• DocumentCode
    1165282
  • Title

    My view: automation vendors seek pastures new

  • Author

    Bond, Alex

  • Volume
    16
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2005
  • Firstpage
    8
  • Lastpage
    9
  • Abstract
    Industrial automation is becoming an increasingly commoditised business. With the ever more widespread adoption of COTS (commercial off the shelf) hardware, software and communications technologies - Windows, Intel, and Ethernet to name but three - it´s becoming harder than ever for automation vendors to differentiate themselves from their competitors, to identify areas where they can seek genuine competitive advantage and, most important, to make serious money. That´s not to deny that opportunities still exist to innovate in the mainstream automation business, but the fact still remains that advances in technology tend to offer only marginal improvements in performance, both over a particular vendor´s previous generation of equipment and over the current offerings of its competitors. Time was when factory and process automation vendors sold instruments and control systems. They still do, but an increasing proportion of their revenues are coming from outside their traditional areas of interest.
  • Keywords
    DP industry; factory automation; COTS; automation vendors; commercial off the shelf; industrial automation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computing & Control Engineering Journal
  • Publisher
    iet
  • ISSN
    0956-3385
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1049/cce:20050401
  • Filename
    1508037