I often read in prestigious scientific journals about smart technologies and complex software solutions tested in air-conditioned labs under perfect conditions. However, as an engineer who s
pent years among generators in mining sites and field operations in Sudan, I know that "reality has a different opinion." The gap between what researchers write and what we actually need is what I am trying to bridge in this series.
1. "Khartoum Sun" Engineering vs. European Labs:
In university research, they assume that the internet is always available, electricity is stable, and sensors never fail. But at our sites, we face dust storms and temperatures that make even metals groan. Therefore, when I talk about "Blockchain" or "IoT," I am not talking about luxury; I am talking about building "resilient" systems that can withstand harsh conditions and guarantee the truth amidst all these challenges.
2. Seeking "Simplicity" Over "Complexity":
The biggest mistake designers make is building complex systems that a field technician cannot handle. The solution we need is a system that the "engine" understands first, and the "engineer" trusts second. We need technology that protects our data with the same strength a "perkins oil filter" protects an engine from sand.
My Message to Young Engineers and Researchers:
Don't settle for the numbers appearing on your lab screens. Go to the field, feel the heat of the generators, and understand how data gets lost amidst the noise of the machines. The Fourth Industrial Revolution will not succeed in our region unless it stems from our understanding of our local reality and daily struggles.
Conclusion:
In the next chapter, I will reveal the "roadmap" I’ve designed to integrate these partners (Ministry of Health, suppliers, and engineers) into a single network where everyone trusts each other without the need for a middleman.