(Credit Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Showing posts with label Automation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Automation. Show all posts
November 2, 2023
September 17, 2020
Automation By Gloves
Everything is so automated these days.
Here's a hydraulic oil machine.
And you see no people.
Just some blue gloves.
If you look long enough, perhaps you'll see the gloves move and work the machine all by themselves.
That's the magic of automation and computerization.
Say hi gloves! ;-)
(Credit Photo: Andy Blumnethal)
Here's a hydraulic oil machine.
And you see no people.
Just some blue gloves.
If you look long enough, perhaps you'll see the gloves move and work the machine all by themselves.
That's the magic of automation and computerization.
Say hi gloves! ;-)
(Credit Photo: Andy Blumnethal)
Automation By Gloves
January 10, 2020
3D Printed Octopus: "Shabbat Shalom"
The bendable legs are cute.
It's sitting on a camera and tripod.
Soon 3D Printed Objects will even talk, and when they do, this one will say:
Shabbat Shalom!
(Credit Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
3D Printed Octopus: "Shabbat Shalom"
Labels:
3D Printing,
AI,
Art,
Automation,
Camera,
Colorful,
Graphic,
Inanimate,
Manufacturing,
Octopus,
Office,
Peace,
Photo,
Rest,
Robotics,
Shabbat,
Shalom,
Speaking,
Speech,
Technology
August 17, 2019
Copy Any Key
Thought this was pretty cool in Safeway supermarket.
A automated key copy machine.
You insert your key.
And out pops a duplicate for you.
Home, car, business, whatever.
What is happening to that guy who used to work the key copy machine at the local locksmith?
Who says automation and robotics isn't taking and going to take away jobs.
I still remember that key machine--where the locksmith would put the key on one side and a blank on the other, and the machine would copy the surface grooves of one unto the other.
Now even that is gone.
I guess we're lucky still to have keys (for now). ;-)
(Credit Photo: Dannielle Blumenthal)
A automated key copy machine.
You insert your key.
And out pops a duplicate for you.
Home, car, business, whatever.
What is happening to that guy who used to work the key copy machine at the local locksmith?
Who says automation and robotics isn't taking and going to take away jobs.
I still remember that key machine--where the locksmith would put the key on one side and a blank on the other, and the machine would copy the surface grooves of one unto the other.
Now even that is gone.
I guess we're lucky still to have keys (for now). ;-)
(Credit Photo: Dannielle Blumenthal)
Copy Any Key
Labels:
Automation,
Change,
Copy,
Duplicate,
Economy,
Future,
Jobs,
Keys,
Locks,
Locksmith,
Photo,
Robotics,
Supermarket,
Technology,
Transformation
June 24, 2019
The Goal is Automagically
Wow, I couldn't believe that this is a real word.
Automagically.
I thought my colleague was using it as a gag.
But when I asked Dr. Google, there it was.
Automagically - Automatically + Magical
It refers to the use of computer automation and how when well-implemented it seems almost like the process is magical, ingenious, and oh, so easy.
So this is the goal for us that all our processes and efforts should be poof--automagically done and there it is! ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Automagically.
I thought my colleague was using it as a gag.
But when I asked Dr. Google, there it was.
Automagically - Automatically + Magical
It refers to the use of computer automation and how when well-implemented it seems almost like the process is magical, ingenious, and oh, so easy.
So this is the goal for us that all our processes and efforts should be poof--automagically done and there it is! ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
The Goal is Automagically
May 28, 2019
Robots In Rockville
Had some fun driving around this cool little Robot in Rockville Town Center.
I like to try out the latest gadgets.
It's funny people's reactions when they see these.
They're still not quite sure what to make of these.
Robots on the street.
Drones overhead.
Submersibles in the water.
Soon they will all be autonomous, ubiquitous, and essential.
And people will be the side attraction. ;-)
(Source Video: Dossy Blumenthal)
Robots In Rockville
Labels:
Automation,
Autonomous,
Drones,
Essentials,
Gadgets,
Needed,
People,
Robotics,
Robots,
Rockville,
Submersibles,
Technology,
Ubiquitous,
Useful,
Video
May 3, 2019
What Are The Chances for IT Project Success?
So I was teaching a class in Enterprise Architecture and IT Governance this week.
In one of the class exercises, one of the students presented something like this bell-shaped distribution curve in explaining a business case for an IT Project.
The student took a nice business approach and utilized a bell-shaped curve distribution to explain to his executives the pros and cons of a project.
Basically, depending on the projects success, the middle (1-2 standard deviations, between 68-95% chance), the project will yield a moderate level of efficiencies and cost-savings or not.
Beyond that:
- To the left are the downside risks for significant losses--project failure, creating dysfunction, increased costs, and operational risks to the mission/business.
- To the right is the upside potential for big gains--innovations, major process reengineering, automation gains, and competitive advantages.
This curve is probably a fairly accurate representation based on the high IT project failure rate in most organizations (whether they want to admit it or not).
I believe that with:
- More user-centric enterprise architecture planning on the front-end
- Better IT governance throughout
- Agile development and scrum management in execution
that we can achieve ever higher project success rates along the big upside potential that comes with it!
We still have a way to go to improve, but the bell-curve helps explains what organizations are most of the time getting from their investments. ;-)
(Source Graphic: Adapted by Andy Blumenthal from here)
In one of the class exercises, one of the students presented something like this bell-shaped distribution curve in explaining a business case for an IT Project.
The student took a nice business approach and utilized a bell-shaped curve distribution to explain to his executives the pros and cons of a project.
Basically, depending on the projects success, the middle (1-2 standard deviations, between 68-95% chance), the project will yield a moderate level of efficiencies and cost-savings or not.
Beyond that:
- To the left are the downside risks for significant losses--project failure, creating dysfunction, increased costs, and operational risks to the mission/business.
- To the right is the upside potential for big gains--innovations, major process reengineering, automation gains, and competitive advantages.
This curve is probably a fairly accurate representation based on the high IT project failure rate in most organizations (whether they want to admit it or not).
I believe that with:
- More user-centric enterprise architecture planning on the front-end
- Better IT governance throughout
- Agile development and scrum management in execution
that we can achieve ever higher project success rates along the big upside potential that comes with it!
We still have a way to go to improve, but the bell-curve helps explains what organizations are most of the time getting from their investments. ;-)
(Source Graphic: Adapted by Andy Blumenthal from here)
What Are The Chances for IT Project Success?
April 12, 2019
Gotta Love FANUC
I love FANUC industrial robots.
They are made by a secretive company in Japan and they are #1 in workplace automation worldwide!
They have over half a million installed industrial robots around the world.
Their robots are on assembly lines making everything from "cars and smartphones to beverages and drugs." They also are in Tesla and Amazon...so you know they are pretty much everywhere.
FANUC has customers in 108 countries supported by 263 service locations.
Their robots are made by...that's right other robots...80% is automated.
These robots are strong, fast, and precise, and they can do dangerous work.
This company is the future of jobs, productivity, efficiency.
But of course, people are still the brains behind the brawn. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Gotta Love FANUC
Labels:
AI,
Automation,
Efficiency,
FANUC,
Fast,
Flexible,
Future,
Industrial,
Innovation,
Japan,
Jobs,
Manufacturing,
Performance,
Precise,
Productivity,
Robotics,
Robots,
Strong,
Technology,
Video
March 21, 2019
Cool Clock in Amsterdam
Check out how the time changes in Amsterdam.
I guess automation hasn't put everyone out of a job yet. ;-)
(Source Video: Andy Blumenthal)
Cool Clock in Amsterdam
May 2, 2018
Computer Sentiment 1984
It's called: "The Unofficial I Hate Computer Book".
It was written in 1984, and like the George Orwell's book by that name, it is a dystopian view of technology.
The back cover says:
Computer haters of the world unite: It's time to recognize and avenge the wonderful advances we've made thanks to computers--excessive eyestrain and headaches, irritating beeping noises, a one-ton printout where once there was a six-page report, a "simple" programming language you can't understand without five handbooks, a dictionary, and a math degree.The book goes on with illustration after illustration of unadulterated computer hate and associated violence.
- Dogs dumping on it (see cover)
- Contests to smash it with a hammer
- Hara-kiri (suicide with a knife) into it
- Skeet shooting computers that are flung into the air
- Shotput with a computer
- Tanks rolling over them
- Sinking it in water with a heavy anvil
- Boxer practicing his punches on it
- Setting it ablaze with gasoline
- And on and on, page after hate-filled page.
So in the last 34-years, have we solved all the annoyances and complexity with computers and automation?
Do the benefits of technology outway the costs and risks across-the-board?
How do security and privacy play in the equation?
I wonder what the authors and readers back then would think of computers, tablets, smartphones and the Internet and apps nowadays--especially where we can't live without them at all. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Computer Sentiment 1984
Labels:
1984,
Addiction,
Annoyance,
Automation,
Book,
Complexity,
Computers,
Cybersecurity,
Dependence,
Design,
Dystopian,
Hate,
Illustration,
Information Technology,
Photo,
Privacy,
Sentiment,
User-centric
September 28, 2017
No Smokestacks Here
So I heard something good about human capital that I wanted to share:
It goes like this:
We can't treat "human capital" in our organizations the way we treat industrial/capital assets in our factories.
The industrial revolution--along with the sweatshops and smokestacks--have been overtaken by the service and information age.
G-d has blessed us with an abundance of wonderful material things that can now be largely produced by automation and robotization--letting us focus more than ever on developing our people, nurturing their ideas, and realizing their innovations.
In our organizations, the human assembly line has given way to thinkers and innovators.
Sure, we have to build things and sustain ourselves, but the people behind the things are what counts and not just the things themselves.
We've grown from heartless slave labor and sweatshops to emotionally intelligent, compassionate, and thriving humans beings in the workspace--or so we strive for it to be. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
It goes like this:
"There are no smokestacks here, only people!"
We can't treat "human capital" in our organizations the way we treat industrial/capital assets in our factories.
The industrial revolution--along with the sweatshops and smokestacks--have been overtaken by the service and information age.
G-d has blessed us with an abundance of wonderful material things that can now be largely produced by automation and robotization--letting us focus more than ever on developing our people, nurturing their ideas, and realizing their innovations.
In our organizations, the human assembly line has given way to thinkers and innovators.
Sure, we have to build things and sustain ourselves, but the people behind the things are what counts and not just the things themselves.
We've grown from heartless slave labor and sweatshops to emotionally intelligent, compassionate, and thriving humans beings in the workspace--or so we strive for it to be. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
No Smokestacks Here
January 26, 2017
Camera Of Life
So this open-door market has no workers there.
Someone comes in to stock the shelves periodically, and that's it!
It's completely automated of workers, and only has this automated kiosk for check-out.
As you shop, there are cameras watching you, so you don't steal anything.
Then you go to the checkout and like in other stores, you scan you items and pay with your credit card, but the difference is that it's without anyone else around at all.
Can you imagine someone would leave there business and there is no one watching you, except the cameras.
You're on your honor system.
Just think how much money the owner saves by not having to stand there or hire someone to stand there all day.
He can have 10 or 100 or 1,000 of these stores and no daily labor to pay for.
Talk about people losing their jobs to automation and robotics!
So even if someone does steal 1 or 2 things, it's a minor loss to the owner compared to paying someone to stand there and check people out all day (salary, benefits, payroll taxes, workers comp insurance, and more).
What if the camera isn't even real and it's just a dark cone, so you are just left to think that you're being surveilled...another savings for the owner.
Now imagine if we all internalized this thought in life that we were under the watchful eye of our Maker, and everyone would do the right thing even when no one else was there watching. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Camera Of Life
November 8, 2016
Hold On To Your Jobs
These statistics are dismal for manufacturing in the U.S.
Today, public sector (government) employment is 22.2 million vs. just 12.2 million manufacturing jobs.
In other words, there are 10 million or 80% more people employed by the government than making things in this country.
This is the complete opposite from 1979 when government employed 16 million people and manufacturing had 19.6 million workers.
So just 37 years ago, manufacturing employment was 22% more than our public sector employment.
Manufacturing lost 37% of it jobs, while government grew 39%.
It hasn't been since 1989 that there was parity at 18 million between the two sectors.
Lest you think that the loss in manufacturing jobs is due to automation and technology, the Economic Policy Institute states unequivocally:
"Trade, not productivity, is the culprit."
In the U.S. the annual trade deficit is over half a trillion dollars--we are hemorrhaging and no one has been even trying to stop the bleeding.
If we send all our manufacturing prowess and capacity abroad eventually we are not only going to lose our capability to make things, our ingenuity to invent things, but our finances to pay for anything.
Trade is a great thing when it is mutual and equal, not when it is one-sided and damaging to our economy and jobs.
Bad political decisions mean a poorer future for our economy and our nation. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Today, public sector (government) employment is 22.2 million vs. just 12.2 million manufacturing jobs.
In other words, there are 10 million or 80% more people employed by the government than making things in this country.
This is the complete opposite from 1979 when government employed 16 million people and manufacturing had 19.6 million workers.
So just 37 years ago, manufacturing employment was 22% more than our public sector employment.
Manufacturing lost 37% of it jobs, while government grew 39%.
It hasn't been since 1989 that there was parity at 18 million between the two sectors.
Lest you think that the loss in manufacturing jobs is due to automation and technology, the Economic Policy Institute states unequivocally:
"Trade, not productivity, is the culprit."
In the U.S. the annual trade deficit is over half a trillion dollars--we are hemorrhaging and no one has been even trying to stop the bleeding.
If we send all our manufacturing prowess and capacity abroad eventually we are not only going to lose our capability to make things, our ingenuity to invent things, but our finances to pay for anything.
Trade is a great thing when it is mutual and equal, not when it is one-sided and damaging to our economy and jobs.
Bad political decisions mean a poorer future for our economy and our nation. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Hold On To Your Jobs
September 15, 2016
Enslavement USA
I am not sure what this art was supposed to represent outside the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC.
But to me, this scene looked almost like a reenactment of enslavement.
I remember seeing similar type photos of presumed harshly treated black slaves who were forced to build the White House and the Capitol.
Sure, we are fortunate to have jobs for people in this country.
Yet, seeing these workers bending over and shoveling in hard labor and in 91 degree heat this week at the feet of this great statue just seemed more than a little demeaning and telling of where we unfortunately still are as a country.
Freedom and human rights means for everyone!
Decent jobs, wages, housing, food, healthcare and education, should be for everyone!
Maybe it's a great thing that we are advancing with automation and robots that can do the jobs that people shouldn't have to do.
So people can do and be treated as human beings and not as robot slaves. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Enslavement USA
September 6, 2016
Requirements Management 101
This was a funny Dilbert on Requirements Management.
In IT, we all know that getting requirements can be like pulling teeth.
No one either has time or desire to provide them or perhaps they simply don't know what they're really after.
Knowing what you want is a lot harder than just telling someone to automate what I got because it isn't working for me anymore!
In the comic, Dilbert shows the frustration and tension between technology providers and customers in trying to figure out what the new software should do.
Technology Person: "Tell me what you want to accomplish."
Business Customer: "Tell me what the software can do."
In the end, the customer in exasperation just asks the IT person "Can you design [the software] to tell you my requirements?"
And hence, the age old dilemma of the chicken and egg--which came first with technology, the requirements or the capability--and can't you just provide it!
(Source Comic: Dilbert By Scott Adams)
In IT, we all know that getting requirements can be like pulling teeth.
No one either has time or desire to provide them or perhaps they simply don't know what they're really after.
Knowing what you want is a lot harder than just telling someone to automate what I got because it isn't working for me anymore!
In the comic, Dilbert shows the frustration and tension between technology providers and customers in trying to figure out what the new software should do.
Technology Person: "Tell me what you want to accomplish."
Business Customer: "Tell me what the software can do."
In the end, the customer in exasperation just asks the IT person "Can you design [the software] to tell you my requirements?"
And hence, the age old dilemma of the chicken and egg--which came first with technology, the requirements or the capability--and can't you just provide it!
(Source Comic: Dilbert By Scott Adams)
Requirements Management 101
August 17, 2016
Robots, They Are Coming
I was so excited by this photo in the Wall Street Journal today.
YuMi, an industrial robot by ABB, is adroitly writing Chinese calligraphy.
If you look at the photo and think for a moment, the notion of the robot doing and the person watching is truly prophetic of how we are evolving technologically and as a species.
Yumi is made by ABB, a leading robotics company headquartered in Switzerland, that on one hand has over 300,000 robots installed worldwide, but on the other hand needs only 4,600 employees in 53 countries to produce all these fantastic and productive droids.
This robot is a work of not just incredible science and engineering, but of art and beauty.
It's sleek black and white build with two incredibly agile arms and hands plus a viewing camera, enables it to do small parts assembly or even fine calligraphic work.
YuMi stands for "You and Me" working together, collaboratively.
While we surely will work together, the flip side is that with robotics, some people (who don't make the transition to STEM) may not be working much at all.
But of course, the positive side is that we are looking at an incredible capacity to do more and better with less!
Leaving the innovation to humans, and the assembly and service to the bots, the bar will be raised on everything--both good and bad.
We will build greater things, travel and explore further, and discover ever new depths of understanding and opportunities to exploit.
But we will also edge people out of work and comfort zones, and be able to engage in new forms of conflict and war that only the power and skill of (semi-) autonomous machines could inflict.
The robots are here, however, they are coming in much greater numbers, capabilities, and impact then we can currently fully comprehend. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal via WSJ)
YuMi, an industrial robot by ABB, is adroitly writing Chinese calligraphy.
If you look at the photo and think for a moment, the notion of the robot doing and the person watching is truly prophetic of how we are evolving technologically and as a species.
Yumi is made by ABB, a leading robotics company headquartered in Switzerland, that on one hand has over 300,000 robots installed worldwide, but on the other hand needs only 4,600 employees in 53 countries to produce all these fantastic and productive droids.
This robot is a work of not just incredible science and engineering, but of art and beauty.
It's sleek black and white build with two incredibly agile arms and hands plus a viewing camera, enables it to do small parts assembly or even fine calligraphic work.
YuMi stands for "You and Me" working together, collaboratively.
While we surely will work together, the flip side is that with robotics, some people (who don't make the transition to STEM) may not be working much at all.
But of course, the positive side is that we are looking at an incredible capacity to do more and better with less!
Leaving the innovation to humans, and the assembly and service to the bots, the bar will be raised on everything--both good and bad.
We will build greater things, travel and explore further, and discover ever new depths of understanding and opportunities to exploit.
But we will also edge people out of work and comfort zones, and be able to engage in new forms of conflict and war that only the power and skill of (semi-) autonomous machines could inflict.
The robots are here, however, they are coming in much greater numbers, capabilities, and impact then we can currently fully comprehend. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal via WSJ)
Robots, They Are Coming
Labels:
Advanced Manufacturing,
Agile,
Automation,
Build,
Comfort Zone,
Discover,
Explore,
Fighting,
Flexible,
Innovation,
Jobs,
Machines,
More with Less,
Powerful,
Robotics,
Robots,
Sensors,
STEM,
Technology,
Tireless
May 23, 2016
All American Chair
Got to love this all American chair.
Red, white, and blue.
And stars and stripes everywhere.
The only thing that I seriously wonder about is whether this chair was manufactured in the U.S.
With the U.S. losing 35% of it's manufacturing employment between 1998 and 2010 (from 17.6M to 11.5M), due in large part to outsourcing, there is a good chance this chair was made overseas.
Now manufacturing makes up less than 9% of total U.S. employment.
Also noteworthy is the loss of 51,000 manufacturing plants or 12.5% between 1998-2008.
Manufacturing are agriculture are strategic capabilities for this country and any country.
It's not just what you know, but what you make!
Sure we can make things faster and easier with automation, but at this point there is a serious skills shortage (with millions of jobs going unfilled), and we need to safeguard the strategic knowledge, skills, capability, and capacity to make things vital to our thriving existence.
We need to be a more self-sufficient nation again and not a one-trick service pony.
We need to use information to be better innovators, creators, developers, and builders.
Information is great, but you can't live by information alone. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
All American Chair
Labels:
Ability,
Agriculture,
American,
Automation,
Capability,
Capacity,
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Information,
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knowledge,
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Patriotic,
Photo,
Self-Sufficiency,
services,
Skills,
strategic,
Strength
December 18, 2015
You're Getting Milked
If you have a pulse and have been to the stores or even shopping online lately (hey, it's the holidays so of course you have), you know that prices are on the rise.
And this is amazing, because--
Major factors point to pricing that should be driven down:
- Commodities--which are the basic raw materials from agriculture to oil and gas and metals and mining--are at a more than 16-year low!
- Manufacturing has moved to low cost sourcing countries (China, India, Vietnam, Africa, etc.)
- Technology continues to benefit us in terms of cost-efficiencies from the transformation to robotics and automation.
Yet, we keep on seeing prices move ever higher:
Just a few examples...
- "Housing market is on fire" with existing home prices exceeding the pre-recession peak!
- "Car prices at records highs - and rising"
- "Food prices are sky high"--it's not your imagination.
- Fashion "prices rising so fast"
- Health care spending is "again accelerating"
- "College costs are so high and rising."
Forget the B.S. of the basket of inflation stats your being feed...you know that your bills are going up, while your income is stagnant.
The real question is why is the middle class always getting milked--whose interest does it serve? ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
And this is amazing, because--
Major factors point to pricing that should be driven down:
- Commodities--which are the basic raw materials from agriculture to oil and gas and metals and mining--are at a more than 16-year low!
- Manufacturing has moved to low cost sourcing countries (China, India, Vietnam, Africa, etc.)
- Technology continues to benefit us in terms of cost-efficiencies from the transformation to robotics and automation.
Yet, we keep on seeing prices move ever higher:
Just a few examples...
- "Housing market is on fire" with existing home prices exceeding the pre-recession peak!
- "Car prices at records highs - and rising"
- "Food prices are sky high"--it's not your imagination.
- Fashion "prices rising so fast"
- Health care spending is "again accelerating"
- "College costs are so high and rising."
Forget the B.S. of the basket of inflation stats your being feed...you know that your bills are going up, while your income is stagnant.
The real question is why is the middle class always getting milked--whose interest does it serve? ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
You're Getting Milked
Labels:
Automation,
Commodities,
Communications Management,
Economy,
Income,
Inflation,
Manufacturing,
Middle Class,
Misinformation,
Mislead,
Outsourcing,
Photo,
Politics,
Prices,
Robotics,
Shopping,
Spin,
Squeeze,
Votes
June 8, 2015
The Robotization Of Society
First, it's people--just us, living and loving.
Then, we welcome robots into our society for automation, industrialization, and services--they are here to help us.
Finally, it's just the robots--we, the people, are obsolete, replaced, maybe even completely gone!
Think about it. ;-)
(Source Comic: Andy Blumenthal)
The Robotization Of Society
Labels:
Androids,
Andy Blumenthal,
Automation,
Comic,
Drones,
evolutionary change,
Family,
Futurism,
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Obsolescence,
People,
Replaceable,
Robots,
Service,
Society
November 5, 2014
Luv Technology, Always
No reason for Sir/Madam technology here to feel down in the dumps.
Yes, we love you technology.
And not just sometimes, but always! ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Luv Technology, Always
Labels:
Art,
Artificial Intelligence,
Augmentation,
Automation,
Clever,
Computers,
Effectiveness,
Efficiency,
Helpful,
Love,
Photo,
Robots,
Technology,
User-centric
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