Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Web
  4. Legacy Archives

GE betting on the ‘Industrial Internet’ with ‘Predictivity’ platform, partners with Amazon Web Services

Add as a preferred source on Google
GE_Software.Aviation.InFlight
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Today’s technology is simply amazing. You can adjust the temperature of your home with your phone, and the thermostat will even send reports of how much energy you’ve used and when you turned the heat on. General Electric has learned from consumer uses of the Internet and is working on what the company calls the “Industrial Internet.” GE took a big step forward with its plan today by announcing the new Predictivity platform and a partnership with Amazon Web Services, Accenture, and Pivotal.

So, what the hell does this all mean? GE’s vision of the Industrial Internet revolves around the idea that by 2020, industrial machines, like jet engines and MRI machines, will be connected to the Internet and will send a constant stream of information gathered by embedded sensors to their owners. For example, sensors on a jet engine could inform maintenance technicians when a piece is veering unevenly based on data from sensors on other engines. GE CEO Jeff Immelt told AllThingsD that the Industrial Internet is the next big thing because the sensors could be used to find the greatest points of jet fuel efficiency, which could save hundreds of thousands of dollars. The whole concept is predicting what’s going to happen to a machine based on historical data. Sorting through and making sense of all that data is a massive task that’s only going to grow as sensor use becomes more widespread.

Recommended Videos

This is where GE’s Predictivity software comes into play. It’s based on the Hadoop software platform and is using Proficy Historian HD, which is software that deals with historical data management. All of this data will be connected through Amazon Web Services, bringing all of these data management tools into the cloud and making it easily accessible to industrial clients. The goal is to increase efficiency. By predicting a machine’s future through analytics, GE will help businesses eliminate downtime and reduce waste. The analytical data could even help develop better ways to use GE’s industrial products. 

This isn’t necessarily technology we’ll personally see in action, but the Industrial Internet and the wrangling of big data may end up making our next plane flight shorter or (even better) cheaper.

Meghan McDonough
Former Contributor
Meghan J. McDonough is a Chicago-based purveyor of consumer technology and music. She previously wrote for LAPTOP Magazine…
Microsoft is retiring the Together Mode in Teams in favor of something cleaner and simpler
Teams is retiring Together Mode for layouts people may actually use
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Microsoft Teams is retiring one of its more recognizable meeting features, and it might be for the best. The company announced that Together Mode is going away in Teams as Microsoft is shooting towards a simpler set of meeting layouts.

To recall, Together Mode was introduced during the pandemic-era video call boom, placing participants inside shared virtual environments such as auditoriums or classrooms. It was a cute idea at the time, but it never became the everyday meeting view for most people.

Read more
Experts are worried that smarter AI gets, the dumber we might become
Experts say chatbots can help research, but leaning on them too hard risks outsourcing the work that builds intelligence
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman during the Uncapped podcast in June 2025.

AI can now answer questions so quickly that the search itself can feel optional. That convenience worries the Royal Observatory Greenwich, which has warned that instant AI answers can weaken the curiosity, scrutiny, and source-checking behind real knowledge.

The risk hides inside the usefulness. Chatbots can help people test ideas, move faster, and find new angles, but a finished response can also cut users off from the messy trail that makes learning stick. When that happens, information arrives without the struggle that turns it into judgment.

Read more
Miss the old PC days? This website lets you experience Wikipedia like it’s Windows XP
This XP-style Wikipedia explorer turns online research into a nostalgia trip, while showing how much browsing changes when search takes a back seat
File, Webpage, Person

Wikipedia has an unofficial new front door, and it looks like a desktop from a very specific era of family PCs, school labs, and chunky blue title bars.

Developer Sami Smith has built a browser-based Windows XP Wikipedia explorer that turns categories into folders and articles into documents. It’s playful, slightly inefficient, and more interesting than another AI search box bolted onto the web.

Read more