Aug 6 2015
Ontegrity, provider of remote monitoring with predictive analytics, site-management services, and power solutions for organizations that cannot afford power interruptions, today announced that its president, Dr. Richard Scott, will participate in two panels at the 14th IoT Evolution Expo in Las Vegas. Both will take place on August 19.
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The two sessions are part of the expo’s Connected Home and Building conference. The “Lessons in Building Automation” panel will give attendees the opportunity to learn from the experiences, obstacles, and successes of companies that have utilized the IoT to automate facilities management and eliminate the silo management of a building’s functions. The “Disaster Recovery” panel will address how the IoT technology can help identify impending disaster and assist in recovery once disaster hits.
“I’m happy to participate in the IoT Evolution Expo because IoT provides the data that is essential to effective building automation and disaster recovery,” said Scott. “That said, access to data alone is not enough: companies must quickly analyze it to extract actionable information that enables them to predict—and prevent—potential site problems and to recover quickly and efficiently from catastrophic events.”
Deep Industry Knowledge Enriches IoT Panels
Scott has years of technical and managerial experience in fields related to IoT. At Ontegrity, he has been the visionary leader of the firm’s remote monitoring and predictive analytics system, which moves site maintenance from reactive to proactive, thereby reducing maintenance costs and increasing product and service availability. As VP/GM for General Dynamics, he led a group that provided turnkey network deployment for wireless carriers, OEMs, tower companies, and the public safety community. At GTE Government Systems, Scott developed and deployed remote sensor collection and processing systems, utilizing pattern recognition and expert system-based algorithms for decision analytics.
Scott recently participated in the 15-month CSRIC (Communications Security Reliability and Interoperability Council) group on Infrastructure Sharing During Emergencies. He earned an MSEE and PhD from Stanford University and a BSEE from the University of California at Santa Barbara.