Automation
in sentence
460 examples of Automation in a sentence
It's a means to an end, not an end in itself, and
automation
allows us to have that machinery.
I think you need to separate the basics of what you're trying to do from how it gets done and the machinery of how it gets done and
automation
allows you to make that separation.
But
automation
in cars allowed that to separate, so driving is now a quite separate subject, so to speak, from engineering of the car or learning how to service it.
We are a company in the field of automation, and we'd like to do very lightweight structures because that's energy efficient, and we'd like to learn more about pneumatics and air flow phenomena.
But as the social researcher Charles Murray has documented, as we started to automate the economy, and 1960 is just about when computers started to be used by businesses, as we started to progressively inject technology and
automation
and digital stuff into the economy, the fortunes of Bill and Ted diverged a lot.
And the other thing that's kind of the major driver of this is automation, which is the deployment of all of this technology as soon as it arrives, without any kind of oversight, and then once it's out there, kind of throwing up our hands and going, "Hey, it's not us, it's the technology."
Ships have
automation
now.
First, we've already lived through mechanization of agriculture,
automation
of industry, and employment has gone up, because innovation is fundamentally about growth.
We virtualized our operating system environments, and we completed numerous
automation
projects.
Big data and algorithms are going to challenge white collar, professional knowledge work in the 21st century in the same way that factory
automation
and the assembly line challenged blue collar labor in the 20th century.
Now, the next thing we looked into was robots, automation, technology.
Not only in the production industry, but even office workers are in jeopardy and might be replaced by robots, artificial intelligence, big data, or
automation.
Let's take the automotive industry as an example, because there, more than 40 percent of industrial robots are already working and
automation
has already taken place.
As a matter of fact, the overall number of people involved in the production of a car has only changed slightly in the last decades, in spite of robots and
automation.
We're trying to get to the point of
automation.
And the first
automation
wave in the 1970s.
The bottom of that pyramid, automation, is going to take over.
I mean, given how valuable intelligence and
automation
are, we will continue to improve our technology if we are at all able to.
They're going to actually engender new kinds of jobs, new kinds of tasks that we want done, just as
automation
made up a whole bunch of new things that we didn't know we needed before, and now we can't live without them.
These facts, revealed in a recent book by Boston University economist James Bessen, raise an intriguing question: what are all those tellers doing, and why hasn't
automation
eliminated their employment by now?
I'm going to try to answer that question tonight, and along the way, I'm going to tell you what this means for the future of work and the challenges that
automation
does and does not pose for our society.
As
automation
frees our time, increases the scope of what is possible, we invent new products, new ideas, new services that command our attention, occupy our time and spur consumption.
Automation
creates wealth by allowing us to do more work in less time.
And this brings me to the challenge that we face today, the challenge that
automation
poses for us.
That feels deeply immoral, and maybe people on the left could agree, as you said, that immigration may have happened too fast, and there is a limit beyond which human societies struggle, but nonetheless this whole problem becomes de-emphasized if
automation
is the key issue, and then we try to work together on recognizing that it's real, recognizing that the problem probably wasn't properly addressed or seen or heard, and try to figure out how to rebuild communities using, well, using what?
Our own data suggest to us that two thirds of all jobs, currently existing jobs in developing countries, will be lost because of
automation.
87 percent of lost manufacturing jobs have been eliminated because we've made improvements in our own productivity through
automation.
In fact,
automation
is spreading to every production line in every country around the world.
Maybe some of the industrial workers from the cities displaced by the
automation
will find a nice alternative job here, and they will move too.
The
automation
is right now, the future is right now.
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