{"id":700,"date":"2018-06-04T15:59:14","date_gmt":"2018-06-04T19:59:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-ca\/industry\/blog\/industry\/2018\/06\/04\/microsoft-canada-at-hanover-messe-2018\/"},"modified":"2018-09-20T20:02:17","modified_gmt":"2018-09-20T20:02:17","slug":"microsoft-canada-at-hanover-messe-2018","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-ca\/industry\/blog\/manufacturing\/2018\/06\/04\/microsoft-canada-at-hanover-messe-2018\/","title":{"rendered":"Microsoft Canada at Hannover Messe 2018"},"content":{"rendered":"
Germany \u2013 the land of automotive excellence, great beer, fairytale castles, and the world\u2019s largest industrial trade show \u2013 Hannover Messe. Attracting over 250,000 visitors, this massive event brings together everyone who\u2019s anyone in manufacturing and industry, and this year was no exception.<\/p>\n
On a personal note, it was especially exciting for me because this was my very first time attending the show. Even though I\u2019ve been in the industry for decades (I was the Desktop Development Lead on Honeywell\u2019s industrial historian 25 years ago), I have never been able to attend\u2013 till this year. As a first-time attendee, I can tell you that the show is massive, overwhelming, and very exciting all at the same time. Protip \u2013 if you\u2019re planning to go next year, make sure you book early. The hotels fill up fast.<\/p>\n
Microsoft had a strong presence at the show, and here\u2019s a summary of some of the great solutions we have for the manufacturing industry, along with some exciting new announcements.<\/p>\n
Connected Factory<\/strong><\/p>\n To help with this, we came up with a Connected Factory IoT Solution Accelerator<\/a>. This preconfigured solution lets you connect and monitor your industrial equipment and devices in the cloud\u2014including your machines already operating on the factory floor.<\/p>\n The solution leverages Azure services including Azure IoT Hub and Azure Time Series Insights (more on this below). It also uses the OPC Foundation\u2019s\u00a0cross-platform OPC UA Net Standard Library reference stack\u00a0<\/a>for OPC UA connectivity, as well as a rich web portal with OPC UA server management capabilities, alarms processing and telemetry visualizations.<\/p>\n The web portal and the Azure Time-Series Insights can be used to quickly see trends in OPC UA telemetry data and see Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE) and several key performance indicators (KPIs) like number of units produced and energy consumption.<\/p>\n Microsoft announced a new OPC Global Discovery Server<\/a> module for Microsoft Azure IoT Edge<\/a> at HMI that will detect all OPC Servers and their related endpoints. The endpoints and their related security configuration can be viewed through the Connected Factory user interface.\u00a0 To ensure communications are secure, certificates can be retrieved from Microsoft Key Vault and sent directly to the OPC Server.<\/p>\n You can view a live demo here -> http:\/\/www.microsoftazureiotsuite.com\/demos\/connectedfactory<\/a><\/p>\n Azure Time Series Insights<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Andrew Shannon and Chandrika Shankarnarayan from the Azure TSI team were at HMI to show some of the new TSI features such as a new tag hierarchy, the ability to save cold data to blob storage, and new JavaScript “widgets” that can be used to make impressive websites.\u00a0 Most of the customers I demoed TSI to had never seen it before and were quite impressed with it, particularly its speed.\u00a0The demo powerful as it was showing millions of real-time windmill data points from one of my Calgary based customers, TransAlta Utilities.<\/p>\n Time series data\u2014sensor readings taken at intervals\u2014has traditionally been a challenge to store and analyze. Azure TSI makes this very easy, enabling manufacturers to use a single place for the long-term storage of this data \u2013 while being massively scalable and protected. Once the data is in the IoT Cloud, you can use it to obtain meaningful insights without worrying about the infrastructure required to host the data.<\/p>\n Learn more about Azure Time Series Insights here<\/a>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n OPC integration with fully managed Azure IoT Central<\/strong><\/p>\n Valerie Naldi showed an interesting prototype of production OPC data in IoT Central.\u00a0 As IoT Central is a fully managed SaaS offering, this would be a very low-touch approach to visualize, analyze and alert on plant floor data.\u00a0 As a bonus, administrators can see OPC UA configuration data as well.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Azure Sphere<\/strong><\/p>\n There are over 9 Billion Microcontroller Units (MCU) powered devices built and deployed every year. These tiny chips are the brain of intelligent devices, hosting compute, memory and storage in a space smaller than your thumbnail.<\/p>\n Connectivity goes both ways though. Devices that send data to the Internet can also receive data \u2013 and if incorrectly secured, these devices can become compromised by malicious actors. To mitigate this threat, Microsoft recently announced Azure Sphere, a platform for securing and powering this new class of IoT devices at the intelligent edge.<\/p>\n The platform consists of three elements \u2013 Azure Sphere Certified MCUs, the Azure Sphere OS, and the Azure Sphere Security Service.<\/p>\n This combination of on-device hardware and software with the power of the cloud provides processing power five times that of traditional MCUs, a highly secure operating system designed specifically for IoT as well as a turnkey cloud security service that will monitor and detect threats, and automatically update security protocols\u2014providing lifetime protection for every Azure Sphere device.<\/p>\n As MCU chips proliferate, Azure Sphere will allow manufacturers to produce the next generation of connected devices while increasing IoT security at every level.<\/p>\n
\nThe most difficult part of any transformation can often be figuring out where to begin. I\u2019ve spoken with many customers who all say the same thing \u2013 they see the potential inherent in digital transformation, they want to start doing it, but they are finding it very hard to figure out where to start!<\/p>\n