The Shape of Future Technology : the Anthropocentric Alternative /
This is a translation - with some new material - of a seminal contribution to the debate about the design of tomorrow's factories in the light of advancing computer and control technology. Peter Brödner contrasts mass production with workshop production and challenges the assertion that modern...
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| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
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London :
Springer London,
1990.
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| Series: | Springer series on artificial intelligence and society.
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| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
| Summary: | This is a translation - with some new material - of a seminal contribution to the debate about the design of tomorrow's factories in the light of advancing computer and control technology. Peter Brödner contrasts mass production with workshop production and challenges the assertion that modern production systems create multi-faceted and responsible tasks requiring correspondingly intense training. He analyses the impact of automation on intellectual work and knowledge-based systems. Is the "workerless factory" possible, or even desirable? Can we avoid the future shown in Lang's Metropolis? Can computers really be made to help rather than replace the workforce? Peter Brödner succeeds in transforming a sociological critical study and economic analysis into a series of convincing technological proposals, based on his thorough understanding of production technologies gained whilst working at the Production Engineering Centre in Karlsruhe. The book was originally published in German under the title Fabrik 2000. |
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| Item Description: | Electronic resource. |
| Physical Description: | 1 online resource (viii, 136 pages 23 illustrations) |
| ISBN: | 9781447117339 (electronic bk.) 1447117336 (electronic bk.) |
| ISSN: | 1431-0856 |