Furthermore, some substitution
of human labor for fossil fuels absorbs unemployed workers.
For example, to concentrate on increasing the use of petroleum to
replace human labor in agriculture, for the sake of increasing the productivity of labor, no longer seems a wise policy.
This whole process has been brilliantly successful in reducing the need
for human labor on the farm.
But the efficiency that has dominated economics has been in the production of goods
by human labor.
The majority of jobs that
require human labor and intellectual capability are likely to disappear over the next decade and a half.
It was necessary to
use human labor to capture the information because of the variables that occurred when capturing data.
In an increasing number of industries, companies can substitute technology for
human labor when wages rise too fast and avoid raising prices.
Automation puts pressure on wages by providing a substitute for low -
end human labor.
We should be most concerned not about
reducing human labor but about protecting sinks and resources.
By employing fossil fuels to
replace human labor, on the one hand, and by having each person perform limited repetitive operations, on the other, total production could be greatly increased.
Electronic markets also reduce the need
for human labor, undermining the requirements for individual desktop software, terminals, and other graphical - user - interface products.
The challenge for managers will be to identify where automation could transform their organizations, and then figure out where to unlock value, given the cost of replacing
human labor with machines and the complexity of adapting business processes to a changed workplace.
The painting might be viewed as an allegory against the exploitation of slaves and
other human labor in favor of machines and economic advancement, represented by the coming storm engulfing the cruel captain.
Fossil fuels replaced most
human labor in agricultural production and also provided faster and more - efficient means of bringing distant resources to urban hubs.
Humans + Machines: How do we use technology to
augment human labor so that the outcome is greater than what either human or machine could achieve alone?
Solomon Northup's 1853 account, adapted by John Ridley, is the foundation for a searing view of the systemic, poisonous and profitable institution of forced,
free human labor.
The fabrication of the pieces is designed to be simple and done completely in - house with a limited use of only two tools; the designers have chosen to
substitute human labor for more electricity (and a higher carbon footprint).
Bangladesh has the sort of dispersed but high density agrarian population as is capable of transforming ecosystems
on human labor alone.
In its narrowest or most basic meaning, it refers only to those things that
make human labor more productive, such as building, machinery, and infrastructure for industrial production.
The reactors — six - foot - tall metal and glass boxes that glow seafoam green when at work — mimic what happens to carbon after millennia of pressure, but faster, with
less human labor and a carbon - neutral footprint.
The Lockean - Marxist doctrine of
human labor holds that our work imparts value to a natural world that is in itself mere raw material for the will, worthless except insofar as it harbors productive potential to be unleashed and exploited.
Modern capitalism is very human which gave rise to Human Resources Departments as humans only are biggest assets & products of
human labor ever multiplying universally.
I realize that real cooking requires
real human labor, but theoretically the simple, unprocessed ingredients in real food should be cheaper.
Right now it's cheaper to employ all of those job types which employ the masses
via human labor, but as our technology improves (automated truck driving and cashier - free stores are coming to service right now) this will quickly change and these jobs will disappear.
Porous barriers to various forms of electronic intrusion are traversed by either
menial human labor or automated botnets.
She earned her master's in public policy with a concentration in
human labor resources and education from the Harvard Kennedy School in 1999.
Enacted live at SFMOMA during the opening days of Soundtracks and replayed on video for the remainder of the exhibition, the performance reflects the constant interaction
between human labor, with all its imperfections and syncopations, and the near perfection of trained musicians, who skillfully follow but also consciously deviate from the regime of a preprogrammed rhythm.
From there, the eye might wander toward Alighiero Boetti for a similarly colored Map of the World, in the photographs of Africa and America by Carrie Mae Weems, or Stone Flag by Robin Rhode as a shattered remnant of
human labor under apartheid, as photographed elsewhere by David Goldblatt.
The standard — which has been ported to sugar - producing operations as well — governs fertilizer inputs, pesticide use, emissions, crop densities, and the treatment of
human labor among other things and offers a plan sugar producers can follow to reduce the impact of their operations.
Keeping tech «disruption» at bay: Machine learning tools often are designed with the intent to replace
manual human labor, but the BillAnalyzer positions itself as squarely in the realm of assistive technology for staff.
It's
mostly human labor, actually, and it starts with human Nvidia game testers playing through the hottest new games to figure out just how difficult they can be to run and just what kind of framerate is acceptable.
Also contributing are the loss of agricultural land to development, cheaper imports from Mexico, and the necessity to
use human labor to harvest green chile.
A yuge consequence will be what is the value of
human labor when a much cheaper and more efficient replacement is available (within a decade)?