Summary
We all use items that are produced in factories, but do you ever stop to think about the code that powers that production? This week Jonas Neubert takes us behind the scenes and talks about the systems and software that power modern facilities, the development workflows, and how Python gets used to tie everything together.
Preface
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Your host as usual is Tobias Macey and today I’m interviewing Jonas Neubert about using Python for industrial automation
Interview
Introductions
How did you get introduced to Python?
How did you get involved in factory automation?
What are some of the technical challenges that are unique to a factory environment and the physical computing needs associated with it?
When developing new capabilities for your factory, how do you manage proper testing of your software given the need to interoperate with the hardware?
Which languages are most frequently used for command and control of industrial systems and how does Python interface with them?
How do you manage the problem of interfacing with the various different protocols and data formats that are presented by the different hardware instruments?
In your PyCon presentation you commented on the fact that security in industrial automation systems is lacking. What are some of the most common issues that you have seen?
Why is it that security is such an issue in industrial systems?
How are production releases of your software managed and how does it differ from other types of products such as web applications?
Aside from manufacturing facilities, what are some other types of environments or industries that require similar levels of hardware automation?
What are some of the most interesting or challenging projects that you have worked on?
What are some of the packages on PyPI that you find most useful in your day-to-day work?
For someone who wants to get involved in industrial automation what kind of experience should they have and what are some of the resources that you recommend?
What are some of the innovations in industrial automation that you are most excited about?
Keep In Touch
@jonemo on Twitter
Website
Jobs at Tempo Automation
Picks
Tobias
Opeth
Jonas
Pycon 2017 Talks
Eric Evenchick – Hacking Cars with Python
Building a wireless speedometer with MicroPython
Python from space by Katherine Scott
Łukasz Langa – Unicode what is the big deal
Morgan Wahl – Text is More Complicated Than You Think Comparing and Sorting Unicode
The Prepared Newsletter by Spencer Wright
Long Distance Amtrak rides!
Links
Tempo Automation
Palm webOS
Infinion Technologies
DRAM
Service Oriented Architecture
Singleton
Light Curtain
Factory Acceptance Testing
Site Acceptance Testing
Testing Pyramid
Protocol Analyzer
Multimeter
GCode
IEC-61131
Pascal
Ladder Logic
OPC Standards
OPC DA
C#
Factory Control Systems
Stuxnet
Industroyer
IEC 61850
Industrial Internet of Things
Counsyl
PySerial
FactoryBoy
Parameterized
Freezegun
Struct
XMLRPC
Factory Tours
How It’s Made
McMaster.com
Mass Customization
Life Sciences
CRISPR
PyCon – Reprogramming the human genome
Transcriptic
Autodesk Life Sciences
The intro and outro music is from Requiem for a Fish The Freak Fandango Orchestra / CC BY-SA