EDIH4LT

European Digital Innovation Hub for Central and Western Lithuania

About us

Who we are?

Industry need driven European Digital Innovation Hub (EDIH) of Central and Western Lithuania consists of 14 partners operating throughout Lithuania and representing different areas of competence and experience.

We are operating in 5 sectors: Manufacturing, Public Sector, Healthcare & Biotechnologies, ICT and Fintech.

Our key competences are Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Cybersecurity (CS) in the fields of ​Big data, Automated BMS & WMS, Smart Sensors, ​Robotics, I​oT/IoIT, ​Automation, ​VR/AR, Automatic reporting.

Project: „INDUSTRY 4.0 LAB PLATFORM: DI4LITHUANIANID“ No. 02-016-P-0003

The European Digital Innovation Center DI4LithuanianID is part of the Industry 4.0 Lab platform, which is coordinated by the Innovation Agency Lithuania.

Hub team

Dr. Mindaugas Bulota

EDIH Coordinator (KTU)

Mindaugas Kemzūra

Project manager (KTU)

Milda Karčiauskaitė

Project manager (KTU)

Audrius Jasėnas

Senior Expert (Intechcenter)

Dovydas Zinkevičius

Senior Expert (OIXIO)

Virgilijus Dirma

Senior Advisor (Infobalt)

Egidija Veršinskienė

Senior Researcher (L3CE)

Mindaugas Kieža

Senior Expert (Lighthouse Hub)

dr. Marius Laurinaitis

Senior Researcher (MRU)

Lina Giedraitė

Senior Expert (LINPRA)

Eimantė Survilaitė

Senior Expert (ISM)

Vytis Radvila

IT Manager (Klaipėda University)

Members

Services

Prototyping, Fostering the Integration, Adaptation of various technologies, Concept validation, Testing and experimentation with digital technologies (software), Demonstration activities, Knowledge and technology transfer

1. Test before invest

Prototyping, Fostering the Integration, Adaptation of various technologies, Concept validation, Testing and experimentation with digital technologies (software), Demonstration activities, Knowledge and technology transfer

Access to funding (Fin institutions and investors: ERDF, Horizon Europe, InvestEU, Transition Mechanism and others), Investors support (Venture Capital entities, Bank loans)

2. Support to find investment

Access to funding (Fin institutions and investors: ERDF, Horizon Europe, InvestEU, Transition Mechanism and others), Investors support (Venture Capital entities, Bank loans)

Short-term advanced Digital Skills training courses, Visioning and strategy development, Awareness creation, Mentoring, Hosting or providing training, Technology road mapping

3. Skills & Training

Short-term advanced Digital Skills training courses, Visioning and strategy development, Awareness creation, Mentoring, Hosting or providing training, Technology road mapping

Networking, Incubator/Accelerator support, Voice of the Customers

4. Ecosystem building & Networking

Networking, Incubator/Accelerator support, Voice of the Customers

News

Ultrasound technology makes Lithuania world-famous: “We started with an idea to apply it to industry”
2025 January 09

The ultrasound solutions developed by the Lithuanian company Ulsontech are already attracting interest not only from European but also from Asian businesses. Dr Vykintas Samaitis, CEO of the company, which has successfully entered international markets, says that this achievement is not only the result of consistent work, but also of the introduction of new digitalisation solutions, thanks to the support of the European Digital Innovation Centre “EDIH4LT” and the Innovation Agency.

International attention for Lithuanian technology

Ulsontech, a manufacturer of state-of-the-art ultrasound technology, is rapidly making its way into international markets, thanks to the advice of the EDIH4LT Digitalisation Centre. The small but globally renowned company has been successfully developing ultrasound solutions for production process control, liquid level measurement and material defect detection since 2019. The technologies developed in Lithuania not only solve industrial problems, but also open new opportunities in the energy, chemical, medical and construction industries.

“We started with an idea of how ultrasound can be applied to industrial needs, and step by step we have developed a fully certified product, which, with the help of the digitalisation centre, is successfully making its way to the international markets,” says Dr. Samaitis, CEO of Ulsontech. According to him, today the Lithuanian product is already CE-certified, which allows the product to be marketed throughout the European Union. Rail, manufacturing and oil companies in Europe and Asia are interested in the solutions developed in Lithuania.

The idea to use ultrasound technology for non-invasive measurements came to Samaitis during his doctoral studies at KTU. Later, he joined the Institute of Ultrasound Science and together with his colleagues researched various measurement solutions. “The Ulsontech device was born during the development of an ammonia liquid meter for a chemical industry company. This unique Lithuanian device can measure the amount of liquid in any container without opening it.

“Such niche solutions are motivated by the opportunity to create something that doesn’t exist, the needs of customers and clients, and scientific curiosity. When working with technology, we often try to see not only the commercial potential of an idea, but also its scientific potential,” says Samaitis. According to him, the Ulsontech project was launched in 2019-2020, so it took almost 5 years to commercialise the idea. Today, this innovation can already be applied to solve problems of safe operation, ecology and energy saving wherever remote monitoring is needed – in medicine, construction, manufacturing, nuclear energy. It is estimated that 10 Ulsontech solutions have already been deployed in companies worldwide.

Product development has been driven by exceptional specialists

According to Samaitis, the sophisticated technology used by Ulsontech is compact – it is the size of a shoebox, so it can be integrated into the control centres of many industrial companies, but there is no limit to perfection. According to the researcher, the digitisation centre’s biggest help in enabling the company to move forward even faster was the ability to create an improved version of the product, and with the help of external consultants, the product reached the highest level of technical advancement, Level 9. Today, it has been commercialised and is being successfully deployed in production.

“The Digitalisation Centre has helped us to address specific problems that arose during application. We received advice from specialists with rare expertise, so we were able to improve the product in terms of technology, software and functionality,” says Samaitis. The newer version of the product is more accurate, more compact and easier to use. It is estimated that a total of around EUR 100 000 has already been invested in the development and commercialisation of this innovation.

Ulsontech’s main focus is the European and Asian markets. However, Samaitis points out that the market for ultrasound solutions in the industry, although important, is very niche, so it is not easy to find customers in other countries. According to him, it was the support of the EDIH4LT centre, in contact with other centres in the European network and decision makers, that was extremely valuable and contributed significantly to the company’s international development.

The Digitisation Centres welcome companies in different fields

According to Teresė Škutaitė, Head of the Innovation Agency GreenTech Hub, these centres are consortia, so they are made up of both business and scientific institutions. Experts can therefore provide a very wide range of solutions and suggest the best way to go digital. The experts tailor solutions to the individual needs of each organisation or company.

“All companies facing challenges in choosing or applying new digital solutions can seek free advice from the digitisation centres. This is a great opportunity for businesses to take a bold step forward with the help of professionals. The EDIH4LT Digital Innovation Hub alone has been used by more than 300 clients in the last two years,” says Teresė Škutaitė, Head of the Innovation Agency GreenTech Hub.

According to Dr Mindaugas Bulota, EDIH4LT coordinator, the main sectors in which the Hub specialises are manufacturing, healthcare and biotechnology, IT and financial technology. Large companies, companies with fewer resources for investment and public sector organisations all apply for free advice.

“Most companies, in particular, want to assess their digital maturity and create a roadmap for developing and commercialising innovation. The biggest value is that we can create an environment and test the technology in the centre before making an investment decision,” says Mr. Bulota.

In the later stages, EDIH4LT advises clients on finding external funding, assists in the implementation of new systems, organises training and catalyses the expansion in foreign countries. The training services are particularly popular, with over 600 participants in the centre’s training courses alone over two years.

Mr. Bulota reminds that the centres can be contacted via the ESIC contact details and services start immediately after an initial needs assessment.

Published by: Rasa Naktinė, Innovation Agency

Digitalisation: everyone has heard, but knowledge is lacking
2023 December 07

Digitisation received generous attention during the coronavirus pandemic. Digital tools have become a means for many businesses and the public sector to maintain at least a modicum of normality. Everyone has said so much about digitisation that the understanding of its benefits in business and the public sector seems obvious.

However, the partners of the European Digital Innovation Centre’s DI4 Lithuanian ID project say that awareness still needs to be raised, while at the same time moving towards specific, individual problems and targeted training, practical testing of technologies and support for digitisation pilot projects.

A deeper understanding is needed

Although some digital tools were adapted during the coronavirus pandemic, such as remote meetings and digitisation of documents, that was mostly the end of the story. As experts say, it is just a change of form – from analogue, physical to digital.

From the fact that information is transferred from paper to digital form and sent by email, but then it is up to a human being to process it – to read it and take action, the process itself has not changed in the slightest and the real benefits of digitisation have not been felt by the organisation.

Digitisation is therefore a necessary but not a sufficient condition for digitisation, where digital technologies are applied to change certain processes. For example, by automating production, information reception, processing and response, where this does not require human decisions.

“Companies and organisations often do not have specific knowledge, although they have heard of digitisation and digitalisation, but do not know what it would mean for them and their processes”, says Mindaugas Bulota, Head of the National Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship of Kaunas University of Technology (KTU), the coordinator of the “DI4 Lithuanian ID” project.

According to him, a significant obstacle is also the natural resistance of employees, because in order for an organisation to use digital technologies to change certain processes, it has to learn, and additional activities arise. “In the beginning, you have to spend more time, more effort, but in the long term it helps to reduce costs,” he notes.

Benefits – and exchange of experience

The EU-funded DI4 Lithuanian ID project, which started a year ago and will continue for the next couple of years, aims to help businesses and organisations take those initial steps towards digital transformation.

The core competencies of the project consortium, which consists of 14 partners, are focused on artificial intelligence and cyber security, big data, automated BMS and WMS, smart sensors, robotics, IoT/IoIT, automation, VR/AR, and automated reporting.

The consortium operates in 5 sectors: manufacturing, public sector, healthcare and biotechnology, ICT and financial technology.

It starts with an introduction to the technologies, then goes deeper, exploring how specific problems can be solved with them.

“The interest is there. Around 150 companies have already participated in our training. They range from one person to large companies with 500 or more employees, as well as public sector bodies,” says the head of KTU’s National Centre for Innovation and Business.

“One of the most important benefits of these initial events and trainings is the opportunity to network with each other. Representatives of organisations come with a certain vision of digitalisation, and at the event they talk to their colleagues, share that vision, their practice and experience”, says M.Bulota.

He said that clients have very individual questions, which is why targeted meetings are organised in the later stages for companies to examine their specific cases.

Digitalisation in its various aspects

According to M.Bulota, the great value of the consortium is that its members cover the whole spectrum and clients can get not only the technological knowledge, but also the legal knowledge that is necessary for digitisation, and can look at potential investments from different angles.

“System integrators who are among the partners and who implement technological solutions on a daily basis can point out from their own experience what works, what to look out for, and what might not be valuable,” explains the head of the KTU’s National Centre for Innovation and Business.

The training and the development of certain solutions for testing are free of charge. “The aim is to give our clients the opportunity to test solutions and technologies before investing in them, to gain the necessary knowledge,” says Dovydas Zinkevičius, Director of Columbus Lietuva, one of the partners of “DI4 Lithuanian ID”.

According to him, the project programme provides an opportunity to clarify one’s need, helps to form a reasoned investment decision after trying one or another tool.

Some of the project’s clients have already matured into concrete implementations. “We hope to share good examples in the near future”, says D.Zinkevičius.

M.Bulota noted that it would be useful to provide support to companies in the later stages of digitisation, when pilot deployment projects are carried out on a limited scale. “This would further encourage digitisation in our industry, public sector and other organisations,” he noted.

 

EDIH4LT – helping the public and private sectors to adapt
2024 June 12

April 10, 2024, INFOBALT, the largest Lithuania national association of ICT organizations, organised the highly anticipated “National Cyber Security Forum: NIS2 Directive Adoption”. The event aimed to introduce the NIS2 directive and its adoption perspectives to both the public and private sectors of Lithuania.

The main goal of the forum was to offer insights into the NIS2 directive, shedding light on its implications for various types of organizations. Moreover, the aim was to motivate national stakeholders to kickstart actionable measures immediately following the event.

With an overwhelming response, the conference attracted over 200 participants, showcasing a keen interest in understanding the NIS2 directive and its potential impact on organizational finances, processes and resources.

In the light of this, Infobalt introduced the EU instruments aligned with the goals of the NIS2 Directive, offering support to the most vulnerable segment of business entities, SMEs.

  • EDIH4LT https://edih4lt.com/ project offers training, educational programs, and digitalization services catered to the public and private sector in Central and Western Lithuania.
  • Other projects developed a set of trainings based on ENISA European Cybersecurity Skills Framework and made them available for wider audience.

With over 4000 Lithuanian organizations set to be impacted by the NIS2 directive. Thus, consolidation of existing tools, initiatives, projects and expertise in the field could significantly help in streamlining this challenging process and minimizing disruptions to business activities.

Open Digital Maturity Assessment

here.

Events

2025-02-12 09:00
2025-02-12 09:00
Artificial intelligence in business: practical applications

The Lithuanian Association of Digital Technologies INFOBALT together with Kaunas Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Crafts invites you to take part in the Artificial Intelligence training course “Artificial Intelligence in Business: practical applications” for small and medium-sized enterprises from Central and Western Lithuania. The training will take place on 12 February at 9 a.m. For those unable to attend live, there will be an opportunity to join remotely.

Tired of Excel spreadsheets? Employ advanced data management tools and artificial intelligence! This training will give you the opportunity to learn how artificial intelligence (AI) works and how it can be applied to your data. You will analyse different areas of AI, such as machine learning and data analytics, along with examples of how these technologies can be applied in business.In addition to theoretical knowledge, there will be a strong focus on practical challenges. You will have the opportunity to analyse data and model solutions in real-life situations, allowing you to understand how data-driven solutions can improve business processes and solve problems efficiently. This will be an interactive training course for anyone who wants to expand their knowledge of data science, artificial intelligence and data-driven solutions.

The training will be conducted by Rolandas Rimkevičius, artificial intelligence expert, head of the data analytics company Dataera and founder of the Data Academy DATACADEMY. Participants will have the opportunity to receive certificates confirming their knowledge.

In order to be approved for registration and to be able to attend the training free of charge, you must meet the following criteria:

  • Your company must not be in financial difficulties;
  • The company must be registered in Western and Central Lithuania.

In order to verify your company’s eligibility, we will ask you to fill in the following documents: a declaration from one of the companies, a consent for the services received, a digital maturity questionnaire.

The training programme can be found here.

Registration you can found here.

2023-06-06 09:00

https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=SHPGoK96QEGcWjouBr8PDc1o9a9-NNNMrG0-EoOb5ddUN1laNk9LVE5VREhDUUQ4NTRKUkUzRzNJSC4u&origin=lprLink

here.

To be confirmed and receive the training free of charge, you must meet the following criteria:

  • The company must not be in financial difficulties,
  • The company must have a physical presence in Western and Central Lithuania.

In order to verify the company’s eligibility for the registration of State aid, we will need to complete the following documents:

  • one company declaration,
  • declaration of the services received.

IMPORTANT: The number of participants is limited to 30 places. Places are subject to the completion of the State aid documents and confirmation. The training is partly funded by the European Union project Industry 4.0 Lab Platform: DI4LithuanianID.

Please hurry up and register, the number of places is limited.

Registration -> https://forms.gle/Hgq6134MVQmDiN5dA

https://forms.gle/rVocBJ1LaQEtTtt5A

here.

Registration form here.

IMPORTANT: The number of participants is limited to 30 places. Only 1 person per company or organisation can register. Places are confirmed by completing de minimis documents and receiving confirmation. The training is funded by the European Union project “Industry 4.0 Lab Platform: DI4LithuanianID”.

here.

Registration you can found here.

The registration form can be found here.

IMPORTANT: The number of participants is limited. Places are subject to completion of the de minimis documents and confirmation.

The event is funded by the European Union project Industry 4.0 Lab Platform: DI4LithuanianID.

Register now and be part of DroneLab! It’s not just a celebration of technology, it’s real help for those who defend freedom.

Programme:

  • 13 November. | Artificial Intelligence, ChatGPT and Automation with Antanas Bernatonis.
  • 15 November. November 18 | Email. Email Efficiency with Matas Pocius.
  • 18 November. | Neuromarketing and digital tools with Indrė Razbadauskaitė-Venskė.
  • 20 November. | Marketing 6.0 and the future of digital marketing with Benas Maslauskas.
  • 26 November. | Data-driven solutions with Radvilas Šeputis.

Full training programme here.

Find out how AI, neuromarketing and advanced digital tools can take your business to the next level!

To be approved for registration and to attend the training free of charge, you must meet the following criteria:

  • Your company must not be in financial difficulties;
  • The company has a sufficient de minimis aid balance (not having used EUR 300,000 in the last 3 years);
  • The company must be physically active in Western and Central Lithuania.

In order to verify the eligibility of the company, the following documents will have to be filled in: Single Company Declaration, SME Declaration, Hardship Assessment Table, Digital Maturity Questionnaire (which will be sent to you upon registration).

The registration form can be found here.

IMPORTANT: The number of participants is limited. Places are subject to completion of de minimis documents and confirmation. The training is funded by the European Union project “Industry 4.0 Lab Platform: DI4LithuanianID” (Training value 3000 EUR).

If you have any questions – sandra.liekyte@lighthouse.lt

Location: Lighthouse SIC, Liepų str. 83a, Klaipėda

Register and get ready to gain knowledge that will help your digital transformation!