With the IT industry set to witness a revolution that is predicted to be brought about by the digital transformation through IoT (Internet of Things), it is important to make note of the huge quantity of data that will be generated and the methods to use it to the advantage of enterprises. Data warehousing was made popular in 1990s to store system data from a handful of IT companies. However, with enterprises in every domain being connected to the Internet, and more recently, even devices/machines other than smartphones generating data logs of their own; it has become a necessity for the enterprises to find ways of harnessing and utilizing this amount of information using big data analytics solutions. IoT use cases IoT makes it possible to connect the basic shop-floor devices directly to the Internet and thus, the business processes and systems can use the data right from the source instead of requiring manual monitoring and data logging.
Retail enterprises can benefit by connecting their POS systems and warehouse/manufacturing data to identify the supply chain requirements and pain points. Manufacturing enterprises can monitor equipment for safety measures and power losses, to save costs incurred from production line failures. Construction enterprises can enable their buildings to monitor power consumption, and avoid unnecessary power wastage. Shipping companies can route their logistics vehicles through a less congested road, by knowing the traffic conditions beforehand.
Ideally, this should make the analytics very easy than the earlier processes that took hours or days to analyze data logs. In the real world though, IoT poses a lot more problems than it solves – at present.