Managing Automation - November 2007 - (Page 29) By virtue of its borderless nature, wireless networking technology may be an unexpected ally in bringing together heretofore separate — and often hostile — automation and IT teams. BY JEFF MOAD ntil fairly recently, you wouldn’t have expected to find individuals from Boeing’s IT organization and its various automation engineering groups working closely together to pilot new technologies on the plant floor. “In the past, manufacturing did its own thing, and IT did its own thing,” says Richard Paine, an advanced computing technologist at the $61 billion aerospace and defense giant. “There wasn’t open hostility between the organizations, but they tended to go their own ways.” Chinks in the virtual wall separating IT and manufacturing at Boeing began to appear a couple of years ago, however, when the Commercial Airplane group stated its strategic intention to deploy secure wireless networking as a way to bring flexibility to the plant floor. Paine, who had been working on wireless and radio frequency technologies as part of Boeing’s Phantom Works research and development (R&D) organization, took the Commercial Airplane group’s statement as a green light. He helped put together a Secure Mobile Architecture Team made up of representatives from Phantom Works, IT, and manufacturing. And the team began to explore, among other things, how Boeing could use existing 802.11 (WiFi) wireless local area networks, which IT had deployed to support general computing applications, for secure mobile communications on the plant floor. The group is creating an architecture — dubbed ScadaNet — in which every packet moving over the wireless network is cryptographically identified, and devices connecting to the network are authenticated via SIM chips. Now, programs such as those for Boeing’s 777 airliner are beginning to use the technology to enable wireless robots and machines to move large airliner subassemblies, dramatically increasing manufacturing speed and flexibility. “There’s always been a bit of competition between manufacturing and IT, and that was perpetuated because everything wasn’t network-connected. Or they Photo: Martyn Goddard/Corbis weren’t using common networks,” Paine says. “Now there’s much more collaboration and communication between the two sides, and technologies like wireless are forcing that.” Boeing certainly isn’t the only manufacturing company where an unofficial yet sturdy wall has separated IT and plant floor automation teams. Overseeing parallel but separate technology infrastructures, IT and automation teams at many companies have long maintained an arm’s-length working relationship, one sometimes tinged with mistrust. Many in IT, experts say, believe automation groups lack the disciplined process orientation and enterprise-wide perspective needed to deploy scalable, secure information systems. And many who manage manufacturing technology think IT lacks an understanding of the intense, real-time responsiveness and reliability required of systems supporting critical manufacturing processes. “Historically there’s been a very rigorous, specific separation of the control architecture and the enterprise architecture at most companies,” says Harris Kagan, director of wireless programs at Invensys. “And that situation has led to a separation of church and state, with firewalls and demilitarized zones dividing IT and automation people and processes.” At companies like Boeing, however, that is beginning to change. And, in many cases, the migration of standards-based technologies from the IT world onto the plant floor is a catalyst for that change. Specifically, the arrival of wireless networks in the manufacturing environment is forcing IT and automation teams to break down the walls that separate them and to find ways to collaborate. “Over the years, IT and manufacturing have spent a lot of time spitting at one another. But now we have wireless, and the radio waves go where they want,” Kagan says. “And it has to be managed.” DIFFERENT STORY Wireless networking certainly isn’t the first technology from the IT world to migrate to the plant floor. Over the past few years, a steady parade of lower-cost standard 29 November 2007
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Managing Automation - November 2007 Managing Automation - November 2007 Contents Take 1 Mailbox SAP's Business ByDesign to Validate On-Demand Model for Enterprise SW Portfolio Management Specialist Losing Ground to Rivals At Incor, It's Time for Some Deep Breathing Can HART, ISA Get Together on a Wireless Spec? Mesa Tries to Help Improve Plant Metrics Notes Cover Story: The Digital Factory Special Report: Breaking Down Walls Integration: Dreaming of One ERP Industries: Locking onto Cyber-Security Transformation: Not Your Father's Time & Attendance Program Product Scan Advertiser Index Next Managing Automation - November 2007 Managing Automation - November 2007 - (Page Cover1) Managing Automation - November 2007 - (Page Cover2) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Contents (Page 3) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Contents (Page 4) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Contents (Page 5) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Take 1 (Page 6) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Take 1 (Page 7) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Mailbox (Page 8) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Mailbox (Page 9) Managing Automation - November 2007 - SAP's Business ByDesign to Validate On-Demand Model for Enterprise SW (Page 10) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Portfolio Management Specialist Losing Ground to Rivals (Page 11) Managing Automation - November 2007 - At Incor, It's Time for Some Deep Breathing (Page 12) Managing Automation - November 2007 - At Incor, It's Time for Some Deep Breathing (Page 13) Managing Automation - November 2007 - At Incor, It's Time for Some Deep Breathing (Page 14) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Can HART, ISA Get Together on a Wireless Spec? (Page 15) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Mesa Tries to Help Improve Plant Metrics (Page 16) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Mesa Tries to Help Improve Plant Metrics (Page 17) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Notes (Page 18) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Notes (Page 19) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 20) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 21) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 22) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 23) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 24) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 25) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 26) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Cover Story: The Digital Factory (Page 27) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Special Report: Breaking Down Walls (Page 28) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Special Report: Breaking Down Walls (Page 29) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Special Report: Breaking Down Walls (Page 30) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Special Report: Breaking Down Walls (Page 31) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Special Report: Breaking Down Walls (Page 32) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Special Report: Breaking Down Walls (Page 33) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Integration: Dreaming of One ERP (Page 34) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Integration: Dreaming of One ERP (Page 35) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Industries: Locking onto Cyber-Security (Page 36) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Industries: Locking onto Cyber-Security (Page 37) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Industries: Locking onto Cyber-Security (Page 38) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Industries: Locking onto Cyber-Security (Page 39) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Transformation: Not Your Father's Time & Attendance Program (Page 40) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Transformation: Not Your Father's Time & Attendance Program (Page 41) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Transformation: Not Your Father's Time & Attendance Program (Page 42) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Transformation: Not Your Father's Time & Attendance Program (Page 43) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Product Scan (Page 44) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Product Scan (Page 45) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Product Scan (Page 46) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Product Scan (Page 47) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Advertiser Index (Page 48) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Advertiser Index (Page 49) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Next (Page 50) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Next (Page Cover3) Managing Automation - November 2007 - Next (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.