Abstract

Factories Without Men: New Industrial Revolution

Diehold, John | September 19, 1953 issue

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The almost daily appearance of new gadgets makes it seem that one is losing little time in creating the world that science fiction has for so long predicted. The first industrial revolution provided power-driven machinery. The industrial revolution now taking place is making possible the automatic control of these industrial processes and the mechanization of much of the routine paper work. Automation is simply a new phase in the long continuum of mechanization. Nevertheless, it is a distinct and a very important phase.

See Also:

AUTOMATION; INDUSTRIAL revolution; MACHINERY; IMPLEMENTS, utensils, etc.; MECHANIZATION; INDUSTRIALIZATION
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