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Global Expansion Continues for Peli Biothermal

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Global Expansion Continues for Peli Biothermal

Temperature controlled packaging company Peli Biothermal announced the continuation of global expansion efforts under new leadership from  Dominic Hyde, VP of a high performance, cost effective temperature controlled shipper rental program, Crēdo™ on Demand.

“My first year with Peli BioThermal has been extremely positive with ongoing developments benefiting our global customers, who represent eight of the top 10 pharmaceutical manufacturers worldwide,” Hyde said. “In 2018, we increased our temperature controlled container fleet size by 90%, while increasing our revenue by 90% and we are well positioned to further accelerate our growth in 2019.”

Peli Biothermal will continue growing its global footprint in addition to convenience and flexibility options for customers in 2019, as seen in 2018 with the expertise and development oversights from Hyde.

Hyde commented:

“Our growing footprint of network stations and drop points are planned to exceed 100 sites by early 2019, representing a significant investment to support the continuing worldwide growth within the pharmaceutical and biomedical industry.

“We have been busy in 2018 signing multiple freight forwarders and integrators worldwide, increasing our convenience and flexibility for customers by selecting the best locations and organisations to speed the journey of their temperature controlled shipments around the globe.

“I look forward to the exciting developments planned for 2019 as Peli BioThermal continues to lead the market with its innovative technology and advanced passive systems.”

Source: Peli Biothermal

New Year, New Operations, New Results

New Years Eve 2018 is upon us and while some are celebrating, others are wondering what it will take to create stronger, competitive results for the new year. The solutions your company implements depends on more than just recycling what might have worked in the past, it requires digging deeper in the areas sometimes overlooked and ignored. Examples of this include contracts, visibility, and employee well-being. Supply Chain 247 compiled a list of resolutions to consider for 2019.

First and foremost, keep things simple and weigh out options to involve suppliers for increased compliance efforts if simplification is not an option. In doing so, the risk of product recalls or compromised safety is eliminated.

Detailed contracts start with a granular evaluation of the task at hand and who will perform it. Consider this level of detail as a must for the upcoming year and don’t compromise the level of detail provided to those involved with the contract. This supports the idea of non-negotiable transparency – also on the list.

Technology advancements provide much more than automation and ultimately reduce operational redundancies and the risk for errors. Additionally, these advancements save companies time and valuable resources. As noted in the list of recommendations, “If you’re still managing your supply chain with paper and pen, or even spreadsheets, you’re doing it wrong,” (SC247).

Taking a step back and evaluating how these factors impact operations can make a huge difference moving forward. These solutions benefit not only the company, but the employees and overall success of the company’s supply chain management efforts. There is no point in devising a plan that can’t succeed because of minor inconsistencies in operations. These tips can help pave the way for your SCM success and bolster a competitive advantage.

Source: Supply Chain 247

 

Industry Leaders Share Tips for Streamlining Logistics

Keeping the books clean requires visibility and awareness of dollars coming and going out. Once again, in the theme of digital solutions, if you want that granular level of transparency, leveraging technology solutions in 2019 is imperative, especially for large-scale businesses. Supply chain management and financing logistics are two of the most important factors when considering logistics planning. Blume Global CEO Pervinder Johar explains why:

“In 2019 the most agile and resilient supply chains are the ones that are going to be the most successful. Natural disasters, economic flux, and rising tariffs are going to remain a concern for the supply chain industry and therefore the C-suite may reconsider its current manufacturing strategies and its global operations. To help inform these decisions, companies should combine external and internal data. Predictive analytics uses historical data and machine learning to identify and anticipate certain outcomes that become increasingly valuable as the volume of data increases. When properly analyzed, this data is helpful for identifying patterns and areas for optimization, to fuel better planning and resource utilization.”

Consider implementing a seamless management system that your business can rely on to eliminate risks such as invoice and vendor fraud, inventory stockpiling and increased inefficiencies. In doing so, companies can track products, customer purchases and deliveries all while monitoring and maintaining their supply chain.

“Predictive analytics will become highly useful to optimize resources within the supply chain in 2019. In late 2018, Gartner identified eight strategic technology trends for the supply chain and how they can provide a competitive advantage. Combined with AI and machine learning, data is the driver for predictive capabilities — with it, future performance can be optimized based on historical results,” Johar said. “This data is powerful and has the potential to positively impact every aspect of the supply chain, from sourcing and compliance to production and quality control. Embracing the value of technologies such as predictive analytics is essential for a strong foundation, upon which to build a digital supply chain.”

Leveraging Licensed Spectrum and IEEE 802.16s for Mission Critical IoT Wireless Networks

Autonomous vehicles and trains are no longer figments of one’s imagination. Innovators such as Tesla have proven that we have the technology available today to build semi-automated vehicles. However, to make truly driverless cars, trucks, and trains a functioning reality on the roads and rails, it’s necessary to deploy communications networks and technologies that assure the requirements for mission critical operations can and will be met all the time, not just most of the time.

As we fast forward towards this new reality, it is important to understand that the U.S. Department of Transportation has started to build a loose framework of principals within its report, “Automated Vehicles 3.0: Preparing the Future of Transportation”. Further, the American Association of Railroads (AAR) and its members have established committees to create standards for automated train operations. Their efforts have prioritized operational safety leveraging a myriad of enabling technologies, software and infrastructure.

Another critical component of the analysis and evaluation is determining the communications infrastructure requirements that will enable these automated vehicles to operate safely, as well as how to responsibly introduce them to the roads and rails for coexistence with manually operated vehicles. This analysis brings to focus the need for control over these networks by the operators.  It also suggests the need for more private communications networks, optimized use of existing licensed radio frequency (RF) spectrum, and the possible need for allocation of more spectrum for licensed use and mission critical requirements.

While the conclusions from this analysis and evaluation aren’t complete, it is clear that companies with mission critical operations and applications, such as the transportation and rail industries, will need to have control over the design, operation and evolution of the communications networks. They are going to require data communications with the highest levels of security, reliability, and quality of service to support the rapidly evolving requirements of their operations. However, despite these requirements, the solution can’t be “at any cost”. The total cost of ownership for these networks must be realistic and not cost prohibitive. This strongly suggests the need for a standards-based communications technology that can be used across multiple industries with economies of scale in manufacturing and a vibrant ecosystem of developers and manufacturers.

Private Vs. Public Networks for Transportation

The transportation and rail industries use of private, licensed spectrum for mission critical control and signaling long predates the availability of the commercial wireless networks.  Even with the advent of the first cellular networks in the mid-1980s, industrial companies have maintained their critical wireless networks given that commercial wireless networks are designed for the consumer market and applications, and they lack the reliability, quality of service, security, and availability required by the rail and transportation industry.  Commercial wireless providers are unable to effectively prioritize traffic for mission critical applications or specific operations.  For example, on a commercial network, there is no way to prioritize a data signal being sent to prevent a train collision over an Instagram post or a video download from Netflix customer. These mission critical applications, control signals and critical data impacting safety and operation’s situational awareness need to be sent, received, and acknowledged with the highest level of reliability and without delay.

The Need for Standardized Protocols

While transportation and rail have had their own private networks using private licensed spectrum for decades, the networks and the spectrum allocated to them use very narrow portions of radio frequency with limited data rates.  This was adequate for voice and low throughput data communications that rail and transportation (and other industries) relied on in the past. However, as we move into an era of increased automation, with higher throughput and greater volume of devices and applications which include controls, increased security, and mission critical applications like positive train control (PTC), the transportation and rail operators need to be able to utilize existing private, licensed spectrum they have been allocated, but also need additional bandwidth and more capacity.  More and more broadband spectrum is being acquired by the commercial wireless service providers who purchase spectrum at auction for billions of dollars, and whose primary purpose is to provide services to millions and millions of consumers. They have a completely different business model than what is needed by mission critical industries.

One of the challenges that transportation and rail operators face, as do other mission critical industries, is that until recently there has not been a viable data communications standard and related technology to increase data capacity in narrower channel spectrum. Most of the  standards work on data communications has taken place for broadband spectrum.  To that end, Long Term Evolution (LTE) requires a minimum of 1.4 MHz channels and IEEE 802.16 requires a minimum of 1.25 MHz channels. This means mission critical entities were forced into proprietary solutions. While proprietary solutions are purpose built to meet specific needs (e.g., privately operated, licensed spectrum, secure, reliable and low latency), they present risks as well, namely the risk of a company or product line being discontinued, or all costs of new development and product evolution being passed on to those relatively few customers who use a specific version of the product or service. Even if the company purchasing the products has done their due diligence and taken measures to protect their interests (i.e., put the intellectual property into escrow in the event of a product or company discontinuation), there is no guarantee that another manufacturer would agree to make the equipment or provide the service, especially if the same economic risks persist.

For this reason, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), the Utilities Technology Council (UTC), leading electric utility companies and telecom manufacturers came together to modify the IEEE 802.16 standard to operate in narrower channel sizes than 1.25 MHz, thereby opening up many new licensed frequency options with greater throughput. The new standard, 802.16s, which published in October of 2017, is frequency agnostic and allows for operation in channel sizes ranging from 100 kHz up to 1.25 MHz with reduced network overhead for maximum throughput in narrower channels.

This new protocol is being used throughout multiple mission critical industries, including electric utilities, water & wastewater treatment, oil & gas, government/military and most recently is being tested for use in rail. It is the first standards-based data communications technology designed specifically for mission critical industries. Leveraging a standard creates an eco-system of manufacturers and industrial companies within North America and globally.

This also means a standard technology for private networks can be implemented and as more and more mission critical companies implement this solution, it will continue to drive down the total cost of ownership for these private networks.  This should begin to open the door for a number of new technology innovations and applications that require higher bandwidths and data throughput to be realized sooner, and at lower costs.

The Path Ahead

It’s not enough that a technology exists and can be programmed or employed to perform tasks or automate operations.  Where safety is the highest priority, and security is directly linked to safety, the potential for technology and automation can only be realized if safety and security can be assured.

Leveraging standards-based technology over private, licensed spectrum to bring a wide array of technical innovations is a way to increase safety and security assurance.  Deploying networks using standard technology is not only a responsible way to keep costs down, but also to ensure interoperability and the ability to build eco-systems that will ensure new innovation and advancements in the future.

We are excited about the path ahead for the transportation and rail industries and believe this combination of approaches to deploying next generation networks will allow these industries to accelerate the benefits from automation and innovation – and do it in a safe and secure manner.

 

Credit: Ondas

 

Asian Logistics and Maritime Conference 2018

Prepare to join thousands of global  industry experts at this year’s Asian Logistics and Maritime Conference from November 20-21 at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre.

A press release from October highlights the conference’s three main areas of focus on “Asian connectivity,  new retail revolution and its implications to logistics and logistics technology” in addition to the rapid changes in the industry (HKTDC).

An expected 70 industry experts are scheduled to speak along with Secretary-General Dato Lim Jock Hoi, who  will kick-off the conference at the opening session.

Other topics anticipated include supply-chain management, logistics, air freight, cold-chain logistics, e-commerce and the ” the International Civil Aviation Organization’s (ICAO) new air cargo security requirements and logistics technology in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area,” (HKTDC).

“Asian countries and regions are now pushing forward various trade agreements and regional development strategies, including the Hong Kong-ASEAN [Association of Southeast Asian Nations] Free Trade Agreement signed last year, the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area development plan, and the China-Singapore Initiative on Strategic Connectivity,” said HKTDC Deputy Executive Director Raymond Yip. “Under the Belt and Road Initiative, many major infrastructure projects, including new road transport systems and port developments, have been kick-started, with a number of them already completed. Such projects foster the development of trade and logistics in Asia, driving better connectivity within the regional supply chain,” (HKTDC).

In addition to traditionally seen forums and discussions, a “New Tech Dialogue and Tech Demo Session” will be featured, spotlighting some key insights and information in block chain technology and hyperloop transportation. Transpod co-founder and CEO Sebastien Gendron and Chief Analytics Officer of Blockchain in Transport Alliance are among those that will review industry tips and developments.

There are more than 100 exhibitors expected and more than 150 one-on-one business-matching sessions are being arranged in an effort to boost industry relations and spur business relationships. For a full list of noted speakers, please visit: ACNNewswire.com

 

Source: ACNNewswire.com, HKTDC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Leveraging Visibility to Gain Control of Your Supply Chain

As an increasing number of business and consumer products are now being sourced globally, supply-chain visibility management has become an undeniably vital tool for any business to have at their disposal. Knowing where your product is at any stop along the supply chain not only keeps you aware of potential roadblocks that could arise, but it also allows you to adapt and make changes to your supply chain in real-time to avoid those roadblocks.

With so much global competition vying for your customer’s dollar, the last thing your business wants to do is drop the ball over poor visibility – but how do you give customers an inside view when so many parties are involved in the supply chain? The answer – according to Steve Williamson, Director, Solution Consulting at BluJay Solutions – is leveraging that visibility with the use of mobile technology. BluJay is a provider of supply chain software and services including MobileSTAR, an app that works with both Android and iOS mobile devices to provide real-time tracking, proof of delivery and last-mile routing solutions.

“When you look at a global supply chain or placing orders, you want to know the ‘immediates,’” says Williamson. “You want to know all the things going on with your order, but when you’re manufacturing globally there’s no way to get that kind of visibility on your own. There are a lot of different systems and parties involved, and no one company is in control of it all. Providers like us are in the marketplace to bring all of those pieces together.”

But getting those pieces to fit together neatly is no small task. While BluJay offers a single technology platform with a constant flow of new features and solutions, many companies still manage supply chain execution with point solutions or manual processes.

“The challenge is, does one tool do it all? The quick answer is no. There’s no perfect recipe. Vendors are looking to pull all these technologies together and try to get the visibility from say, an RFID provider or get the visibility of an ocean container, and it’s that ‘try to get’ that is always challenging,” says Williamson.

And that challenge can be just as frustrating for end-consumers and business-to-business (B2B) customers, too.

“As a solution provider, we’re always looking at that – what would our customer’s customers experience be? Depending on what you’re moving within your supply chain, the importance of that could be tenfold – it could be that someone’s waiting on that part to do something else, so subsequently that little piece could be a domino that knocks down all the other dominoes in a bad way or in a good way.”

And that’s where apps like MobileSTAR really prove their worth. To be able to view where a shipment is at any stage in the supply chain – right from your mobile device – can really save the day for that ‘customer’s customer.’  Delayed shipments can be re-routed, or re-sourced, damaged shipments can be re-ordered, and if lost shipments cannot be found, your customer can easily notify their customer about potential delays – all from the information provided by one easy-to-use app. It’s not a perfect solution – but it’s pretty close.

“When you look at visibility, the question really comes down to ‘what kind of business are you?’ Are you a proactive business or a reactive business? Are you waiting for something to happen in your supply chain… or are you monitoring your supply chain and see a disruption and reacting to it?”

According to Williamson, the reactive provider – while still most-likely reacting appropriately to the problem – is inefficient. A proactive provider could have potentially stopped the problem earlier along in the supply chain and avoided a lot of subsequent problems along the way. Thankfully, mobile apps like BluJay’s MobileSTAR are designed to do the proactivity legwork for you. So even if you fall into the reactive category, you can be proactive with minimal effort, before the problem has a chance to get worse.

The solution, according to Williamson is called Control Tower. Control Tower monitoring allows your business to be able to “drive and react” to problems along the way by providing visibility and connectivity to supply chain partners, from origin to delivery. Information you once had to hunt down from multiple sources, and at a great cost to your time, is now streamlined and available from one platform that connects many participants.

“Solution providers like ourselves are really partners. And I think that’s the way that the supply chain will ultimately be solved. There will be strong partnerships with all the potential parties involved in a supply chain movement to be able to give the companies themselves – and then their end users – visibility.”

Samsung, Nvidia Trade Broadsides in Patent War

Washington, D.C. – South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co Ltd has filed a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) seeking to block from the U.S. market any and all products using computer-graphics chips made by  Nvidia Corp.

Samsung called on the federal agency to investigate Santa Clara, California-based Nvidia for what it says are violations of Samsung patents and for making false claims about its products.

The Korean company’s lawsuit came in response to Nvidia’s charges that Samsung and rival Qualcomm Inc of infringing patents on its graphics-processing unit (GPU).

Samsung, which had filed the lawsuit in a U.S. federal court last month, is seeking damages for deliberate infringement of several technical patents, including a few that govern the way semiconductors buffer and use data.

Also named in the complaint were 11 other Nvidia partners – computer-parts manufacturers Biostar Microtech, Elitegroup Computer Systems, EVGA, Fuhu, Jaton, Mad Catz, Ouya, Sparkle Computer, Toradex, Wikipad and ZOTAC – all of which sell products using Nvidia graphics cards and system chips.

The complaint is the latest in a series of patent-related legal actions between the two companies that started in September with Nvidia suing both Samsung and mobile-chip maker Qualcomm.

Samsung’s ITC filing is the latest broadside in a patent battle between Nvidia and Samsung.

In September, Nvidia filed a suit in U.S. Federal Court in Delaware claiming that Nvidia’s graphics patents were being violated and a complaint with the ITC calling for the agency to block shipments of some of Samsung’s best-selling smartphones and tablets into the U.S.

Last month, the ITC agreed to investigate Nvidia’s complaint.Samsung fired back in early November with its own civil suit in Virginia, claiming Nvidia and its customer Velocity Micro, as a whole, violated eight of its patents.

The ITC is expected to determine whether to initiate an investigation within 30 calendar days of a complaint being filed.

12/02/2014

Apple Plans Broad Global iPhone 6 Distribution

Cupertino, CA – By the end of this month, technology giant Apple Inc. will make its highly popular iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus available in 36 additional countries and territories across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa.

Starting with China, India and Monaco this week, the new iPhones will be available in China and 68 other countries and territories by the end of the month, including the initial launch countries.

The distribution campaign is reportedly also on track to make the devices available in more than 115 countries by the end of the year, making this the company’s fastest iPhone rollout ever.

Apple set a new record for first weekend sales of iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, having breached the 10 million mark within just three days of its initial September 9 sales launch in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Puerto Rico, Singapore, the UK, and the US.

The new iPhones will be available in Israel from Thursday, October 23 and in Czech Republic, French West Indies, Greenland, Malta, Poland, Reunion Island and South Africa the following day. They will be available in Bahrain and Kuwait from Thursday, October 30.

It will be available in further 23 countries – Albania, Bosnia, Croatia, Estonia, Greece, Guam, Hungary, Iceland, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Macau, Macedonia, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia, South Korea, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine and Thailand – on October 31.

Cupertino, California-based Apple unveiled the two new larger screen smartphones, iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, last month in San Francisco.

The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are both available in 16GB, 64GB, and 128GB versions and feature larger HD (high definition) screens than their predecessors, as well as markedly enhanced performance and power efficiency.

10/14/2014

Adobe to Close Its China Research & Development Center

Mountain View, CA – Adobe Systems has said it will shutter its research and development center in China because of what the US software giant says are the country’s “increasingly unfavorable” business conditions.

 

The Beijing facility opened its doors on October 2008 with more than 300 people involved in developing software products specifically designed for the Chinese market.

The process of closing down the center will reportedly continue through the end of the year.

 

Lay-offs have already started with about 300 people likely to face job cuts. Some 30 employees, the company said, will be relocated to the company’s headquarters in Northern California or to branch offices in India.

 

“We are committed to China as a long-term market, and will continue our sales presence nationally as always,” the company said in a statement released to the press.

 

The move, it said, “will not affect Adobe’s overall level of investment in R&D and is not an indication of financial performance in China or worldwide.”

 

Adobe did say it would, however, maintain its Chinese sales offices in Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hong Kong.

 

The Silicon Valley-based company is just one of several US-based high-tech firms that have come under increasing scrutiny by the Chinese government over allegedly illegal business practices.

 

Microsoft and Qualcomm are currently being probed, while Adobe recently had its office in Beijing raided by Chinese officials as part of an “anti-monopoly investigation” aimed at its ‘Office’ suite of programs and ‘Windows’ operating system, which is used on the vast majority of computers in China.

 

The head of the government agency investigating Microsoft for what it calls “monopoly actions” said last month that the probe includes the way the US giant distributes its media player and browser.

 

Speculation by industry analysts draws a connecting line between the investigations by Beijing and the US government’s indictment earlier this year of five members of a Chinese military unit for allegedly hacking into the computer systems of several major US companies to steal trade secrets – a charge the Chinese government vehemently denies.

 

09/29/2014

IBM Inks Three Major Technology Deals in China

Armonk, NY – IBM is increasing its footprint in China with three major deals as the global technology giant has been trying to turn around falling revenues there.

The company’s sales in China have reportedly declined 11 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, after tumbling 20 percent in the first three months of the year.

In the largest – and most surprising – deal, IBM has formed a partnership with Inspur Group Ltd. that calls for the Chinese company to install IBM’s database and WebSphere software on its mainframe computers.

The mainframes are reportedly the first ‘high-end’ servers to be wholly developed and produced by a Chinese company.

The partnership has raised some eyebrows as IBM and Inspur have maintained a serious rivalry since May when the Chinese company set out to lure IBM’s customers after a US media report was published claiming that Beijing was studying if domestic banks’ reliance on the US company’s technology threatened national security.

At the same time, IBM has said that Ping An Insurance (Group) Company of China Ltd., the largest private insurer in the country, has implemented an IBM Software Defined Storage solution “to help it speed data collection from one month to one hour, dramatically improving its ability to meet new regulatory requirements such as the annual audit and industrial data analysis.”

According to a statement issued by IBM, “With the new virtualized storage environment, Ping An is able to aggregate its growing data volumes in one hour instead of one month and accomplish data migrations easily with just a few instructions. In addition, the solution has delivered fast service times for Ping An’s critical projects.”

IBM also announced that it’s also working with China Telecom Corp. in a three-year agreement to help small- and medium-sized businesses run cloud-based applications, which are stored on remote servers instead of on-site.

Working with China Telecom, IBM said it will “provide integrated and seamless management across all SAP architectures and delivery models so clients can migrate and integrate new applications on the cloud, while maintaining and operating current applications.”

Under the agreement, IBM and China Telecom will first focus on clients in the Guangdong province and then extend the project to such “key areas” as the Yangtze River Delta, Pearl River Delta, Beijing and Tianjin.

09/10/2014