Edge computing is loosely defined as enterprise or industrial computing outside of a datacenter. The environments which encompass edge computing pose a unique set of challenges, requiring hardware to be designed to have a broad set of thermal and structural characteristics. For example, an edge computing device designed for an outdoor telecommunications application may be exposed to an extensive range of operating ambient temperatures, but it will experience little to no structural vibration or shock forces.
In this video, Braden Cooper presents a tour of the OSS booth at AFCEA West 2023 in San Diego, which took place from February 14th-16th. Braden discusses the products OSS showcased, including a few new products. OSS' Rugged Edge AI Transportable products provide GPU acceleration, FPGA data ingest, and NVMe storage for Edge AI Military Applications on land, on the sea and in the air.
The use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in maritime applications is quickly becoming an integral part of the shipping industry. As technology advances, so does the potential of AI to help ships better navigate their routes, identify potential hazards, and make more informed decisions. Of course, AI can be used to support a wide variety of applications in traditional manned marine vessels, but the gold standard that is being developed in maritime settings is fully autonomous vessels. This blog post will explore some of the most promising use cases for AI in maritime applications, for both manned and unmanned vessels.
In today's world, many industries are striving to increase their productivity and efficiency in order to remain competitive. One industry that has made tremendous strides in this area is the oil and gas industry. In recent years, the industry has made extensive use of artificial intelligence (AI) on oil production platforms to increase efficiency and reduce costs.
As the world is on the brink of a tech refresh, scale-out solutions will get a significant boost in both TDP and PCIe transfer speeds. Our CPUs jump from 250w up to 400w in Gen5. Our PCIe lane architecture increases from ~32 GB/s to ~64 GB/s - in each direction. The extra watts will push the boundary of I/O solutions and speeds. Scale out I/O is expanding capacity of new hardware resources instead of increased capacity of old hardware.
In my last post I wrote about the true value of an AS-9100 system, and as part of that document, I touched on “customers”. In this blog I would like to expound on the topic of customers.
Companies are in business to achieve one thing for their shareholders, and that is VALUE. Let us look at that sentence ……there is no mention of “customer”, it is not even implied. But if customers are required, why don’t we have the word customer in it. Customers are the “How” we create value, where the sentence above is “WHY” we are in business. Subtle differences but very important.