This white paper is aimed at anyone with responsibility for choosing, implementing, and managing distributed IT infrastructure in a retail, or more specifically, a quick-serve restaurant setting. That means IT architects, software integrators, platform and site reliability engineers, CIOs and CTOs, and virtualization, network, and storage administrators in those industries will find value here. Ideally, each of those individuals will read this, and work together as a cohesive team to bring a solid edge computing platform to fruition.
Edge computing presents a decentralized computing model tailored to the needs of emerging technologies in quick-serve restaurants (QSRs), improving performance, reliability, security, and flexibility. By processing data closer to its source, edge computing addresses challenges such as latency, bandwidth constraints, and connectivity issues, enabling QSRs to leverage emerging technologies efficiently. Initially, computing relied on centralized mainframe systems, later evolving into a distributed client-server architecture. However, the rise of IoT devices necessitated decentralized computing models to handle vast data volumes with low latency.
Edge computing emerged as a solution, bringing processing closer to data sources, reducing latency, and enhancing system efficiency. In the QSR industry, edge computing ensures system reliability, offline operation, cost savings, reduced latency, enhanced efficiency, IoT integration, data security, customization, and supply chain optimization, ultimately improving customer satisfaction and business performance.