Mentioned in 19 AI use cases across 6 industries
Sensors watch how an old mine tunnel bends and strains while heavy ore is piled above it, and software uses that live evidence to decide whether the tunnel can safely handle more load.
AI watches mine cameras and changes digital no-go zones in real time so workers and vehicles are warned before entering dangerous areas.
PSEG deployed a new outage management system that gives staff near real-time information so they can decide faster where crews should go and restore power sooner.
Put all asset and work information in one place so managers can decide what to fix first, who should do it, and how money should be spent based on facts instead of opinions.
Build a live digital copy of factory operations so teams can test ideas and understand performance without guessing.
A map-based mobile app tells tree-trimming crews exactly where to go, what work ticket to complete, and lets managers see progress live instead of relying on paper maps and forms.
The mine used software to study photos of blasted rock and simulate blast-hole layouts so it could change the drilling pattern and produce rock pieces that are not too big and not too fine.
A utility replaced disconnected old systems with an integrated IBM Maximo setup so teams can manage assets, maintenance, and operations in one digital environment instead of by hand.
When the system detects signs of equipment trouble, it automatically alerts maintenance teams through the tools they already use so issues can be handled faster.
The power company upgraded its maintenance and service system so teams handling wires, meters, and field work can work faster together and serve customers better.
An AI safety system watches mine vehicle drivers and vehicle behavior to detect fatigue, speeding, and unsafe driving, then helps reduce accidents.