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At Durst's Print Next event in Brixen, INKISH speaks with Houssine Chekkar from Morocco about one of the industry's most important topics: how automation and AI will reshape printing without replacing the people who make it work.
Inspired by Christoph Gamper's keynote, the conversation explores how software, orchestration, and automation are changing the role of operators and creating new opportunities for printing companies. Rather than replacing skilled employees, Houssine believes these technologies will enable people to focus on higher-value tasks while making businesses more efficient.
The discussion also offers an interesting perspective on the Moroccan printing industry. Houssine explains why many still underestimate North Africa's technological development and why Morocco has become a growing manufacturing and export hub for both North and West Africa. With world-class printing companies, modern equipment, and an increasingly international outlook, the region is far closer to Europe and North America than many people realize.
The conversation also highlights the importance of travelling, learning from other markets, and building international relationships. As the first representative from Morocco to attend NON-EVENT, Houssine shares why these global communities matter and why he looks forward to returning again.
A thoughtful conversation about technology, people, education, and the future of print.
At Durst's Print Next event in Brixen, INKISH sits down with Andrea Riccardi, one of the key people behind Durst's highly successful P5 platform, to discuss the company's next major step: Kyveris. While many people see Kyveris as a workflow solution, Andrea explains that the vision goes much further. It is about connecting the entire production process—from order intake and RIP to printing, finishing, and logistics—using data to make printing companies smarter, more efficient, and better prepared for the future. Having played a central role in developing the P5 platform, Andrea shares how the philosophy has always been about more than building outstanding printers. The goal has been to create an ecosystem where software, sensors, machine intelligence, and production data work together to optimize every aspect of production. Kyveris is the natural evolution of that vision. The conversation also explores one of the industry's hottest topics: artificial intelligence. Andrea believes AI should be seen as an opportunity rather than a threat. Instead of replacing operators, intelligent software will support them, helping companies overcome labour shortages while allowing employees to focus on higher-value tasks. With Durst aiming to connect hundreds of machines over the coming years, Kyveris represents an ambitious journey towards Industrial Intelligence—where connected equipment, meaningful data, and intelligent automation become the foundation for the modern print factory. A fascinating conversation about software, machine intelligence, automation, and why the future of printing is about far more than the press itself.
At Durst's Print Next event in Brixen, Editor Morten B. Reitoft speaks with Christian Harder, Chief Sales Officer at Durst Group, about why more than 2,000 visitors from nearly 50 countries travelled to South Tyrol to celebrate Durst's 90th anniversary—and to experience first-hand the company's vision for the future of industrial printing. The conversation begins with the remarkable commitment shown by Durst's customers and partners. Travelling from every corner of the world, many of them are not simply attending a product launch but reaffirming long-standing relationships with a company that has built its reputation on innovation, reliability, and partnership. Christian believes this level of engagement reflects much more than technology—it reflects trust built over decades. Despite challenging market conditions across parts of the printing industry, Durst continues to grow. Christian explains how the company has strengthened its position by focusing on long-term investments, continuous innovation, and maintaining a family-owned business philosophy that allows decisions to be made with a much longer perspective than quarterly results. Whether in graphics, labels, packaging, textiles, or industrial applications, the objective remains the same: helping customers build sustainable and profitable businesses. A major part of the discussion focuses on Kyveris, Durst's new platform for intelligent workflow orchestration. While many may initially see Kyveris as another workflow solution, Christian explains that the vision is considerably broader. The platform is designed to connect machines, software, operators, and production data into one intelligent ecosystem that enables printers to become more productive, efficient, and competitive. One of the most interesting aspects of Kyveris is its open philosophy. Rather than being limited to Durst equipment, the platform is being developed as a vendor-agnostic solution capable of integrating technologies from across the production floor. By connecting presses, finishing equipment, software, and business systems—regardless of manufacturer—Durst aims to help print service providers optimise their complete production environment rather than individual machines. Throughout the interview, Christian returns to one central message: printers are not investing in equipment alone—they are investing in partnerships. Technology will continue to evolve, but long-term collaboration, customer success, and the ability to help businesses remain competitive will ultimately define the industry's future. A thoughtful conversation about leadership, innovation, workflow orchestration, and why Durst believes the future of print is built on connected production and lasting partnerships.
At Durst's Print Next event in Brixen, Editor Morten B. Reitoft speaks with Matt Ashman, Managing Director of Durst Oceania, about the Australian and New Zealand markets, why Durst continues to grow across the region, and how the company's latest strategic initiative, Kyveris, fits into the future of print production. Although Australia and New Zealand together represent a relatively small population, Durst Oceania has built an impressive presence, reaching 100 Durst installations in just seven years. Matt explains that the region continues to invest in new technology and that printers remain optimistic despite global economic uncertainty. Australian print service providers value local partnerships, long-term support, and technologies that help them remain competitive in demanding markets. The conversation naturally turns to Kyveris, Durst's new platform for intelligent workflow orchestration. Matt explains that Durst has repeatedly demonstrated its ability to anticipate where the market is heading—from photographic systems to wide-format inkjet, labels, packaging, and industrial applications. In his view, Kyveris represents the next logical step, connecting production through software, automation, and data rather than focusing solely on individual machines. Matt also shares why customers from Australia immediately accepted the invitation to travel to Brixen. Visiting Durst headquarters allows them to experience what he describes as the company's DNA—a culture where everyone is aligned behind a common vision. That commitment, combined with long-term investment in research and development, gives customers confidence that they are partnering with a company that is planning not only for today's business, but for the next decade and beyond. The discussion also touches on Durst's strategic collaborations with industry leaders, including Koenig & Bauer and OMET. Rather than trying to build every solution themselves, Durst continues to partner with companies that are leaders in their respective fields, allowing customers to benefit from complete production solutions built around best-in-class technology. A fascinating conversation about leadership, partnerships, innovation, and why Durst's vision continues to resonate with print businesses on the other side of the world.
At Durst's Print Next event in Brixen, Wayne Beckett speaks with Cees Bolijn from Probo, one of Europe's most forward-thinking print service providers, about automation, robotics, AI, and why the future of print production is being built one step at a time. Having spent the previous days attending Durst's software sessions, Cees shares his perspective on Kyveris and how it aligns with Probo's own automation strategy. While Probo is developing many of its own systems, he sees significant opportunities to combine Durst's vision with the company's existing infrastructure. For Probo, the objective is not simply workflow automation—it is the intelligent utilization of machines, materials, and people across the entire production environment. One of the most fascinating parts of the discussion focuses on robotics. Rather than placing robots directly on individual production devices, Probo is taking a broader logistics approach, using automation to move materials efficiently between machines and to create flexible production lines capable of handling different products and workflows. It is a strategy designed to maximize overall efficiency rather than optimize individual machines. The conversation also addresses one of the industry's biggest concerns: the impact of automation on employment. Cees believes robotics will inevitably change certain job functions, but rather than replacing experienced employees, the goal is to redeploy their skills towards higher-value activities such as predictive maintenance, process optimization, and quality control. At the same time, artificial intelligence is already helping to accelerate software development and simplify user interface creation, allowing innovation to move faster without necessarily increasing the size of development teams. Although Probo's automation journey only began around a year ago, measurable improvements are already visible. Better machine data, improved production sequencing, and greater visibility across operations are enabling the company to utilise both equipment and staff more effectively while laying the foundation for increasingly autonomous production. The interview concludes with a preview of INKISH FLOW, taking place at Probo later this year, where visitors will have the opportunity to experience many of these technologies in a real production environment and see first-hand how automation, robotics, and AI are reshaping modern print manufacturing. A highly insightful conversation about intelligent manufacturing, practical automation, and why the journey towards lights-out production is accelerating faster than many printers realise.
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