Workers
in sentence
5388 examples of Workers in a sentence
So when we look at what technology can do to general knowledge workers, I start to think there might not be something so special about this idea of a generalist, particularly when we start doing things like hooking Siri up to Watson, and having technologies that can understand what we're saying and repeat speech back to us.
But in the not-too-long-term, I think within the lifetimes of most of the people in this room, we're going to transition into an economy that is very productive, but that just doesn't need a lot of human
workers.
We've done events for council depot
workers
and tradies.
It was a very somber gathering of the reporters that worked there during the war, humanitarian aid workers, and of course the brave and courageous people of Sarajevo themselves.
The
workers
still come the next day, they do their job, but they're following different instructions.
If you could get two extra
workers
for 90 minutes to start in an hour's time, you'd do it, but they'd have to be reliable, inducted in how your cafe works.
It's found 31
workers.
Or traditionally, the German education divides children at the age of 10, very young children, between those deemed to pursue careers of knowledge
workers
and those who would end up working for the knowledge workers, and that mainly along socioeconomic lines, and that paradigm is being challenged now too.
How do countries pay their teachers relative to other highly skilled
workers?
In agile,
workers
are organized into small groups and do things in very short spans of time.
The UAW, who represented the workers, said they would offer unprecedented concessions, sacrifices to just keep those jobs in Greenville.
So this is like a management-labor negotiation in which the
workers
don't know how much profits the privately held company has, right, and they want to maybe hold out for more money, but the company might want to create the impression that there's very little to split: "I'm giving you the most that I can."
In fact, these professionals were miracle workers, but they're working in a flawed, expensive system that's set up the wrong way.
We're trying to help build a social network that can help track and train the care of seniors caring for themselves as well as the care provided by their family members or volunteer community health workers, as well as have an exchange network online, where, for example, I can donate three hours of care a day to your mom, if somebody else can help me with transportation to meals, and we exchange all of that online.
The six people in the photo are Xia Gang
workers.
And under the guidance of the amazing Lear deBessonet, we started the Public Works program, which now every summer produces these immense Shakespearean musical pageants, where Tony Award-winning actors and musicians are side by side with nannies and domestic
workers
and military veterans and recently incarcerated prisoners, amateurs and professionals, performing together on the same stage.
Even if everyone at my firm has good skills, if the
workers
at the suppliers to my firm do not have good skills, my firm is going to be less competitive competing in national and international markets.
And again, the firm that's less competitive will not be able to pay as good wages, and then, particularly in high-tech businesses, they're constantly stealing ideas and
workers
from other businesses.
So clearly the productivity of firms in Silicon Valley has a lot to do with the skills not only of the
workers
at their firm, but the
workers
at all the other firms in the metro area.
There's a lot of research evidence that those folks will stick around the state economy, and there's a lot of evidence that having more
workers
with higher skills in your local economy pays off in higher wages and job growth for your local economy, and if you calculate the numbers for each dollar, we get about three dollars back in benefits for the state economy.
Because if you earn a lot of money, you can give away a lot of money, and if you're successful in that career, you could give enough to an aid organization so that it could employ, let's say, five aid
workers
in developing countries, and each one of them would probably do about as much good as you would have done.
The first are economic, and they're really nicely summarized in an apocryphal story about a back-and-forth between Henry Ford II and Walter Reuther, who was the head of the auto
workers
union.
To tell you the kinds of societal challenges that are going to come up in the new machine age, I want to tell a story about two stereotypical American
workers.
With the revolution around 1980 of P.C.'s, the spreadsheet programs were tuned for office workers, not to replace office workers, but it respected office
workers
as being capable of being programmers.
So office
workers
became programmers of spreadsheets.
And I think we really have to look at technologies that ordinary
workers
can interact with.
And as a result of that, Mildred is very typical of today's factory
workers
in the U.S. They're older, and they're getting older and older.
She lifts her game, like the office
workers
of the 1980s lifted their game of what they could do.
Doctors, health workers, from 30 different countries, of every race, every religion, every color, worked together, fought alongside each other, fought against a common enemy, didn't fight against each other.
And when Nuna was founded, they used data to serve the health needs of lots of
workers
at large companies.
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