
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


We curate most relevant posts about Smart Manufacturing on LinkedIn and regularly share key takeaways.
This edition collectively detail the swift transformation of global industry towards smart manufacturing and Industry 5.0, driven by the fusion of advanced technologies and human expertise. This evolution is defined by the widespread implementation of robotics–including custom solutions and emerging humanoid robots–alongside highly adaptive Agentic AI systems managing factory operations. Successful digital transformation, however, is repeatedly stressed as contingent upon foundational prerequisites, such as rigorous data standards, robust system integration, and utilizing technologies like the Digital Twin for planning and optimising factory assets. Geopolitical factors and talent shortages also play a major role, as many sources contrast China’s strategic, large-scale deployment of AI with Western manufacturers struggling with policy instability and the need for specialised talent. Finally, recent industry activity, highlighted by numerous reports from SPS 2025, indicates a move toward software-defined automation and open architectural standards crucial for achieving global interoperability and supply chain resilience.
This podcast was created via Google NotebookLM.
By Thomas Allgeyer, Frenus GmbHWe curate most relevant posts about Smart Manufacturing on LinkedIn and regularly share key takeaways.
This edition collectively detail the swift transformation of global industry towards smart manufacturing and Industry 5.0, driven by the fusion of advanced technologies and human expertise. This evolution is defined by the widespread implementation of robotics–including custom solutions and emerging humanoid robots–alongside highly adaptive Agentic AI systems managing factory operations. Successful digital transformation, however, is repeatedly stressed as contingent upon foundational prerequisites, such as rigorous data standards, robust system integration, and utilizing technologies like the Digital Twin for planning and optimising factory assets. Geopolitical factors and talent shortages also play a major role, as many sources contrast China’s strategic, large-scale deployment of AI with Western manufacturers struggling with policy instability and the need for specialised talent. Finally, recent industry activity, highlighted by numerous reports from SPS 2025, indicates a move toward software-defined automation and open architectural standards crucial for achieving global interoperability and supply chain resilience.
This podcast was created via Google NotebookLM.