 |
| CONSTRUCTION
LINK Combining tools with purpose. |
Looking forward,
industry deep-thinkers say the near term holds useful tools
ready for work that need only be appreciated, adapted and
applied. The future holds inventions yet to be defined.
"When it comes to new technology
thats ready to take the construction and building industry
by storm, its out there," says Ric Jackson, FIATECH
managing director. He says technologies are just waiting to
meet the criteria of solving problems, being easy to use and
being affordable. "Youve got to rank them not in
terms of this is cool, but in terms of I
have a particular problem that is causing me pain and Ive
got to fix it. If we can rank things according to that,
we can accelerate innovation."
As an example, he cites a recent
FIATECH test at a Fluor Corp. construction site in Puerto
Rico of a commercially ready sensing technology from Nomadics
Inc., Stillwater, Okla. Sensors took the temperature of curing
concrete, then plotted it against a baseline curve to gauge
maturity. The readings process allowed the crew to track the
curing process accurately and slice two days off every pour,
says Charles Wood, manager of FIATECHs SmartChips technology
testing program. The results led Fluor to make the system
a standard for its projects worldwide, he says.
Another SmartChips test involves
taking inventory of truckloads of fabricated pipe fitted with
Radio Frequency Identification Data tags. At a gate to the
jobsite, remote sensors take inventory by reading RFID tags
as trucks pass through. The reprogrammable tags can scan from
100 ft away or more and have batteries that should allow them
to last for years, says Wood. The test measured whether the
tags would function in a highly metallic, exposed environment.
Researchers are still analyzing the data, but so far "it
looks pretty good," Wood says.
"Almost everything we do ends
up being related to a computer, RFID, all kinds of sensors,
as well as [global positioning systems] and wireless communications,"
Wood says.
Innovators also find success combining
existing products for new purposes. Case in point: a wireless
tablet PC communicator with a touch screen and a digital camera
on the back. Field2Base Inc., Raleigh, introduced the construction-specific
tool that melds invention with existing technology.
Field crews need not know English.
Users navigate the tablets software via icons to call
up images of existing company forms. Handwriting recognition
software and wireless connections provide instant processing
and transmission of data from the field, complete with marked
up photos if desired. CEO David Lea says his goal is to solve
the problem of getting timely information from the field by
making a tool that is focused on a need and is easy to use
and affordable. The system, including hardware, leases for
about $300 a month, he says.
For some industry leaders, more
attention needs to placed on the far horizon of systems conceptualization
and development. To listen to John Voeller, chief knowledge
officer at Black and Veatch, Kansas City, that is a far more
challenging venue. You can almost hear him grind his teeth
in frustration when he talks about the plodding pace of technology
innovation and adoption. Of the tools the industry now uses
widely, "Its a nice list of good things that have
given us some value, but the consequence is that it has given
us satisfaction," he says. "And satisfaction actually
turns into an enemy, because there is so much more we could
do."
Again and again he notes examples
of technology now taking hold that have been around for decades.
He bemoans societys failure to grasp the significance
of technology that falls outside narrow boxes of interest.
The industry has talked about the
rich potential of "robotics and RFID
for decades,"
he says. "Were just now getting to the point where
society is saying that sounds interesting. The
technology adoption curve has been ridiculous."
He warns that by failing to seize
the lead in advancing technology for communications, information
management, software design and robotics, we are doing more
than missing opportunity. While the U.S. smiles in self-satisfaction,
technology innovators in Asia are putting us at a "tremendous
disadvantage."
In broadband communications, three
traditional opponentsChina, Japan and Koreahave
recently formed a consortium to deploy a common platform for
the next generation of cellphone technology. Improvements
to the so-called 4G class of phones will give them a wireless
technology platform that promises "blinding" speed,
Voeller says.
"Its where you really
get true convergence of communications worldwide, and the
ability to communicate things that current bandwidth wont
allow," Voeller says. "With 4G, your device contains
hardly any applications." After punching a request into
the system, it provides the user with the latest software
available.
Developers are meeting another
challenge by building intrinsic, real-time translation into
a telephone system so Japanese can conduct business in their
own language, anywhere. "No longer will everyone have
to learn English," Voeller says.
That technological capability has
already arrived. Voeller points to his PDA, a $200 Taiwanese
device running on a novel Chinese operating system that performs
English/Chinese translation in seven dialects. Higher-end
models respond to verbal command, he says, and low-priced
versions perform a host of functions western PDA users cant
even dream of, due to limitations of our software operating
systems.
Redesigning operating systems
from scratch is where the next battle of the revolution will
occur because western developers are "trapped" by
legacy operating systems that restrict innovation, he says.
"The future lies in computer technology that has absolutely
nothing to do with our legacy," Voeller claims.

When we asked our Web visitors for examples of applications
that benefit construction today, and ones with promise for
the future, they responded with open minds and a list of about
100 ideas. click
here to see them.
|