Industrial manufacturers are conservative by nature. The value of their equipment and potential liability mean they generally won’t adopt new technology without it being a proven use case first.
So, while AI and the IoT will revolutionize IoT factory automation, many enabling technologies needed for industrial digital transformation must still make it from the drawing board into working proofs of concept (PoCs). This starts at the foundation of AIoT system architectures, where ideas like workload consolidation have yet to be successfully demonstrated at scale in real-world factories.
In fact, many automation professionals might still be unfamiliar with workload consolidation and why it’s important for achieving their smart-factory objectives. Simply stated, the term describes a way of virtualizing multicore processors. As a result, manufacturers can eliminate entire redundant systems, reduce total energy consumption, minimize latency, and lower costs.
This may seem simple, but it’s not. One reason workload consolidation hasn’t been sufficiently proven in automation use cases is that graphics processors leveraged in AIoT workloads like image processing and deep learning aren’t easily virtualized. Really, they can’t be virtualized at all without advanced features like the interface virtualization and I/O sharing designed into 12th gen Intel® Core™ processors (formerly “Alder Lake”).
These technologies are already being demonstrated in real-world industrial PoCs. But to fully appreciate them we must understand why they are required in the first place.