New demand, new markets: What edge computing means for hardware
companies
With over 100 edge use cases identified, the
fast-growing need to power connected devices demands a custom response from
vendors.
As connected devices proliferate and their capabilities expand, so does the need
for real-time decision making untethered from cloud computing’s latency, and
from connectivity in some cases. This movement of computational capacity out of
the cloud—to the edge—is opening up a new sector: edge computing.
By circumventing the
need to access the cloud to make decisions, edge computing provides real-time
local data analysis to devices, which can include everything from remote mining equipment and autonomous vehicles to
digital billboards, wearable health appliances, and more.
IoT devices tend to
operate under different conditions from those of the controlled environments of
offices and factories, driving demand for a whole new set of technologies that
can allow computing in those situations. Take the scenario of a military drone
deployed on a tactical surveillance mission in a high-intensity combat zone. It
is essential for the drone to be able to collect, process, and transmit
high-quality data in real time, despite numerous challenges, including remote
location, limited connectivity, and extreme environmental conditions.
While the drone can use
mobile satellite connectivity to access the secure military cloud, it’s much
faster if it does the computing onboard, using lightweight data storage and
compute power. This way of computing—on the edge of the cloud—lets the drone
stay in sync with both the command center and troops on the ground, without the
latency that computing in the cloud involves. Once the job is done, the drone
returns to base and can connect with the larger system, now transferring its
data to the cloud, where it can be used to feed algorithms and other advanced
analytics activities.
In considering the
sheer variety and volume of edge use cases, it becomes clear that the demand
for the edge computing technologies that enable them will in turn create myriad
opportunities in a vast number of industries. In this article, we map out more
than 100 edge computing use cases across 11 sectors that we believe could
create more than $200 billion in hardware value in the next five to seven years
(Exhibit 1 IN ORIGINAL ARTICLE).
What drives edge computing?
To understand what
effect edge computing will have, it is important to know what causes its
evolution. Edge computers have an infinitely wide range of uses; however, the
conditions in which they operate form the driving factors for this new field
and the technologies that serve it. These are:
Varied connectivity and
data mobility. Edge technologies
can operate in places that might limit or require intermittent connectivity to
the cloud for services like computing, storage, backup, and analytics.
Need for real-time
decision making. Edge use cases
often require data to be processed instantly, for self-driving cars or
automatic picking machines, for example. These devices and platforms need to be
able to do analytics locally, without first sending data to the cloud, so
decisions can be made rapidly.
Localized compute
power. Edge computers
need to be lightweight devices that can make fast, secure decisions without the
support of bigger computing power.
New storage and
security needs. As the numbers of
sensors generating data on remote and mobile devices grow, so does the need for
efficient storage that can be secured in a variety of environments.
Intermittent power. Power and infrastructure
variations at the edge are pushing the boundaries of performance and
capabilities of edge solutions. Especially in industrial applications, edge computers need to be able to operate with a power
supply that might be sporadic.
What opportunities will edge computing open?
Unlike recent
technological advances such as cloud computing, where most gains were captured
by just a few major players in the technology sector, edge computing creates
opportunities across a breadth of industries. In addition, while much of
today’s technical infrastructure is sector-agnostic—the same cloud that powers
an ecommerce engine also powers the workflow of a bank—edge computing
technologies need to be more specialized. For example, the data storage and
computing power needed for precision agriculture will be different from that
needed to run mobile, durable medical appliances or safety equipment in a mine.
In our research we
identified 107 edge computing use cases
(Exhibit 2 IN ORIGINAL ARTICLE).
These
applications are not conceptual: we identified 3,000 companies deploying these
use cases today to understand the potential opportunities across sectors and
the technology stack. Our calculation of the value they could generate focused
on hardware, but of course the opportunity extends to software too. We
considered the hardware stacks (the value of the sensor, on-device firmware,
storage, and processor, for example) and use cases across the edge value chain
(including edge computers at different points in the architecture).
To chart each
particular opportunity, we adopted an industry lens to conduct our analysis,
identifying edge use cases and quantifying the potential resulting hardware
value. Based on the percentage of edge use cases in each vertical, the top
three verticals are:
·
Travel, transportation,
and logistics
·
Global energy and
materials
·
Public sector and
utilities
The benefits of past
technology revolutions were concentrated in sectors with heavy tech users, such
as financial services. For edge computing, sectors that have traditionally been
less tech-intensive, such as energy and materials, stand to make substantial
improvements in human productivity and safety from edge computing.
Given the central theme
of edge computing—that a majority of the computing is done closer to where the
data is being generated, and so real-time decision making can’t rely on the
traditional cloud or massive on-premises data centers, the varying conditions
that each use case involves drive the technology needed for it. Looking at this
through the lens of specific use cases gives a sense of the range of
technologies that will be needed. For example, autonomous vehicles rely on
visual processing, among other technologies, and these systems have to be able
to withstand rugged environments that involve variations in weather, vibration,
and connectivity.
(Exhibit 3 IN ORIGINAL ARTICLE).
The edge will soon be everywhere
Very soon edge
computers will be all around us performing distributed computing across a
multitude of devices in homes and factories, on farms, and throughout public
infrastructure. The forces fueling the demand for these devices and the
technologies enabling them are advancing rapidly. For tech companies, the
development of edge technology will revolutionize industry with solutions
customized for diverse use cases. This will create a paradigm shift from the
device and original equipment makers all the way through to how such products
are sold, installed, and serviced. The changes that result will affect all
players in the tech stack, consumers in a vast array of sectors, and any
companies and leaders looking to have a role in it.
By JM Chabas, Chandra
Gnanasambandam, Sanchi Gupte, and Mitra Mahdavian
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/high-tech/our-insights/new-demand-new-markets-what-edge-computing-means-for-hardware-companies?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1811&hlkid=9c60010d1b394427a06c47feb2e3401c&hctky=1627601&hdpid=1dbd559b-1690-4c8b-bc99-35b7ed7279a2
No comments:
Post a Comment