|
Turn Up the Wi-Fi
Wireless Fidelity, or Wi-Fi, technology is proliferating in the factory, but it's not the best answer for everything.
Will Wi-Fi take over the industrial world? How about wireless Ethernet? The second question is easy to answer: there is no wireless Ethernet. Ethernet, IEEE 802.3, runs on wires. Yes, you will see the term. The current generations of Wi-Fi, or Wireless FidelityIEEE 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g and 802.11-2007 (which rolls up -a, -b and -g with the lesser-known -h, -i, and -j)define wireless local area networks (LANs) that have become so inextricably linked with Ethernet that many call Wi-Fi, “wireless Ethernet.”
Wi-Fi is taking over a range of factory applications. Part of the reason might be called peer pressure: outside of industrial settings, there is a huge installed base of IEEE 802.11 LANsbased on the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers standardat work literally everywhere. A second driver is the direct link to Ethernet, both for environments that use industrial Ethernet and for communication with Ethernet-based enterprise IT systems.
The reasons for the widespread usage of Wi-Fi are many. First, the silicon investment is minimal on the commercial or consumer side. Chips and circuits are commodity items at commodity prices, driving equipment prices down to less than a single meal at a moderate restaurant.
Second, people like Wi-Fi and demand it in their solid-state goodies. Name any reason from sternly practical to frivolously air-headed and someone around you will be trying to connect using 802.11(x). The result is that every new laptop computerin fact, any new device that will reach into e-mail or Web addressesincludes wireless, and the lines between cell phones, personal data assistants (PDAs), MP3 music players and wireless computers are increasingly blurred.
The upshot is that, while Wi-Fi was once a struggling new technology, it is now literally easier to log on to a wireless LAN anywhere than to avoid logging onto a LAN. In fact, the 802.11 airwaves are now so crowded that many of us (especially those on the road) spend appreciable time figuring out just which LAN we are using at a given locale. It can take many minutes to ensure that you are on the LAN you want amid all the LANs around you
Traffic flowing on 802.11 highways is likely to be in the air around you, especially if your facility is anywhere near office buildings or family residences, or if your corporate IT embraces wireless connectivity (most do).
So, Wi-Fi is beckoning to production. Broadly speaking, there are only three responses to its siren call. The first is to simply hold off while the current recession blows chill winds through every kind of technology, especially those committed to silicon chips. It is unclear who might benefit from this approach (if anybody). For a while, there will be fewer changes to keep up with. In the vendor community, the survivors will be smaller, leaner and hungrier than last year's (or last decade's) boom-time participants. Unfortunately for manufacturing, at the same time, the availability of resources for custom installation will be greatly diminishedand manufacturing absolutely depends on customization.
The second is to hold off until the next generation of Wi-Fi specification, IEEE 802.11n, becomes mainstream. A new generation, 801.11n may reach finalization in November of this year. Its promiseless interference, more data throughput, possibly enhanced securityprovides a rosy glow for the future, a glow that will almost certainly invite industrial needs into its warmth. More on that later...
Read more
Taking Wi-Fi to Work -
Few things are more pathetic than watching road warriors in search of a “hot spot”that is, a place where we can connect our beloved laptop computers to the Internet wirelessly over what is known popularly as Wi-Fi.
Wireless Fidelity (did you even know that Wi-Fi was a shortened nickname for a real term?) is not wireless Ethernet, technically speaking. It is effectively the same as the wired Ethernet connectionand our pathway to the Internet from conference rooms, hotel lobbies, coffee shops or wherever. Even sometimes our patios for those who work at home in times of good weather.
Wireless in manufacturing is not just for sensors. Operators with mobile computing devices such as laptops, personal digital assistants or tablet personal computers can be freed from the shackles of the control room and keep tabs on the plant's operations while physically checking out situations in the field. This can be a tremendous productivity boostsomething desperately needed in the current economic climate. But it can be a boon to maintenance technicians, as well. They can communicate with the maintenance management system to follow up on alerts, check out technical documents for the device they are working on and report potential problems they may observe just by walking around and being aware of the plant...
Read more
MORE SIGNATURE ONLINE CONTENT! - Archived Webcast on Wireless
Check out an archived Webcast on Enabling a Mobile and More Efficient Workforce. Learn about the varieties of wireless technologies available for plant operations, the status of standards in the industry and valuable tips for applying wireless.
|