A blog by Oleg Shilovitsky
Information & Comments about Engineering and Manufacturing Software

How to break limits of existing PLM architectures

How to break limits of existing PLM architectures
Oleg
Oleg
13 March, 2015 | 3 min for reading

break-limits-plm

The conventional opinion of many people in PLM domain is that technology is not a main problem in PLM industry. At the same time, PLM vendors having significant challenges to convince customers to adopt new versions of their products. Manufacturing companies are replacing PLM platforms every 10 years (some people can even come with 20 years benchmark). When you think about technological improvement, even ten years is a number which can put any manufacturing company back in dinosaur era in terms of what tech they are using.

My attention was caught by article  The Past and Future of Systems Management written by Ben Horowitz. Take some of your time during the weekend and read the article. If you have more time, I can recommend you Ben’s book – The hard thing about hard things. I found Ben’s insight about new cloud based architecture very important to understand for future development of PLM products. According to that, traditional systems would not work for modern, massive, cloud-based architectures. In fact, they would not work properly for cloud-based architectures of any scale. One of the most interesting points I captured is related to the move of system architecture “from servers to services” and the fact applications are now collection of micro services.

Traditional systems are server centric — Even relatively modern systems management products like New Relic treat servers as sacred resources which must be kept alive, but Facebook loses servers every day and it doesn’t matter. Facebook doesn’t care about servers; they care about services. Knowing when a cluster of services that provides, for example, an identity service is out of capacity is critical, but getting paged in the middle of the night because you lost one server in a cluster of 20 is asinine. Applications are now a collection of micro-services — These micro services are often managed by separate teams with all sorts of upstream and downstream dependencies. Having a solution that tracks all the relevant metrics across all the services fosters a much more collaborative environment where teams can communicate with one another (versus logs, where only the developer who wrote the app can really understand what’s going on).

It made me think again about existing PLM technologies and architectures. Most of them are 15-20 years old and they are completely server and database centric. Few years ago, I explained that in my Future of PLM databases article. In my view, the end of single PLM database architecture is coming . The new PLM system architectures can change a way customer can adopt and manage their PLM environments. Here is the idea to think about.

plm-tech-step-outside-rdbms

All existing PLM products are developed on top of existing database technological stacks. Nothing wrong with that, but here is a problem – the scale. The amount of data PLM systems have to handle is growing in scale and reach too. Manufacturing companies are dependent on significant amount of information originated and maintained outside of organization – product catalogs, supplier and other reference information. In addition to that, in many situations, the data is owned by multiple companies – not a single OEM. How traditional PLM platforms will handle that?

What is my conclusion? The conventional wisdom of PLM architectures and implementation is to put information in a single database. It must change. Modern engineering and manufacturing environments are different. It is more likely network of sacred resources rather than single PLM database. New product architectures and technologies should come to handle that. Just my thoughts…

Best, Oleg

Image courtesy of ddpavumba at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

 

Recent Posts

Also on BeyondPLM

4 6
29 May, 2017

Data is a new oil. Slowly, but surely manufacturing companies and PLM software vendors are getting to the point when...

4 December, 2018

Cloud PDM is the topic I’ve been following for some time. Check my articles about cloud PDM here. One of...

29 October, 2017

Bob Evans’ Forbes article  – Why Amazon Won’t Catch #1 Microsoft In The Cloud: Because It’s All About Software caught my...

17 March, 2017

PLM is getting more competitive these days. Cloud technology development, SaaS applications and new business models injected competitive energy between...

27 April, 2021

It doesn’t matter what business you are in, the question about differentiation is coming up. We live in an extremely...

24 May, 2013

Product data is one of my favorite topics. People in product development and manufacturing organizations are surrounded by digital data...

29 March, 2021

Autodesk’s article Why Data Interoperability Is Game-Changing for Collaboration written by Amy Banzel caught my attention over the weekend. It...

21 February, 2017

Last week I blogged about PLM selection politics. People are hard and political games in an organization are unavoidable.Existing PLM...

30 October, 2011

I was reading Oracle journal early today. Navigate your browser to read a short article – Which Cloud Service Provider...

Blogroll

To the top