LEARNING HUB
Search interactive primers, demos, and case studies. Filter by your role or tier. Everything below is either live now or in active production — no stub pages, no marketing white papers in disguise.
Six layers, one signal path. Vocabulary, architecture, and how operators trust what they see.
Scan cycles, ladder logic, ladder vs structured text, and where PLCs actually sit in your plant.
Replay a compressor cascade in two control rooms. Watch how prioritization changes the operator outcome.
Every remote site, every radio path, every degrading link in one geospatial view. Click to inspect.
A field radio that tells you it’s failing two weeks early. Scrub the timeline and watch the AI catch it.
The terms get confused. Here’s the practical difference on the plant floor.
Remote Terminal Units — why telemetry-first edge devices live where PLCs can’t.
The 40-year-old protocol that still moves industrial data. RTU, TCP, and the gotchas in between.
The modern industrial interoperability spec — when it’s worth the lift, and when it isn’t.
From transmitter to historian — the path data actually takes across your plant.
NIST 800-82 and IEC 62443 distilled into the controls that move the needle.
Licensed MAS, cellular fallback, satellite — choosing comms for the field.
Time-series databases for industrial data — schema, retention, and the queries that matter.
Ring topologies, PRP, HSR — when each one is actually worth the cost.
Site-to-site, remote access, and why a flat VPN into the control LAN is a bad idea.
High-Performance HMI design — gray base, color reserved for abnormality.
Where to put compute — at the asset, at the gateway, at the historian, or in the cloud.
Applying zero-trust principles inside the OT boundary — what changes, what stays the same.
Behavioral models, anomaly detection, and the cases where AI earns its keep on the panel.
Combining SCADA, MES, maintenance, and weather feeds into one decision surface.
A 6-hour outage at a midstream operator — the alarms, the timeline, and what would’ve helped.
How a single failed transmitter turned into 1,200 alarms in 90 minutes.
The slow drift no one noticed — until they noticed all at once.