Dashboard WindTwin Consortium – R&D Programme of the Year Award with TWI Ltd
Dashboard is thrilled to be part of the winning team for R&D Programme of the Year Award with TWI Ltd working on the WindTwin project.
Dashboard is thrilled to be part of the winning team for R&D Programme of the Year Award with TWI Ltd working on the WindTwin project.
Amid the massive demand and continuous increase it is facing, the supply chain for lithium-ion batteries has found itself in a precarious situation.
On Wednesday evening at Green Park in Reading, the Thames Valley IoT Meetup convened, to listen to a variety of speakers in the field of IoT, Piers Corfield (Dashboard’s CEO) amongst them.
Dashboard is pleased to announce its involvement in the Wind Twin project. Wind Twin is a £2m collaborative R&D project supported by Innovate UK, with a focus to reduce maintenance costs for both onshore and offshore wind turbines by delivering optimised operations and increased energy generation.
Barely a few weeks ago, Dashboard pointed out the willingness of energy companies to merge with technology experts to create a better fit for customers, a more efficient process for themselves and an overall smarter environment to extract and analyse information from.
Even if the digital oilfield is a relatively new trend in O&G production, there is a case to be made for today being a golden age for supporting technology.
Dashboard is a very enthusiastic speaker for IoT and the effect that it could have on the modern society once its full potential is unlocked. From smart homes to industrial applications and wearable technology, IoT has been on our main focal points since the very beginning.
The Dashboard CEO Piers Corfield, fresh from TC3 in Silicon Valley, travelled to Barcelona to attend the Gartner Symposium.
We often share news and talk about energy as well as big data in our articles, as these are two topics that are not only important to our business, but also close to our hearts.
Back in 2014, the news of transparent solar energy technology first surfaced; the industry was excited by the concept of glass office buildings transforming sunlight into useful, green energy without sacrificing the aesthetic value.