Tuesday 29 December 2015

Modi visit to the UK Adds to Make In India Momentum

17th November, 2015. London, UK. PM Narendra Modi, in keeping with the format, addressed the Indian dispora of the United Kingdom to a packed Wembley Stadium. It is clear that no other Indian Prime Minister has ever represented the Indian nation from a cultural and political standpoint to the world. Our knowledge and interest on the visit was based on the societal benefit of having additional markets to supply, to collaborate with and bring even further economies of scale to the increase in electronic manufacturing.

(Jay Shah, Friends of India and Bikal partner, second from the right). 

Bikal has been to India on three occasions in 2015 sparked by a February UKTI trade mission that took place. This highly concentrated 4 days, attending IESA (India Electronic & Semi-conductor Association) and ELCINA annual events in Bangalore and Chennai respectively, reinforced the emerging market opportunity but also gave the team the detail in where the opportunities lie. Having been long term partners with Chinese product and component manufacturers Bikal has been researching how to partner with other factories around the world. The timing of this mission, the Make in India campaign (to promote manufacturing in India and reduce imports) and then Modi’s visit to the UK have contributed to our set up of our manufacturing partners in the UK.

Tuesday 22 December 2015

Big data analytics – The Power of Petabytes

Big Data Analytics






 






                                          

   

Big data analytics – The Power of Petabytes


Fifteen years ago, it was a landmark achievement. Ten years ago, it was an intriguing but highly expensive research tool. Now, falling costs, soaring accuracy and a steadily expanding base of scientific knowledge have brought genome sequencing to the cusp of routine clinical care.

The US$1,000 genome, initially conceived as a price point at which sequencing could become a component of personalized medicine, has arrived. “Our capacity for data generation relative to price has increased in a way that is almost unprecedented in science — roughly six orders of magnitude in the past seven or eight years,” says Paul Flicek, a specialist in computational genomics at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory's European Bioinformatics Institute in Cambridge, UK. The HiSeq X Ten system developed by Illumina of San Diego, California, can sequence more than 18,000 human genomes per year, for example.


Friday 11 December 2015

Video Surveillance as a Service (VSaaS) - The 'Buzzword' for Affordable Video Storage & Management Services


5th December 2015
The global market for Video Surveillance as a Service (VSaaS) is projected to reach US$1.7 billion by 2020, driven by the growing demand for affordable video surveillance services.

Given that in-house video management and monitoring is becoming unsustainable, both from an operational and financial point of view, there is growing interest surrounding the ballooning concept of 'Video Surveillance as a Service' (VSaaS). VSaaS is a service provisioning business model where hardware, storage, management and monitoring services are offered under the software-as-a-service (SaaS) model. For service providers, the recurring revenue stream provided by this business model is major benefit, as it offers a steady cash flow into the business.

For customers, the subscription billing based service delivery model offers unrivalled cost benefits and affordability. Increasing preference for low cost commoditized IT hardware and software is a major factor driving the popularity, importance and proliferation of recurring revenue-based business models. Other major benefits driving the widespread popularity of VSaaS include ability to mix and match video storage either in the in-house datacenter or in a cloud; remote management and monitoring of surveillance videos; eliminates the need for dedicated on-premise storage and other computing resources; significantly lowers CAPEX and OPEX; anytime, anywhere access to video footage on any device; and easy pay as-you-go payment model.


Tuesday 8 December 2015

Business, Innovation and Skills Committee


3rd November 2015
Written evidence from Bikal Distribution GKB
Executive summary
  • - The digital revolution and the change in the economy of where the opportunities are.
  • - UK Academic research institutions and their ability to aid productivity through innovation.
  • - Manufacturing in volume vs high quality and partnering with emerging economies who are driving manufacturing, by way of reducing dependency in China.
  • - Requirement for the right skills pool through education and re-training.
  • - The funding requirement for short, medium and long term planning.
  • - Ageing population and cuts in welfare, leading to longer working lives.
  • - Collaboration between industries and the move away from single product companies.
The organization
A UK company that provides software and devices to capture video, audio and big data. These can then create efficient processes, increase public safety and provide preventative healthcare. This is done by liaising with end users and using HPC and algorithms to process the data. We work through our network of global offices and partners to create localized solutions for local communities. We innovate product through the collaboration with universities


Tuesday 1 December 2015

Modular data centres are greener


Nov 23rd, 2015, In Data centre, By Frank Brand – Associate Director,
Amsterdam can rightly claim to be one of the founding cities present at the birth of what is now called the ‘Data Centre Industry’ – the others in Europe being London, Frankfurt and Paris. The city continues to be a focus of attention for colocation and connectivity within the Netherlands and across the continent.

However, it is at the other end of the country in the municipality of Sittard-Geleen, where the most recent innovation in data centres can be found. Last month (Friday April 10th to be exact) saw the ground-breaking ceremony for what will become arguably the most energy efficient Tier III facility in the Netherlands.

The data centre is being built by ICTroom for the Belgian cloud services provider Cegeka and will initially provide 750kW of IT power and a design PUE of 1.14. It will integrate solar power to reduce its carbon footprint and it will make use of GEA’s indirect Air2Air cooling system which helps to reduce the cooling system's energy consumption by up to a factor of seven compared to classic cooling methods.

As with any technology, time tends to bring improvements and the data centre environment is no exception. Equipment is better designed: UPS systems running closer and closer to the theoretical maximum efficiency, air handling units which don’t leak air and generators with superior fuel economy. It is no wonder that today’s data centre has better green credentials than those built ten years ago.