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The Internet of Things (IOT) will have a dramatic impact on product and service innovation. Rolls-Royce uses sensors in its jet engines to monitor performance and to detect problems. It has turned its product into a service and charges by engine usage rather than outright purchase.
This shift requires new skills like programming and systems analysis, which has spurred an increase in demand for these roles. Beyond the factory floor, AI is reshaping the manufacturing industry by creating jobs in fields like AI programming, robot coordination, and systems analysis.
The industry will need to add manufacturing softwareengineers, robotics specialists, machine learning specialists, automated systems engineers, cybersecurity specialists as well as designers, product engineers, developers, analysts, pricing strategists and procurement specialists, many of which are forecast to be in short supply in years ahead.
The widespread deployment of low-cost sensors and their connection to the internet has generated a great deal of excitement (and hype) about the future of manufacturing. The internet of things (IoT) and industrial internet in the United States, Industrie 4.0 A Unified Data Model: Data Sharing, Not Just Data Exchange.
And many in enterprise IT, from softwareengineers to IT managers, are moaning the loss of control as elegant, easy-to-use consumer technologies like the iPad and Dropbox reshape expectations in the corporate landscape. What sort of social graph could you build?
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