillion bytes of data would be generated per day. That’s 24 times the daily traffic generated by the global Internet in 2000; and that’s just for one sector. All included, annual global IP traffic is expected to pass the zetabyte threshold—one million quadrillion bytes— by end of next year, according to Cisco.




Companies will also need to create management structures that can rapidly operationalise the strategic insights gleaned from analysing this enormous amount of data. This will require new skills, but also new approaches to performance management and design. Will the Industrial Internet be the next Schumpeterian way and allow us to finally leverage the productivity gains so many were hoping to achieve with the Internet? It’s a bit early to tell. But with collaborative demonstration projects underway and a new generation of industrial internet startups in the pipeline, change may come sooner than we think.Originally published August 30, 2013. Updated in April 2015 to reflect latest figures and developments.




Follow @GELookahead on Twitter to join the conversation. - See more at: http://gelookahead.economist.com/industrial-internet/#sthash.PQFbfRns.dpuf

Wednesday, 6 August 2014

.. Economic Crisis..................

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Transfinancial Economics

 

Jeff Immelt letter to GE shareholders Feb 2009:
we are going through more than a cycle. The global economy, and capitalism, will be ‘reset’ in several important ways. The interaction between government and business will change forever. In a reset economy, the government will be a regulator; and also an industry policy champion, a financier, and a key partner.
GE - Letter to Shareholders from Jeff Immelt CEO Feb 2009
Jeff Immelt Financial Times column July 09
"The challenge ahead is not impossible. The first step is recognising that we cannot simply go back to the way things were. This downturn is not simply another turning of the wheel but a fundamental transformation. We are, essentially, resetting the US economy."

Van Jones Powershift 09
"We want a new system"

Robert Reich - Economic Advisor to Barack Obama July 09
"Not a V, not a U. But an X...The X marks a brand new track -- a new economy."

Testimony to the House Subcommittee on Investigations & Oversight Sep11 2009 Nassim Taleb principles of 'Capitalism 2.0':

"Finally, this crisis cannot be fixed with makeshift repairs,
no more than a boat with a rotten hull can be fixed with ad hoc patches. We need to rebuild
the hull with new (stronger) materials; we will have to remake the system before it does so
itself. Let us move voluntarily into Capitalism 2.0 by helping what needs to be broken break
on its own, converting debt into equity, marginalising the economics and business school
establishments, shutting down the "Nobel" in economics, banning leveraged buy-outs,
putting bankers where they belong, clawing back the bonuses of those who got us here,
and teaching people to navigate a world with fewer certainties.

Then we will see an economic life closer to our biological environment: smaller companies,
richer ecology, no leverage. A world in which entrepreneurs, not bankers, take the risks,
and companies are born and die every day without making the news.
"


Micheal Moore - Jay Leno Sept 15 2009

LENO: Now is reform possible? Is reform possible?

MOORE: Well, I, I don't, you know, a hundred years ago when there was child labor, they said, you know,
'Can we reform child labor? Can we just regulate it, like if the factories were safer and the kids go
to school, we can still have 12-year-olds working in the factory, right?

LENO: Right.

MOORE: No, not right. It's wrong. Some things are just wrong. And this capitalist economic system
that we have, it might have been right at one point, it's not right now. And I don't think we're
ever gonna put the genie back in the bottle. So we need to come up with something new to replace it.
And I'm not talking about... This isn't a debate between capitalism versus socialism.

LENO: Right.

MOORE: I'm actually suggesting go back to our roots of this country, democracy. What if we had an
economy that you and I had a say in? Right now, we all don't have much of a say in this economy.
What if we applied our democratic principles and said, 'We, the people, have a right to determine
how this economy is run.' I think we'd be in much better shape than what we're going through right now.



These and COUNTLESS other examples, are all talking about the SAME thing.

To get to a "reset economy" or "Capitalism 2.0" can't reform existing system, have to scrap everything and start again on path to sustainability.

With everything thats been happening in the last 12 months, but particularly the last 6 months, it's as plain as day to me this is exactly what is happening.


The "reset economy" or "Capitalism 2.0" is some form of "Transfinancial Economics"
(latest update on "Transfinancial Economics")


The above is from the following blog End of Civil Society