Any popular exploration of a topic as complex as cybernation is bound to be skimpy: to fuse fact and speculation. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
Certainly, with so many needs to be filled, neither technology nor cybernation is going to make human labor redundant. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
(For it may well be that if massive efforts in the public sector were to be operated efficiently, they would, by their very scope and scale, encourage their cybernation.). From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
When Mr. Michael, in reply, says that "no available model" can predict the rate at which any industry will cybernate, this is a sorry basis for his prediction of coming cybernation. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
They awaken General Garroway and his Star Marines from eight and a half centuries of deliberate cybernetic-hibernation sleep; a super squad who chose cybernation in 3152 in case they were ever needed again. From Wordnik.com. [Semper Human-Ian Douglas « The Merry Genre Go Round Reviews] Reference
I deliberately used "disrupt," not "unemploy," in order to emphasize both unemployment produced by cybernation, and, for many who are employed, radical changes in the substantial content and status of their jobs. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
Much more importantly, it has taken ten years to learn how to fit cybernation to industrial and business practices and vice versa, and to invent the complex, subtle, and flexible programs, programming methods, and hardware. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
But Mr. Michael talks of the "interplay of economic, humanitarian and public relations and other factors" as making cybernation "more or less possible and pervasive" (what waffling!) and says that mine are the "incautious speculations.". From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
It would be surprising if the impact of cybernation in its present relatively early stages were felt everywhere or in particular places sufficiently impressively to show up in the crude statistical measures of technological change which are all we have. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
Those who talk of automation and cybernation have raised a bogey which simply beclouds the real economic and political problem: how to maintain sufficient demand so as to assure full employment and how to satisfy the evident large needs of major groups in the society. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
The averages, time trend data, and so on, used to demonstrate that cybernation has had little or no effect on the labor force — and by implication, presumably, that it will have little effect — by their very nature wash out the present exceptional examples of cybernation's impact on the workers. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
Part of what's going to be involved in getting the needed shift — if we do get it — in values and styles of doing and paying for work will be recognizing the likely impacts of cybernation on conventional work — not in deprecating its very likely contribution to the "difficult political and economic problems that lie ahead.". From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
No available models can adequately, much less precisely, predict the rate at which an industry will cybernate as a response to domestic or foreign competition or the degree to which other unanticipated changes in associated technologies and products — not to mention the interplay of economic, humanitarian, public relations, and other factors — may make cybernation more or less possible and pervasive in a given industry. From Wordnik.com. [Automation] Reference
Back then, America hadn't yet evolved into a gladiatorial cybernation of bloggers, tweeters, and self-ordained voice coaches. From Wordnik.com. [EW.com: Today's Latest Headlines] Reference
LearnThatWord and the Open Dictionary of English are programs by LearnThat Foundation, a 501(c)3 nonprofit.
Questions? Feedback? We want to hear from you!
Email us
or click here for instant support.
Copyright © 2005 and after - LearnThat Foundation. Patents pending.

