IT in Manufacturing


How to afford AI

September 2024 IT in Manufacturing


Graham Brown, regional director for South Africa and SADC at Commvault.

Science fiction enthusiasts are familiar with AI, often depicted as the technology driving robots, cyborgs and spaceships with human-like thinking and computer-like efficiency. The business world recognises AI’s potential, and invests heavily in its development, seeing it as a key to technological advancement, competitiveness and profitability. Technology giants like Microsoft, Meta and Google emphasise AI’s significance.

The price tag of AI

AI can indeed improve decision making, efficiency, cost-effectiveness and customer relations. However, it comes at a substantial cost. Training models like ChatGPT and other Large Language Models (LLMs) demand significant financial resources. For instance, ChatGPT’s training used over 10 000 graphics processing units (GPUs), each costing around R567 223. Operating ChatGPT alone can cost up to R13 235 222 per day due to infrastructure requirements.

AI and cloud infrastructure

AI development goes beyond GPUs; it involves additional hardware and infrastructure, often relying on servers. Interestingly, these same servers used for data protection now democratise it. Cloud infrastructure plays a vital role in enabling LLMs, machine learning (ML) and the widespread use of automation. Reducing AI costs becomes crucial to business profitability.

Businesses can optimise their cloud-based operations by ensuring data integrity, while cutting costs. Leveraging Data Protection as a Service (DPaaS) is one such approach. DPaaS helps trim operational expenses related to cloud infrastructure, offsetting the rising AI development costs. This aligns with ongoing business optimisation efforts, fostering growth through cost reduction and reinvestment.

The future of data protection

AI-driven data protection offers continuous innovation to meet modern organisations’ evolving needs. Whether in the cloud or on premises, adapting to this evolving landscape is essential. Envision a future where you can automate tasks, analyse data in real time, achieve more with fewer resources, make informed decisions, receive precise security alerts, and utilise data insights for efficient customer and employee support.

These capabilities will soon become standard. Your data protection is the gateway to affordable AI adoption, offering endless possibilities.

Beyond current TCO concerns

When considering DPaaS, enterprises prioritise security, while assessing total cost of ownership (TCO). However, evaluating TCO can be challenging because of its quantitative nature and potential vendor bias. To navigate this effectively, consider these key factors:

• Deduplication and data tiering: Maximise storage efficiency and control cloud expenses.

• Cloud-native storage: Collaborate with DPaaS providers, for reduced storage costs, alongside your cloud service.

• Proactive ransomware monitoring and alerting: Ensure end-to-end data encryption and immutability for data security.

• Multi-cloud data protection: Choose DPaaS solutions aligned with diverse cloud needs.

• Support for various workloads: Your DPaaS solution should accommodate a mix of SaaS, IaaS, and on-premises resources.

• Robust reporting: Include compliance analytics to ensure adherence and future readiness.

Meeting these criteria will facilitate cost-effective data protection, enabling you to plan and reinvest your savings wisely.




Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Siemens ecosystem strengthens data and AI integration
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has announced significant expansions to its Industrial Edge ecosystem, accelerating data and AI integration and releasing enhanced cybersecurity functionalities. These enable a seamless integration of IT and OT environments, optimise processes and reduce operational disruptions.

Read more...
Siemens manages shipbuilding process for HD Hyundai
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has been selected by HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering as a preferred partner to establish an integrated platform to manage the entire shipbuilding process as a single data flow to help ensure consistency across all its global shipyard facilities.

Read more...
Transforming the process industry through digitalisation
Endress+Hauser South Africa IT in Manufacturing
By connecting field devices, systems and people, digitalisation creates new opportunities to optimise operations, enhance maintenance strategies and support continuous improvement. As a leading instrumentation provider and major source of process data, Endress+Hauser plays a key role in enabling this transformation.

Read more...
The OT operator’s guide to security and uptime on the plant
RJ Connect IT in Manufacturing
The article addresses three common questions about industrial network deployment and maintenance, exploring ways to achieve better control and visibility with more efficiency.

Read more...
The assets you can’t see are the ones that can shut you down
IT in Manufacturing
ABEGuardOT is an asset management solution that delivers continuous, non-intrusive visibility across multi-vendor environments, including Siemens, Rockwell, ABB, Honeywell, Schneider Electric, Emerson, GE and Yokogawa, with support for OPC UA, EtherNet/IP, Modbus and Profibus.

Read more...
Edge I/O NTS and the need for industrial speed
Schneider Electric South Africa IT in Manufacturing
One of the most compelling solutions to emerge from industrial automation is Edge I/O NTS, which represents a natural evolution of computing from centralised servers to localised, device-level input/output processing, offering improved speed, efficiency and resilience.

Read more...
The next wave of AI-driven process automation
Schneider Electric South Africa IT in Manufacturing
As process industries hurtle toward an AI-driven future, four powerful trends are set to redefine automation strategies in 2026: hyper automation, AI-first automation, low code/no code platforms, and advanced process intelligence.

Read more...
Huge increase in denial-of-service cyber threats
IT in Manufacturing
NETSCOUT has released its Distributed Denial-of-Service Threat Intelligence report, revealing sophisticated attacker collaboration, resilient botnets and compromised IoT infrastructure that drove more than eight million DDoS attacks worldwide.

Read more...
Sustainable manufacturing
ABB South Africa IT in Manufacturing
ABB’s production facility in Shandong province, China is delivering measurable energy and emissions reductions through the implementation of advanced digital energy management and electrification solutions.

Read more...
Open automation is breaking legacy chains
Schneider Electric South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Industrial automation is now entering a new era defined by open, software-driven principles that are breaking decades of hardware-bound limitations.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved