Industry 4.0 has transformed manufacturing, connecting machines, automating processes, and changing how factories think and operate. But its success has revealed a new constraint: compute. As ...
The shift from Industry 4.0 to 5.0 is not an easy task. Industry 5.0 implementation will be complex, with connected devices and systems sharing data in real time at the edge. It encompasses a host of ...
Industry 4.0 is not just about automation. It’s about smart systems that sense, adapt, predict and act in real time. One example is inventory control, which was once a centralized back-office function ...
Conceptually, the progression from Industry 4.0 to 5.0 reflects an ongoing evolution toward smarter, more connected and more human-centric systems that drive innovation and resilience. ERP and supply ...
Manufacturing has always evolved with human ambition—from mechanisation to automation, from cyber-physical integration to intelligent value creation. Today, ...
There’s nothing the technology and communications industry likes more than the arrival of a next generation. For example, look at the comms industry and the clamour that centres around the launch of ...
Manufacturers adopting Industry 5.0 are using AI, collaborative robots (cobots) and digital twins to enhance decision-making while empowering workers to optimize operations. Automation has defined ...
The global manufacturing conversation has begun to shift from Industry 4.0 to what is now being called Industry 5.0. While Industry 4.0 focused on automation, interconnectivity and data-driven ...
AS we stand on the brink of Industry 5.0, a new era where advanced technologies and human ingenuity converge, we must ask ourselves if we truly equipped with the right skills to navigate this next ...