AWS IoT TwinMaker GA
April 22, 2022
AWS
IoT TwinMaker is a new service that makes it faster and easier for
developers to create digital twins of real-world systems like buildings,
factories, industrial equipment, and production lines. Digital twins are
virtual representations of physical systems that use real-world data to
mimic the structure, state, and behavior of the objects they represent
and are updated with new data as conditions change. AWS IoT TwinMaker
makes it easy for developers to integrate data from multiple sources
like equipment sensors, video cameras, and business applications—and
combines that data to create a knowledge graph that models the
real-world environment. With AWS IoT TwinMaker, many more customers can
use digital twins to build applications that mirror real-world systems
that improve operational efficiency and reduce downtime. There are no
upfront commitments or fees to use AWS IoT TwinMaker, and customers only
pay for accessing the data used to build and operate digital twins.
Industrial companies collect and process vast troves of data about their
equipment and facilities from sources like equipment sensors, video
cameras, and business applications (e.g., enterprise resource planning
systems or project management systems). Many customers want to combine
these data sources to create a virtual representation of their physical
systems (called a digital twin) to help them simulate and optimize
operational performance. But building and managing digital twins is hard
even for the most technically advanced organizations. To build digital
twins, customers must manually connect different types of data from
diverse sources (e.g., time-series sensor data from equipment, video
feeds from cameras, maintenance records from business applications,
etc.). Then customers have to create a knowledge graph that provides
common access to all the connected data and maps the relationships
between the data sources to the physical environment. To complete the
digital twin, customers have to build a 3D virtual representation of
their physical systems (e.g., buildings, factories, equipment,
production lines, etc.) and overlay the real-world data on to the 3D
visualization—and then ensure the digital twin is kept up to date as
conditions change. Once they have a virtual representation of their
real-world systems with real-time data, customers can build applications
for plant operators and maintenance engineers who can leverage machine
learning and analytics to extract business insights about the real-time
operational performance of their physical systems. Because the work
required is complex, the vast majority of organizations are unable to
use digital twins to improve their operations.
AWS IoT TwinMaker makes it significantly faster and easier to create
digital twins of real-world systems. Using AWS IoT TwinMaker, developers
can get started quickly building digital twins of devices, equipment,
and processes by connecting AWS IoT TwinMaker to data sources like
equipment sensors, video feeds, and business applications. AWS IoT
TwinMaker contains built-in connectors for Amazon Simple Storage Service
(Amazon S3), AWS IoT SiteWise, and Amazon Kinesis Video Streams (or
customers can add their own connectors for data sources like Amazon
Timestream, Snowflake, and Siemens MindSphere) to make it easy to gather
data from a variety of sources. AWS IoT TwinMaker automatically creates
a knowledge graph that combines and understands the relationships of the
connected data sources, so it can update the digital twin with real-time
information from the system being modeled. Customers can import existing
3D models (e.g., CAD and BIM files, point cloud scans, etc.), directly
into AWS IoT TwinMaker to easily create 3D visualizations of the
physical system and overlay the data from the knowledge graph on to the
3D visualizations to create the digital twin. Once the digital twin has
been created, developers can use an AWS IoT TwinMaker plugin for Amazon
Managed Grafana to create a web-based application that displays the
digital twin on the devices plant operators and maintenance engineers
use to monitor and inspect facilities and industrial systems. For
example, developers can create a virtual representation of a metals
processing plant by associating data from the plant’s equipment sensors
with real-time video of the various machines in operation and the
maintenance history of those machines. Developers can then set up rules
to alert plant operators when anomalies in the plant’s furnace are
detected (e.g., temperature threshold has been breached) and display
those anomalies on a 3D representation of the plant with real-time video
from the furnaces, which can help operators make quick decisions on
predictive maintenance before a furnace fails.
“Sensors for equipment, buildings, and industrial processes are
proliferating and generating massive amounts of data. Customers are
increasingly eager to use that data to optimize their operations and
processes and one way to do that is using digital twins, but they find
that building a digital twin and custom applications is difficult, time
consuming, and prohibitively expensive to maintain today,” said Michael
MacKenzie, General Manager, IoT at AWS. “With AWS IoT TwinMaker,
customers can now derive previously unavailable insights about their
operations that inform real-time improvements to their buildings,
factories, industrial equipment, and production lines, and make accurate
predictions about system behavior with minimal effort.”
AWS IoT TwinMaker is generally available today in US East (N. Virginia),
US West (Oregon), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney),
Europe (Frankfurt), and Europe (Ireland) with availability in additional
AWS Regions coming soon.
Siemens Digital Industries Software is a leader in industrial software
including digital twin solutions that connect information technology and
operational technology across the entire product lifecycle through
design, manufacturing, production, and service. “Through this
collaboration, we can leverage AWS IoT TwinMaker and other AWS services
within the low-code, data management, visualization, simulation, and
industrial IoT applications in our Xcelerator portfolio, making it
easier for customers to create digital twin solutions that can scale
from the simplest to the most complex use cases,” said Brenda Discher,
Senior Vice President for Global Strategy & Marketing, Siemens Digital
Industries Software. “Together, we are helping our customers increase
manufacturing productivity and flexibility, optimize material costs, and
better meet their energy and sustainability goals.”
Carrier is a leading provider of healthy, safe, sustainable, and
intelligent building and cold chain solutions. “At Carrier, we are
pushing to drive more innovation and connectivity to make buildings and
the cold chain more sustainable, efficient, and comfortable. To enable
rapid development of more digital solutions, we embarked on the
development of a shared services platform—carrier.io—as the foundation
of all Carrier digital services,” said Dan Levine, Senior Director IoT,
Cloud, and Software Engineering at Carrier. “AWS IoT services will be a
key enabler to accelerating the development of our carrier.io IoT
platform, and AWS IoT TwinMaker will be used to provide critical asset
modeling for the platform, enabling our applications to easily create
and integrate digital twins of real-world systems. These applications
allow our customers to use their data alongside advanced machine
learning and data analytics to decrease service costs, optimize
maintenance schedules, and increase reliability, efficiency, and
profitability of their Carrier equipment.”
INVISTA, which is a subsidiary of Koch Industries, transforms daily life
through its innovations in the nylon and specialty materials industries
used in clothing, carpets, cars, and computers, just to name a few.
“INVISTA is using AWS IoT TwinMaker to help our field personnel
efficiently address operational notifications and alerts from plant
floors across multiple, distributed locations,” said Jerry Grunewald,
Vice President of Operations Transformation at INVISTA. “With AWS IoT
TwinMaker, we can quickly and easily build a digital twin of our
manufacturing operations to give field workers a consolidated view of
all assets and operational data. By doing so, INVISTA operations is
making significant progress on our vision of the connected worker as the
outcome of our transformation effort. For example, a field technician
could pinpoint the source of equipment anomalies and identify
appropriate corrective actions.”
John Holland is one of Australia’s leading integrated infrastructure,
rail, multi-modal transport, and building companies. By finding
solutions to complex challenges and opportunities, John Holland
transforms communities to make them easier to move around, be more
connected, and become better to live in. “By their nature, construction
projects create change to their surrounding environment, and through the
use of IoT and other emerging technologies, John Holland can expand the
capabilities of our people,” said Bastian Uber, Chief Digital and
Information Officer at John Holland. “As an example, projects are
subject to environmental regulations, evidence collection, and
monitoring of environmental factors such as noise, dust, vibration, and
air quality. Using AWS IoT TwinMaker to create a construction digital
twin, we aim to provide environmental managers a 360-degree view into
the environmental impact of their project. Our platform collects,
analyzes, and displays environmental data in a realistic 3D
representation of the construction site, so environmental managers can
monitor performance, investigate claims, and gather comprehensive
historical evidence.”
Element helps industrial enterprises achieve cleaner, safer, healthier,
and more profitable operations through analytical insights that are made
possible by uniting IT/OT metadata in a flexible knowledge graph,
speeding time to insight and governing data in context. “Built with
industrial organizations in mind, Element Unify uses automated, no-code
data pipelines to integrate and contextualize IT/OT metadata and then
stores relationships within the Unify Graph,” said Andy Bane, CEO at
Element. “AWS IoT TwinMaker enables users to create highly
contextualized 3D scenes and digital twin applications for analytical
insights and actions across the plant floor, control room, and remote
operations center to help teams collaboratively solve problems with
data. The relationships stored in Unify Graph are provisioned as data
models in AWS IoT TwinMaker, which is an essential part of making all of
this work. Unify shrinks digital twin development cycles by up to
tenfold, significantly speeding time to value. It improves data quality
through graph-based relationships and brings much needed governance to
digital twins that rely on data from multiple legacy IT/OT systems
blended together with data from new IoT sources.”
FuseForward provides critical energy, education, and health care service
providers a clear path to an intelligent digital future, with expertise
across cloud, intelligent systems, advanced analytics, data privacy and
governance, and cybersecurity. “Recently, FuseForward embarked on a
collaboration with a team of academic researchers to create a digital
twin of a complete university campus. We started with one building, and
the next step is to scale up to all 60, and AWS IoT TwinMaker will make
this possible,” said Dr. Michael Lamoureux, VP of Research and Lab
Operations at FuseForward. “With AWS IoT TwinMaker, we now have the
tools to facilitate the creation of our digital twins at scale.
Components of AWS IoT TwinMaker will support digital twin development
through secure streaming data ingestion and storage, 3D visualization of
buildings and artifacts, display of operating data, and more. These
methods will allow our industry to move away from bespoke, one-off,
custom-made solutions and move into an automated digital twin creation
process for smart cities that rapidly meets the customers’ needs and
expectations over the long term.”
Radix
is a global technology company that provides consulting, engineering,
operations technology, and digital solutions. “In today’s world of
highly automated manufacturing, many enterprises seek innovations that
help modernize older process equipment to remain competitive. A
historical obstacle to the development of digital twins was the effort
to locate and build the relationships between the metadata and all of
the different pieces of process equipment,” said Elliott Bell, Program
Director at Radix Engineering & Software. “We at Radix have found that
AWS IoT TwinMaker helps systematically build the relationships that
exist within the engineering documentation, process data, business
systems, and maintenance systems, without human intervention. When
applied correctly, digital twins are the ‘automatic spell checker’ of a
manufacturing process. This greatly reduces the activities that don’t
add value in creating digital twins. Without the obstacles of mapping
the metadata, our engineers are able to assist our customers in reaching
higher levels of value creation faster.”
Matterport is a spatial-data company digitizing the built world that
unlocks unparalleled spatial-data insights for companies and individuals
to better design, build, promote, and manage their most valuable asset.
“Using immersive, dimensionally accurate 3D models from Matterport, AWS
IoT TwinMaker allows customers to create game-changing 3D experiences
for their users,” said Conway Chen, Vice President of Business
Development & Strategic Alliances at Matterport. “Through our
collaboration with AWS, enterprise customers in the industrial,
manufacturing, and smart-building industries can connect their
immersive, dimensionally accurate 3D models from Matterport with IoT
devices to enhance remote monitoring, increase working efficiencies, and
enable root-cause analysis. This collaboration provides digital twin
visualization of any space with associated data insights and analytics,
as well as real-time and historical data access to their spaces.”
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