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<strong>FORWARD</strong><br />

Next-Generation Manufacturing<br />

A CSC Magazine for<br />

Innovators in Manufacturing<br />

INSIDE<br />

Engage One on One with Chris Fangmann,<br />

CTO, Global Manufacturing Industries, CSC<br />

Visit go.csc.com/meet-the-expert<br />

Putting IoT Within Reach<br />

Connected Cars Drive Value


Letter from the Editor<br />

Dear Reader,<br />

It’s an exciting time in manufacturing — not only for those<br />

of you on the frontlines, but also for companies like ours that<br />

serve the industry and provide next-generation technology.<br />

Perhaps at no age since the Industrial Revolution has the field<br />

been primed for such dramatic change with such grand potential.<br />

CHAT WITH CHRIS!<br />

Chris is looking to<br />

engage one on one<br />

with leaders in the<br />

manufacturing industry.<br />

To connect, simply<br />

scan the QR code<br />

below or visit<br />

go.csc.com/<br />

meet-the-expert<br />

and submit the form.<br />

Of course, instead of technologies like the assembly line and<br />

the steam engine, we’re now talking about game-changers like<br />

automation, the Internet of Things (IoT) and real-time data<br />

analytics. The conversation has shifted from using machines to<br />

making machines smarter, more efficient and more productive.<br />

This age is really about making use of data. It’s about<br />

integrating islands of information into one single source of<br />

truth; leveraging real-time data and advanced analytics to<br />

drive business strategy; and using simulations and digital twin<br />

models to predict outcomes.<br />

I’m eager to talk with you about the transformation we’re<br />

seeing in the industry, and we’re making it easy to set up that<br />

meeting of the minds. To get in touch, scan the QR code or<br />

follow the link at left, then complete the form that comes up.<br />

We will take it from there.<br />

In the meantime, please enjoy this special publication, which<br />

presents CSC’s best thought leadership on these important<br />

topics. Read about how open-source software can put IoT in<br />

reach, connected cars can drive business value, and emerging<br />

technology can change the workplace.<br />

The digital transformation in manufacturing is here. It’s<br />

happening now. As chief technology officer for the global<br />

manufacturing industry at CSC, I’ve been lucky to witness<br />

up close history in the making. I can’t wait to see where<br />

we go next!<br />

Thank you,<br />

CHRIS FANGMANN<br />

CTO, GLOBAL MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES, CSC<br />

2 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


Table of Contents<br />

2 PUTTING IOT WITHIN REACH<br />

4 FIVE TECHNOLOGIES THAT WILL<br />

CHANGE WORK FOREVER<br />

6 CONNECTED CARS DRIVE VALUE<br />

9 Q&A: UNDER THE HOOD WITH FORD<br />

10 THE DIGITAL TWIN<br />

13 ABOUT CSC<br />

2<br />

6<br />

4<br />

10<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

1


PUTTING I T<br />

WITHIN REACH<br />

Open source and shared platform<br />

bring IoT benefits to more companies<br />

by Lucy Nolan<br />

An unprecedented amount of data — “actionable data” that<br />

can be processed quickly to make operational decisions — is<br />

coming in daily through connected machines. But until now,<br />

many manufacturers have been reluctant to make major<br />

investments in Internet of Things (IoT) systems and realize<br />

the full potential of this data.<br />

The IoT consists of the machines, devices and other physical<br />

objects connected to a network. Sensors attached to all of<br />

those items can provide a steady stream of data to a central<br />

IoT platform. With custom dashboards, each department in a<br />

manufacturing organization could work with the data in the way<br />

it sees fit. Even the IoT platform itself could act on the data.<br />

“IoT systems are intelligent enough to tune management<br />

solutions automatically,” says Chris Fangmann, CTO for global<br />

manufacturing at CSC. “Now let’s add a capability to simulate<br />

a change in a production line before a part is physically<br />

executed. That will save companies millions of dollars.”<br />

The potential benefits of setting up an IoT platform are huge —<br />

the ability to intelligently track and trace materials, parts,<br />

and equipment and ensure that they’re delivered to the right<br />

product at precisely the right time, or perhaps to predict<br />

deviations and react accordingly. That same intelligence can<br />

optimize production schedules and improve machine uptime<br />

or react quickly to last-minute customer changes.<br />

Other applications can help manufacturers harness vast<br />

amounts of data streaming in from connected products.<br />

Major automotive firms not only see these connections as<br />

a way to take the driver’s experience to the next level with<br />

predictive services, but they are also looking<br />

at ways to harness the data for thirdparty<br />

partners such as insurance<br />

companies.<br />

“Today, fast computing is<br />

accessible to everybody.<br />

It doesn’t matter if an<br />

organization has 10<br />

people or 10,000. Open<br />

source technologies are<br />

bringing costs down to<br />

a commodity level.”<br />

— Chris Fangmann,<br />

CTO for global<br />

manufacturing at CSC<br />

2 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


“This is not just automating the process of how a<br />

truck gets from Point A to Point B. This is going<br />

to have a pervasive effect on how we live our<br />

lives in the future.”<br />

— Rick Tomredle, IoT engineering and delivery<br />

manager for CSC<br />

Not being tied to a specific vendor also solves the matter of<br />

portability. “With open standards, you’re not locked into a<br />

specific platform or technology,” Doble explains. “So if one<br />

vendor becomes too expensive, you can move to another.”<br />

Fangmann also points out that open source helps to<br />

ensure a DevOps environment, where the system can<br />

be continually updated.<br />

Equipment manufacturers are also looking at ways they can<br />

utilize this data to provide better services to their customers.<br />

While commercial IoT platforms are available from a variety<br />

of vendors, manufacturers have been slow to adopt these<br />

systems, which often require a major upfront investment.<br />

“That is one of the biggest barriers to implementing an IoT<br />

platform,” Fangmann says. “Companies are either not willing<br />

to make the large upfront investment to stand up their own<br />

environment, or they’re concerned that they don’t have enough<br />

knowledge to do so. The costs — and time involved for valuable<br />

IT staff — would quickly become prohibitive.”<br />

“Any company can now take advantage of the most<br />

modern system available without having to worry about<br />

upfront investments, ongoing maintenance fees or looming<br />

obsolescence,” Fangmann says. “By using an as-a-service model,<br />

any manufacturer should be able to find an IoT platform to<br />

support the specific use case it needs.”<br />

LUCY NOLAN is a content editor with CSC’s global<br />

content team.<br />

Learn more at csc.com/manufacturing.<br />

Open source opens the way<br />

Using open source technologies is one approach to keeping costs<br />

down, and a commitment to open source was a guiding principle<br />

in the development of CSC’s new industrial connectivity and data<br />

exchange platform, which connects and harmonizes data flow<br />

among all types of machines. The CSC environment is based on<br />

Hadoop Apache Storm, an open source framework for storing<br />

and processing large streams of data.<br />

“We wanted to have as many open standards as we possibly<br />

could,” says Andrew Doble, an enterprise architect at CSC.<br />

“We’re very familiar with open source products — and they’re<br />

quickly becoming standard for streaming analytics.”<br />

Nico Krebs, mobility consultant with CSC, also believes in the<br />

power of using open source. Shop floors often use proprietary<br />

vendor protocols, making machine-to-machine connectivity<br />

difficult. These challenges, Krebs explains, can be overcome<br />

with protocols based on open standards.<br />

“We believe in open IoT standards such as MQTT [a machine-tomachine<br />

IoT productivity protocol],” he said. ”It’s free to use, and<br />

I think we will see many libraries for this protocol in the future.<br />

We think open protocols will dominate the market in a few years.”<br />

Share the burden<br />

An individual manufacturer might have difficulty dedicating the<br />

resources necessary to build out a Hadoop IoT/big data system,<br />

but CSC built its platform so that it can be offered to multiple<br />

companies on a pay-per-usage basis.<br />

“Offering a shared platform produces cost savings for us, which<br />

we can pass along to our clients,” Doble explains. “And we further<br />

reduce our costs by not being tied to a large licensing fee —<br />

something manufacturers should consider as well.”<br />

IoT Around the World<br />

By connecting machines to each other and to business<br />

operations, the Internet of Things gives companies the ability<br />

to analyze data to make better-informed decisions. Here are<br />

two successful uses of CSC’s IoT platform, OmniLocation ® ,<br />

built entirely from open source tools.<br />

1. Pharmaceutical manufacturer simplifies supply chain.<br />

A large pharmaceutical manufacturer uses IoT to better<br />

manage its assets, operations and supply chain. Data from<br />

public and private sources, including suppliers around<br />

the world, is aggregated and analyzed to keep track of<br />

operations and recognize problems and disruptions. The<br />

system alerts the necessary workers of supply chain issues.<br />

“We are continuously updating, through automated<br />

notification via text message and email… exactly what’s<br />

going on across the company, across the supplier network,<br />

so they can make real-time adjustments that allow their<br />

operations to keep moving smoothly,” says Dan Munyan,<br />

Internet of Things product manager at CSC.<br />

2. Industrial site overcomes environmental challenges.<br />

CSC overcame a number of challenges to install an IoT<br />

at a large surface mine. The industrial site did not have<br />

available cell coverage or power. In fact, Rick Tomredle,<br />

IoT Engineering and Delivery Manager for CSC, described<br />

the environment as resembling “the surface of Mars.”<br />

To reliably generate IoT data in this environment, CSC<br />

engineered an extensive “extrastructure,” says Tomredle,<br />

complete with radio towers and power. The company<br />

can now pull important data from the site to improve<br />

business operations.<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

3


Here are five technologies that are about to make a huge<br />

impact on work as we know it, according to Stuart Downes,<br />

CSC workplace offerings lead, and Gary Beckett, CSC global<br />

director for workplace and enterprise systems management<br />

(ESM) services.<br />

1. Wireless connectivity<br />

You walk into a meeting room to make a<br />

presentation, and everything is wireless —<br />

truly wireless.<br />

Your laptop automatically syncs with the big-screen<br />

monitor at the front of the room and with the screenshare set up for<br />

remote audiences. Wireless chargers power up all devices in range.<br />

The WiFi network detects the number of devices and increases<br />

bandwidth to that part of the building.<br />

Sound like a dream?<br />

“This isn’t technology that’s years away,” Downes says. “It’s<br />

technology that’s here, but most enterprises tend to be a bit<br />

slower on the adoption curve of these things.”<br />

TECHNOLOGIES<br />

THAT WILL CHANGE WORK<br />

FOREVER<br />

by Christine Neff<br />

Employees have already seen massive<br />

changes in their workplace. With<br />

modern tools, they can access their<br />

work on nearly any device, anytime<br />

and anywhere, making it easier than<br />

ever before to collaborate, innovate<br />

and be productive. But that is only<br />

the beginning.<br />

The advent of ubiquitous connectivity opens up huge<br />

opportunities for the workplace in the form of Internet of Things<br />

and collaborative digital tools — and upcoming 5G cellular<br />

technology will only magnify that trend. For instance, Beckett<br />

predicts that live-streaming of video will become “matter-offact,”<br />

making it easier for colleagues and partners at remote<br />

locations to collaborate. “Those things start to open up and<br />

expand people’s ability to innovate,” he says.<br />

5G mobile subscriptions to hit<br />

150 million by 2021<br />

— Ericsson Mobility Report, Mobile World<br />

Congress Edition, February 2016<br />

2. Smart machines<br />

As systems gain the intelligence to perform<br />

tasks and make decisions that formerly<br />

required human input, employees — even<br />

highly educated knowledge workers — will<br />

be affected. In fact, a widely cited Oxford<br />

University study predicts that 17% of American knowledge<br />

workers will lose their jobs to machines.<br />

Already, artificial intelligence has crept into the service sector to<br />

“staff” help desks for workplace IT departments and consumer<br />

applications. The technology may expand in the near future to<br />

respond to proposals, write legal documents and reports, act as<br />

a personal assistant, perform supervisory roles, make staffing<br />

decisions and do any number of tasks that currently require a<br />

living, breathing, knowledge-based employee.<br />

“The smart machine will be very disruptive in the next 5-plus<br />

years,” Downes predicts.<br />

4 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


3. VR/AR<br />

With Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg now fully<br />

invested in virtual reality (VR), and major<br />

tech and media companies joining the craze<br />

every day, the technology seems to be on the<br />

cusp of finally becoming a, well, reality.<br />

Some industries have embraced the potential as early<br />

adopters. For instance, the International Space Station now<br />

has augmented reality (AR) headsets that enable expert remote<br />

support to work more efficiently with astronauts to rehearse for<br />

procedures in space. Manufacturers, surgeons and others have<br />

used VR (tools such as Oculus Rift and Google Cardboard)<br />

or AR (such as Microsoft’s HoloLens) to better visualize and<br />

complete complex tasks.<br />

More than 24 million VR/AR devices<br />

will be sold in 2018<br />

— CCS Insight’s Augmented and Virtual Reality<br />

Device Forecast, 2015 – 2019<br />

“Today, I don’t see it as a general work habit, but I do see it<br />

becoming a requirement for specific use cases with reality<br />

rooms appearing in more facilities,” Downes says.<br />

While it’s not a stretch to imagine using a VR headset to brainstorm<br />

with remote colleagues in a virtual office space, Downes<br />

doesn’t see this becoming mainstream in the near future. “For<br />

the next 2 to 3 years, AR and VR will be limited, with the<br />

consumer market driving enterprise adoption,” he says.<br />

4. Wearables<br />

One of the hottest segments in consumer tech,<br />

wearables — gadgets that measure the user’s<br />

physical activity, such as the Apple Watch and<br />

Fitbit — are starting to make their way to the<br />

workplace, and the trend is expected to grow.<br />

Employers can find big value in encouraging employees to use<br />

wearables to maintain healthy levels of activity throughout<br />

the day. “The whole focus is on: ‘How do we prevent people<br />

from entering chronic or acute care systems?’ Companies can<br />

distribute sensors and get people to sign up and report back<br />

on their activity,” Beckett says.<br />

Wearables can also lead to the reimagining of the physical work<br />

space. As sensors track how employees move and congregate<br />

throughout the day, the office space can be designed to meet<br />

their different needs. Rather than a traditional desk setup, for<br />

instance, the office can support different styles of work, such as<br />

social, research-driven and concentrated tasks, Downes says.<br />

5. Data analytics<br />

Big data provides new opportunities<br />

and challenges for enterprises, and the<br />

technology is about to take another<br />

leap forward.<br />

Enterprises can now access reams of data about systems,<br />

processes and performance that can be analyzed to create<br />

more productive workplaces and tools. “We’re seeing a<br />

point where data is more accessible, and data scientists<br />

are beginning to drive real value from new analytics<br />

techniques,” Downes says.<br />

Data can be used to design more functional spaces,<br />

understand the characteristics of high-performing individuals<br />

and teams, make better-informed hires and more, all with<br />

the goal of establishing a “highly intelligent workplace<br />

experience,” Downes says.<br />

At an individual level, employees have become “data<br />

managers” of their personal data at work. This task requires<br />

a set of user-friendly tools to keep track of HR and benefits<br />

records, training logs, contact information, evaluations<br />

and more.<br />

Companies not up to par may find themselves losing talent to<br />

competitors, warns Beckett. “In 5 years, the digital workplace<br />

strategy in major corporations will be the realm of HR. As the<br />

battle for talent becomes ever more difficult, the differentiator<br />

will be not just in the kind of work, but also in the strategy<br />

deployed by the business,” he says.<br />

CHRISTINE NEFF is a content editor with CSC’s global<br />

content team.<br />

Making Work, Work<br />

CSC offerings and services are designed to deliver a<br />

modern workplace experience for current and future<br />

generations of business workers.<br />

CSC MyWorkStyle provides a framework for supporting<br />

the growing variety of cloud-based applications and<br />

services. We enable existing applications to operate with<br />

an expanding universe of devices that includes tablets<br />

and smartphones. CSC MyWorkStyle provides a common<br />

platform for access and authentication, allowing users to<br />

operate onsite and at remote locations in an equal fashion.<br />

CSC MyWorkStyle is designed to take advantage of<br />

continual improvements and enhancements with few or<br />

no service interruptions. As additional capabilities and<br />

functions emerge in the industry, the updates are made<br />

readily available to employees.<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

5


Connected Cars<br />

DRIVE VALUE<br />

by Dale Coyner<br />

Using telematics<br />

data to deliver<br />

benefits throughout<br />

the automotive<br />

value chain<br />

Learn more about CSC’s<br />

connected car solutions at<br />

csc.com/connectedcar.<br />

6 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


Autonomous driving and electric cars may dominate<br />

headlines about the future of the automobile, but the era of<br />

the connected car has already arrived. Fueled by demands<br />

from an always-connected mobile society, millions of cars<br />

equipped with built-in connectivity are driving off dealership<br />

lots every year.<br />

Connected vehicles enable a host of innovations that add<br />

convenience, comfort and safety, says Chris Fangmann, CTO,<br />

global manufacturing industry at CSC.<br />

“Connectivity enhances safety features such as parking<br />

assistance, adaptive cruise control, blind spot assistance,<br />

collision avoidance and improved night vision, to name just a<br />

few,” he says. “While those features are important to attract<br />

new buyers, the value of connected cars to automotive and<br />

other industries, such as insurance, extends much further.”<br />

Let’s stay in touch<br />

Data generated by connected vehicles has inherent value,<br />

whether it’s used to study the reliability and service life of a<br />

power window relay, analyze and automatically optimize engine<br />

performance in a wide range of environments, understand<br />

driver habits, communicate with other vehicles, predict failures,<br />

report an accident, or track and predict any of a vast range of<br />

specific vehicle metrics.<br />

Ford Motor Company will be using the data to customize<br />

maintenance and services, improve safety and enhance the<br />

driving experience.<br />

“With connected vehicles, we can create a custom<br />

maintenance schedule for the customer,” says Roopak Verma,<br />

Ford’s CIO for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. “Today, we<br />

might tell a customer to change the oil every 10,000 miles,<br />

but in reality the schedule should be based on the customer’s<br />

driving habits. With connected capabilities, you can know it’s<br />

OK to wait until 11,500 miles, and the same applies to every<br />

component in the car.”<br />

Connectivity also enables Ford vehicles to automatically<br />

reconfigure driving characteristics based on weather and<br />

road conditions.<br />

In a pilot project in London, Fords are even tapping into data<br />

from parking lots. “You enter an address into the GPS, and you<br />

can see in real time where the parking spaces are — and in<br />

London, that’s a big deal,” Verma says.<br />

Ford is conducting pilot projects for car sharing, which is<br />

made easier with connected cars. Rather than exchanging<br />

keys, drivers can simply send a code to unlock the vehicle<br />

over a mobile phone. Settings for the seat, radio, rearview<br />

mirror and more can be activated with the touch of a<br />

button on a smartphone.<br />

“I believe the biggest impact is going to be to the fleet business,<br />

because you can really optimize your costs,” Verma says.<br />

Larry Stolle, global automotive marketing director at SAP,<br />

says advancements like these are changing the fundamental<br />

makeup of cars. “I like the contrast Dr. Lawrence Burns from<br />

the University of Michigan makes: When you look at the old<br />

DNA of the industry, the automobile was fossil-fuel powered,<br />

mechanical, owned and operated by a person, and built to<br />

suit many purposes,” Stolle says. “The DNA of the car is<br />

changing — self-driving, shareable and more types built<br />

for specific uses. That future is here, now.”<br />

The power of data<br />

The collected data has great potential value beyond<br />

manufacturers, for example to third-party service providers<br />

such as auto insurance companies. Vehicle information can<br />

help insurers adjust rates based on driver performance,<br />

leading to more efficient risk-pricing models, lower claims and<br />

faster claims processing. Marketers would pay for that data,<br />

too, because they would have yet another channel to reach<br />

customers. Plus, new services could be offered based on the<br />

data — imagine drivers entering a route into their GPS and<br />

receiving a proposal for trip-dedicated roadside assistance due<br />

to road and weather conditions.<br />

Governments have begun to grasp the significance of connected<br />

vehicle data. Proposals by federal regulators in the United States,<br />

the European Union and Brazil are targeted at either encouraging<br />

or requiring manufacturers to include telematics to improve<br />

safety, report crashes and reduce incidents of vehicle theft. The<br />

U.S. National Transportation Safety Board is creating standards<br />

to promote connected technologies, predicting that crashes may<br />

be reduced by more than 75%. The European Union will require<br />

eCall crash alert technology on all new models by 2018, which it<br />

is estimated will save 2,500 lives annually. Governments, as well<br />

as private companies, can also use data about road conditions to<br />

focus their investments on road repairs or route planning.<br />

Retailers are eager to tap into the personal data collected,<br />

including location, but the challenge is finding services that<br />

both benefit the customer and address privacy concerns,<br />

Ford’s Verma says.<br />

“We have so many legal constraints, data privacy constraints.<br />

How do we ensure the user’s ownership of data is taken<br />

into account?” Verma says. “That is slowing us down a<br />

little because everybody wants to be extremely careful in<br />

complying with the law.”<br />

One solution is to give drivers the right incentives, according<br />

to Fangmann. “Most people are willing to give up some data<br />

privacy for a 5% to 10% better deal on services or products,”<br />

he says.<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

7


Staying connected in the aftermarket<br />

Still, connected cars offer manufacturers an important avenue<br />

for developing stronger, longer-lasting ties to customers.<br />

“Manufacturers have a reasonable chance of generating<br />

revenue from an owner during the duration of a vehicle’s full<br />

warranty, a window of about 3 to 5 years. Once that period<br />

ends, things change,” Fangmann says. Owners soon begin<br />

making greater use of aftermarket service and independent<br />

parts providers.<br />

Compounding the problem is the fact that cars are staying on<br />

the road longer, with the average age of vehicle registrations<br />

creeping up to 11 years. An IHS Market study found that in 2016<br />

the average age of light vehicles reached 11.6 years old, up from<br />

9.6 years in 2002.<br />

Connected cars alter that equation by offering manufacturers<br />

an effective way to stay in touch with vehicle owners over a<br />

vehicle’s entire life cycle. Manufacturers would have a much<br />

greater chance of maintaining service revenue and a stronger<br />

brand-building channel to drive repeat sales. And that<br />

always-on connectivity can help automakers notify drivers<br />

about recalls and address security threats more effectively<br />

by issuing over-the-air software updates to critical systems.<br />

Not too late for older models<br />

The number of new vehicles shipping with telematics systems<br />

accounts for only a small percentage of vehicles on the road<br />

today. For vehicles that predate the connected car revolution,<br />

CSC offers hardware, services and an online platform that can<br />

collect and report performance data from a car’s controller<br />

area network (CAN) bus port, used for diagnostics.<br />

Data is displayed in a dashboard on a variety of mobile<br />

devices for the driver, owner or fleet manager, as well as the<br />

manufacturer. “Car makers, rental agencies and enterprise<br />

fleet managers have the opportunity to bring millions of<br />

vehicles online,” Fangmann says.<br />

Despite the challenges in ramping up quickly, automakers<br />

need to continue to push ahead with connected capabilities,<br />

as competitors who already understand the value of large<br />

data pools are nipping at their heels. A few well-known Silicon<br />

Valley enterprises with large connected customer bases, such<br />

as Google, have been experimenting with their own mobility<br />

services and connection technologies.<br />

“These companies are making rapid progress, and they’ve<br />

already connected customers,” Fangmann says.<br />

“This could allow them to become the<br />

owners of the connected car space<br />

before manufacturers realize<br />

they’ve been overtaken.”<br />

DALE COYNER is a writer with CSC’s<br />

digital marketing team.<br />

8 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


Q&A<br />

Under the Hood with Ford<br />

Roopak Verma<br />

— Ford CIO,<br />

Europe, the Middle East<br />

and Africa<br />

Ford Motor Company was among the first in the industry<br />

to offer connected car services through the driver’s<br />

cell phone. Today, new models released by Ford have<br />

a built-in modem for connectivity. For more on the key<br />

considerations raised by connected cars, CSC recently<br />

spoke with Roopak Verma, Ford’s CIO for the Europe,<br />

Middle East and Africa region.<br />

How is Ford helping to secure the connected car?<br />

How can OEMs work together to address this threat?<br />

Recent security demonstrations have really prompted<br />

all of the OEMs to take a hard look at vehicle security.<br />

We have the capability today to remotely unlock a vehicle,<br />

and if someone can hack into it, that’s the first thing he or<br />

she will do. If someone can control the functionality of the<br />

vehicle remotely, that’s dangerous.<br />

A Fusion Hybrid, for example, is generating 25 gigabytes<br />

of data per hour. A hacker would love to get access to the<br />

functionality of the car, your location data, your contact<br />

data, even your credit card data. At Ford, we realize you<br />

have to have the fundamental security architecture built<br />

into the vehicle. The architecture that controls the vehicle<br />

functionality needs to be isolated from the connected<br />

vehicle architecture, and you need encryption between<br />

every component.<br />

Everybody’s facing a common challenge. A lot of the safety<br />

features we expect are going to require vehicles to talk to<br />

each other, so if a Ford car is not talking to a GM car, it’s not<br />

going to know the car is stopped ahead just around a blind<br />

curve. That type of connectivity is going to require us to work<br />

together on the protocols and the security architecture.<br />

What role is data analytics playing at Ford in supporting<br />

automotive sales, production and services?<br />

Data analytics and intelligence can give us a single, integrated<br />

view of people who are researching a car on the Web, linking<br />

them with the people who may come in and visit the dealer,<br />

and linking them with the people who might actually buy a<br />

car and then come back to Ford for the servicing. It can help<br />

us change the whole marketing paradigm.<br />

It’s also going to help us make a connection with the<br />

customer to design the next-generation car. We won’t<br />

need hundreds of hours of research to find out where<br />

the next trends in car designs are going. We’ll be talking<br />

to our customers.<br />

Organizations are under constant pressure to step up their<br />

rate of innovation. How are you nurturing innovation at Ford?<br />

One of the things we’ve been doing in Europe is looking<br />

for a way to really democratize innovation. What we used<br />

to always see is that you could come up with a great idea,<br />

it worked well, but there was always a challenge in the<br />

implementation and getting the business value out of it.<br />

So we started the Ford Innovation Challenge. The idea is<br />

that anybody in Ford with an innovative idea can put it<br />

forward. We opened it for 2 weeks and we had 415 ideas.<br />

We had a semifinal event to select the top 12 ideas, and<br />

now the business owns these ideas, and we are providing<br />

them time, funding and resources to take them forward.<br />

It’s exciting.<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

9


THE<br />

DIGITAL TWIN<br />

With the rise of digital, manufacturers are finding themselves rich in data. Meanwhile,<br />

computing has emerged as the cheapest, most abundant resource that we can deploy<br />

against any problem.<br />

The problem in manufacturing is not the lack of new ideas and products, but the ability<br />

to design and build new products efficiently. An IDC Big Data user study found that<br />

operations-related processes were the top priority for analytics investments.<br />

This next wave of IT innovation, the rise of digital, is providing manufacturing with<br />

the engine to improve efficiency. IT has become an integral part of a product. This<br />

is because of cheap sensors and processors, cheap storage, purpose-built software,<br />

purpose-built clouds enabling data storage and ubiquitous connectivity.<br />

Simulating new innovations is the idea behind the digital twin in manufacturing. We can<br />

use stochastic simulation to generate future “what-if” scenarios and use those scenarios<br />

to avoid costly product quality issues, speed time to market, and increase throughput.<br />

This may sound exotic, but it is really just a modern twist on a very old idea — the<br />

scientific method. Build stochastic simulations, generate experiments, and use those<br />

experiments to minimize risk and innovate in the process.<br />

Tesla is an excellent example of this concept. Tesla has a digital twin of every VIN they<br />

manufacture. Data is constantly being transmitted back and forth from the car to the<br />

factory. If a driver has a rattle in a door, it can be fixed by downloading software to adjust<br />

the hydraulics of that particular door. Tesla regularly downloads software updates to<br />

their customers’ cars based on the data they are constantly receiving from each VIN.<br />

Future What-If Scenarios<br />

Real Manufacturing Innovation<br />

New Materials<br />

Product Design<br />

Innovations<br />

Process<br />

Innovations<br />

Manufacturing Process<br />

101 1010101<br />

Manufacturing Simulation<br />

f (x)<br />

Instrument the manufacturing<br />

equipment and feed our<br />

simulations streaming data<br />

Flaws<br />

Cost<br />

Performance<br />

Figure 1. Using the digital twin as a source of manufacturing insight<br />

10 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


Prescriptive data, and pipelines<br />

Creating a digital twin starts with establishing new pipelines of manufacturing data.<br />

We can automate the collection, for example, of materials and design data. When<br />

integrated with historical operations performance data, we have the raw data<br />

required to support the creation of a digital twin.<br />

The next step is to take the manufacturing process and model it using rules. But<br />

instead of using the more common retrospective models, digital twin simulation uses<br />

prescriptive models. Retrospective models, like those commonly used in predictive<br />

modeling, try to calculate the future based on past trends. Models like that have been<br />

successful in some areas of manufacturing prediction, but they take us away from<br />

breakthrough innovation and keep us stuck in optimizing. Instead, we need to build<br />

stochastic simulations, or prescriptive models. We create rules for mapping from<br />

design to performance and add randomness to simulate risk.<br />

The prescriptive data from the simulations tells us how new products will work. We<br />

can detect design flaws early. We can predict and minimize cost. Because randomness<br />

is inherent in our models, we can simulate the kinds of uncertainty we encounter in<br />

the real world. Computer power is cheap — we can afford to run millions of scenarios.<br />

We can anticipate an entire spectrum of possible outcomes rather than just a single<br />

expected result.<br />

Continuous insights through IoT and industrial machine learning<br />

We can learn as much from the digital twin as we can from the real-world original.<br />

Internet of Things (IoT) technology allows us to augment the manufacturing process<br />

with sensors and automatically generate data about operations, performance and<br />

maintenance. If we use industrial machine learning to build and deploy, we can turn the<br />

streaming variant of the digital twin into a continuous source of manufacturing insight. 1<br />

1<br />

Access and Collect Data<br />

Ingest and Clean<br />

Agile Experimentation<br />

10110<br />

Scaled globally across the entire<br />

manufactuing process<br />

2 3<br />

Map to standard<br />

concepts and make<br />

insights repeatable<br />

Use experiments<br />

to produce reliable,<br />

measurable results<br />

Transform Manufacturing<br />

New Materials<br />

Product Design<br />

Innovations<br />

Process<br />

Innovations<br />

Generate<br />

Insights<br />

4<br />

Produce insights that<br />

can be distributed<br />

and used throughout<br />

the entire manufacturing<br />

process<br />

Figure 2. When deployed according to CSC’s Industrial Machine Learning, the digital<br />

twin becomes a continuous source of manufacturing insight<br />

Digital twin really sits in the continuum of the IoT. If we agree that the foundation of<br />

IoT is connectivity, sensors and analytics, predictive maintenance is an established<br />

IoT application. Predictive maintenance is case-based reasoning enabled by data for<br />

mitigation and repair. Digital twin incorporates product data from design to operation<br />

and beyond, including maintenance history. Harnessing all the data to enable a complete<br />

digital twin isn’t there yet. But examples and pilots showing the steps along the way<br />

are certainly relevant.<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

11


The digital twin comes to life<br />

This idea is beginning to take hold in several major manufacturers. GE is piloting a<br />

“digital wind farm” concept, which it uses to inform the configuration of each wind<br />

turbine prior to procurement and construction. Once the farm is built, each virtual<br />

turbine is fed data from its physical equivalent, and software enables optimization of<br />

power production at the plant level by adjusting turbine-specific parameters, such<br />

as torque of the generator or speed of the blades. The hope is to generate 20% gains<br />

in efficiency.<br />

PTC has developed a “Smart Connected PLM” software product called “Windchill.”<br />

The Swiss solar panel manufacturing company Oerlikon uses Windchill to automatically<br />

track system metrics and keep account managers apprised of the condition of their<br />

customers’ systems. PTC describes it as a FRACAS process, a failure reporting, analysis<br />

and corrective action system.<br />

Dassault Systèmes has built an aerospace and defense-specific manufacturing operations<br />

management product called “Build to Operate.” It provides the ability to monitor,<br />

control and validate all aspects of manufacturing operations — ranging from replicable<br />

processes and production sequences, to the flow of deliverables throughout their<br />

supply chain — each on a global scale. Airbus Helicopter has deployed this system<br />

for current and future helicopter manufacturing.<br />

In every industry, we see the increase of data at both higher velocity and volume. This is<br />

leading to the creation of more machine learning algorithms designed to learn incrementally<br />

over new data. In manufacturing, these new algorithms will take the form of digital twins<br />

capable of helping manufacturers design and build new products more efficiently.<br />

What do you think? Are there any compelling manufacturing products or processes<br />

that would benefit by creating a digital twin?<br />

JC Brigham<br />

CSC ResearchNetwork Analyst<br />

Joan-Carol (JC) Brigham has been an<br />

analyst within CSC’s ResearchNetwork<br />

for 8 years. She has led strategy work<br />

and managed much of the startup of<br />

industry research within the<br />

ResearchNetwork. Right now she is a<br />

principal and business manager analyzing<br />

the manufacturing industry. Prior to joining<br />

CSC she worked in the services area at<br />

Sun Microsystems, and before that, at a small<br />

digital marketing company. She stumbled<br />

into the high-tech market analysis profession<br />

during her 15 years as an IDC analyst. JC<br />

lives in the mountains of Colorado, loves the<br />

outdoors and travels as much as she can.<br />

Jerry Overton<br />

CSC Distinguished Engineer<br />

Jerry Overton is head of Advanced<br />

Analytics Research in CSC’s<br />

ResearchNetwork and the founder of<br />

CSC’s FutureTense initiative, which<br />

includes the Predictive Modeling<br />

Research Group, the Advanced Analytics<br />

Lab and the Predictive Modeling School.<br />

1<br />

http://www.csc.com/big_data/insights/138011-what_is_industrial_machine_learning<br />

12 <strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE


CSC at a Glance<br />

INDUSTRY EXPERTISE<br />

MANUFACTURING<br />

TECHNOLOGY AND<br />

CONSUMER SERVICES<br />

PUBLIC<br />

SECTOR<br />

ENERGY AND<br />

NATURAL<br />

RESOURCES<br />

HEALTHCARE<br />

INSURANCE<br />

BANKING AND<br />

CAPITAL MARKETS<br />

TRAVEL AND<br />

TRANSPORTATION<br />

NEXT-GEN<br />

TECHNOLOGIES<br />

CLOUD<br />

BIG DATA AND ANALYTICS<br />

CYBERSECURITY<br />

APPLICATIONS SERVICES CONSULTING SOFTWARE AND IP<br />

BUSINESS PROCESS SERVICES<br />

AND OUTSOURCING<br />

INFRASTRUCTURE<br />

SERVICES<br />

BY THE NUMBERS<br />

66,000<br />

EMPLOYEES<br />

WORLDWIDE<br />

$8B<br />

GLOBAL<br />

POWERHOUSE<br />

55+<br />

YEARS OF INNOVATION<br />

AND SERVICE EXCELLENCE<br />

100+<br />

GLOBAL ALLIANCES WITH<br />

BEST-OF-BREED PARTNERS<br />

RECOGNIZED BY INDUSTRY ANALYSTS AS A LEADER ACROSS OUR PORTFOLIO<br />

<strong>FORWARD</strong>: A CSC MAGAZINE<br />

13


Regional CSC Headquarters<br />

The Americas<br />

1775 Tysons Boulevard<br />

Tysons, VA 22102<br />

United States<br />

Asia, Middle East, Africa<br />

Level 9, UE BizHub East<br />

6 Changi Business Park Avenue 1<br />

Singapore 468017<br />

Republic of Singapore<br />

+65.6809.9000<br />

Australia<br />

26 Talavera Road<br />

Macquarie Park, NSW 2113<br />

Australia<br />

+61(2)9034.3000<br />

Central and Eastern Europe<br />

Abraham-Lincoln-Park 1<br />

65189 Wiesbaden<br />

Germany<br />

+49.611.1420<br />

Nordic and Baltic Region<br />

Retortvej 8<br />

DK-2500 Valby<br />

Denmark<br />

+45.36.14.4000<br />

South and West Europe<br />

Tour Carpe Diem<br />

31 place des Corolles<br />

CS 40075<br />

92098 Paris La Défense Cedex<br />

France<br />

+33.1.55.707070<br />

UK, Ireland and Netherlands<br />

The Walbrook Building<br />

25 Walbrook<br />

London<br />

EC4N 8AQ<br />

United Kingdom<br />

About CSC<br />

CSC (NYSE: CSC) leads clients on their digital transformation journeys.<br />

The company provides innovative next-generation technology services<br />

and solutions that leverage deep industry expertise, global scale, technology<br />

independence and an extensive partner community. CSC serves leading<br />

commercial and international public sector organizations throughout the<br />

world. CSC is a Fortune 500 company and ranked among the best corporate<br />

citizens. For more information, visit the company’s website at www.csc.com.<br />

Connect and engage one on one with Chris Fangmann, CTO, Global<br />

Manufacturing Industries, CSC. Visit go.csc.com/meet-the-expert.<br />

© 2017 Computer Sciences Corporation. All rights reserved.<br />

Designed and produced by CSC’s Creative Services. MD_9751a-17

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