Chinese Industry 4.0 businesses to African countries.

African thinkers to Chinese businesses

Industry 4.0 embraces mobile connectivity, artificial intelligence, Big Data, the Internet of Things (IoT), next-generation robotics, additive manufacturing (three-dimensional printing), blockchain software, wearable technologies and genetic engineering.

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 www.ChinaAfrica.mobi

the creation of jobs will be much greater than the destruction [of jobs.

African entrepeneurs to Chinese companies

Being a leader or a follower in FIR?

Followers have a limited current manufacturing base but are underprepared for Industry 4.0 and are at risk for the future.

Fear it or embrace it; avoiding it is not an option- www.ChinaAfricaTech.com

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The Fourth Industrial Revolution is upon us and South African industry must adapt

New from Engineering News

Sixth Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) Conference, in Pretoria.

AN AWAKENING FORCE “Digitalisation changes everything,”

a smartphone gave people access to verbal and written communications (in various formats), to data and a huge range of information, to commercial and financial services and to satellite navigation services, as well as acted as a camera and entertainment centre. A hand-held device could thus substitute for cable telephony and telegramme/telex systems, a full set of encyclopaedias, for shops and branch banks and for atlases, if desired.

“A digital company has integrated digital technologies (Big Data, cloud [computing], mobile devices, [and] social networking); [and] has evolved an organisational level to address digitalisation.”

The ‘global brain’ means the efficient use of human resources.

The “human footprint”: the workforce is going to change. The adoption of new technologies will also affect the physical footprint of an enterprise. Corporate social responsibility will remain important. “Innovation can be incredibly productive.”

BEWARE THE DARK SIDE

Global professional services group PwC defines Industrial 4.0 thus: “[It] focuses on the end-to-end digitisation [sic] of all physical assets and the integration into digital ecosystems with value chain partners.” As a result, an enterprise could be hacked, key and confidential data stolen and, in the era of the IoT, equipment sabotaged. The hackers could be agents of organised crime, of terrorist groups, of rival companies, of States, or just malicious individuals taking pleasure in causing pain. As a result, cybersecurity is essential as both a prerequisite and an enabler for Industry 4.0.

“The IoT is quite broad – actually, it is massive

What if a hacking attack caused such damage that a plant had to be shut down for weeks, even months?

Regarding new systems, he stressed: “We have to design security from the start.” Some networks, such as Random Phase Multiple Access (better known as RPMA), already have better security built into them. The security of the devices themselves can also be improved, using trusted processor modules (specialised encryption chips), the complementary and increasingly cheap crypto chips for the IoT, and trusted operating systems.

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