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Manufacturing Software Articles | Enterprise Resource Planning ERP, Manufacturing Resource Planning MRP, CRM, SaaS

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Manufacturing software systems are important tools for the automation and management of production processes. A wide range of manufacturing companies covering many different vertical sectors rely on manufacturing software to better manage the sourcing and use of material or parts quantities, scheduled production timelines, inventory management and the planning for future order demand. One commonly deployed example of a manufacturing software system is an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) solution, designed to better manage information concerning orders and materials, finance, Customer Relationship Management etc.over the whole organisation.

Eleven more companies join Digital Catapult’s Digital Supply Chain Hub programme to solve manufacturing challenges

Digital Catapult, the UK authority on advanced digital technology, has partnered with five leading technology companies and six pioneering SMEs to solve critical supply chain challenges facing small-to-medium sized manufacturers across the country. As part of the Made Smarter Innovation | Digital Supply Chain Hub, the initiative will fund and facilitate the development of pioneering solutions to remedy significant industrial challenges, with a view to driving economic growth and advancing the UK’s manufacturing sector.

Chronos Technology and WiTTRA collaborate to enhance positioning solutions

Chronos Technology, the advanced timing, synchronisation, and smart technology solutions provider, has entered into a strategic collaboration with WiTTRA, a Swedish-based company that provides innovative IoT solutions for various industries.

Tata Steel UK and iov42 selected to tackle the steel industry’s efficiency challenges, at the heart of deliveries

Tata Steel UK and iov42, a UK based blockchain-inspired start-up, have been selected for the second time by Blockchain Connected, for the “Demonstrating the Potential of Blockchain” challenge, funded by the Welsh Government.

Global holography awards open for entries

Entries are now open to find the best in international commercial holography 2023.The Excellence in Holography Awards are organised by global trade body, the International Hologram Manufacturers Association (IHMA).

Growing Rotherham business expands its team

A design and additive manufacturing business based in Rotherham has added a key appointment to its team.

The rise of OT cybersecurity threats

Until recently, cyberattacks focused primarily on electronic data such as login credentials, credit card information, and other types of both personal and business information.

International study highlights the major drivers of digital transformation projects

SAP consultancy NTT DATA Business Solutions and IT service provider Natuvion GmbH jointly published the international “2023 Transformation Study.”

The study provides detailed insight into the motivation behind transformation projects within companies, the strategies and methods applied, and the major challenges in the transformation process.

74% of executives believe the benefits of generative AI will outweigh the associated concerns

Some 70% of executives believe that generative AI will enable organisations to widen the scope of the roles of knowledge workers.

Dakota forms partnership with Ai Automation, adding robotics to its solution portfolio

Dakota Integrated Solutions Ltd, a real-time data capture, printing, mobility, support and voice-directed solution specialist, has formed a partnership with Ai Automation, a worldwide specialist in vision, automation and robotics.

A look at new in the NIS2 Directive

By Bernard Montel, Cybersecurity Strategist and Technical Director, Tenable.

The Directive on the security of Network and Information Systems, often shortened to NIS, was first established in July 2016. When introduced it encompassed two groups— the operators of essential services; and relevant digital service providers, with the aim to strengthen cybersecurity resilience.

Manufacturing software systems provide the automation and computational support for complex manufacturing processes. Manufacturing companies leverage manufacturing software systems to carefully manage the timing, types and quantities of materials they purchase in order to ensure that they are able to meet current and future customer demand while at the same time achieving the lowest possible cost and inventory accumulation.

Enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems integrate internal and external management information across an entire organization, embracing finance/accounting, manufacturing, sales and service, customer relationship management, etc. ERP systems facilitate the flow of information between all business functions inside the boundaries of the organisation and manage the connections to outside stakeholders.

Manufacturing resource planning (MRP II) addresses operational planning in units, financial planning, and has a simulation capability to answer “what-if” questions and extension of closed-loop MRP.

CRM or Customer Relationship Management concerns the relationship between an organisation and its customers. The scope of CRM which can vary drastically as it can be used by management, salespeople, people providing service, and even customers could directly access information to find out information.

Cloud computing can be defined as the set of hardware, networks, storage, services, and interfaces that combine to deliver aspects of computing as a service. Cloud services include the delivery of software, infrastructure, and storage over the Internet and is based on user demand. Cloud Computing  is the latest stage in the Internet’s evolution, providing the means through which everything , from computing power to computing infrastructure, applications, business can be delivered to you as a service wherever and whenever you need.

Cloud computing has some essential characteristics: scalability depending on requirements, offers a way to increase capacity or add capabilities on the fly without investing in new infrastructure, eliminates the need for on-site personnel to maintain computer equipment. No up-front CAPEX (capital expenditure) required, as billing is a pay-as-you-go model, access to the very latest application programming interfaces (APIs).

SaaS (software as a service) is a type of cloud computing delivering a single application through the browser to thousands of customers using a multitenant architecture. On the customer side, it means no upfront investment in servers or software licensing; on the provider side, with just one app to maintain, costs are low compared to conventional hosting. SaaS is emerging to provide service to all aspects of an organisation`s activities in the areas of Manufacturing, ERP, Demand Forecasting, Advanced Planning, S&OP, Supply Chain, Warehousing, Transport Management and HR (human resource).

Business intelligence (BI) is a set of theories, processes and technologies that convert raw data into useful information for business purposes. BI can handle large amounts of information to help identify and develop new opportunities to gain market advantage over competitors. The amounts of data that are now being gathered as a result of because they are increasingly being gathered by a growing range of diverse and ubiquitous information-gathering devices.

These data sets become so large and complex that it becomes difficult to process using on-hand database management tools or traditional data processing applications. The trend to larger data sets is due to the additional information derivable from analysis of a single large set of related data, as compared to separate smaller sets with the same total amount of data. The current challenges of BIG DATA include the capture, storage, search and share capability, transfer, analysis, and visualisation. Every day, we create 2.5 quintillion bytes of data — so much that 90% of the data in the world today has been created in the last two years alone. This data comes from everywhere: sensors used to gather climate information, posts to social media sites, digital pictures and videos, purchase transaction records, and cell phone GPS signals to name a few. This data is big data.

It is estimated that the world’s technological per-capita capacity to store information has roughly doubled every 40 months since the 1980s. The challenge for large enterprises is determining who should own big data initiatives that straddle the entire organisation and how this data can be used as a source of revenue and to gain competitive advantage.

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