Software is the language of automation.

Besides black art, there is only automation and mechanization.

Automation is driving the decline of banal and repetitive tasks.

The age of automation is going to be the age of "do it yourself".

We're at the beginning of the digitization and automation of biotech.

Governance allows organizations to...achieve unprecedented automation.

Everything I do is 100% automation, which means I'm just doing it live.

In the early days at Asymetrix, we were focusing on business automation.

Automation is good, so long as you know exactly where to put the machine.

Automation is going to cause unemployment, and we need to prepare for it.

What is happening with automation and globalization, that's not going away.

Automation applied to an inefficient operation will magnify the inefficiency.

Iran is a complete Windows country when it comes to the Office automation side.

The written word still enjoyed a certain prestige here. It was a sluggish country.

Automation is great for profits, but it's a real potential trouble area for society.

The automation of warfare has, then, come a long way since the Persian Gulf War of 1991.

I think the automation of vision is a much bigger deal than the invention of perspective.

Automation and technology don't cure behavioral ruts: they just create new instances of them.

I couldn't tell you in any detail how my computer works. I use it with a layer of automation.

The fundamental problem here is that humans and automation approach the driving task differently.

Automation will significantly change many people's lives in ways that may be painful and enduring.

Automation has emerged as a bigger threat to American jobs than globalization or immigration combined.

The way you deal with automation is by upgrading people's skills so they can get the jobs of the future.

It is easy to underestimate in advance the impact of globalization and automation - I have done it myself.

There's a lot of automation that can happen that isn't a replacement of humans but of mind-numbing behavior.

Technology, through automation and artificial intelligence, is definitely one of the most disruptive sources.

I think as automation gets even more and more prevalent, we're going to need to learn how to code. Everybody does.

The more we reduce ourselves to machines in the lower things, the more force we shall set free to use in the higher.

To be sure, robotics are not the only job killers out there, with outsourcing stealing far more gigs than automation.

Increasingly, the work we do is enabled more and more by new IT, including automation, robotics, and intelligent platforms.

Sooner or later, the U.S. will face mounting job losses due to advances in automation, artificial intelligence, and robotics.

All in all, I don't think robots and greater automation can bring about a utopian world as I imagined it would as a kid 50 years ago.

In the long term, artificial intelligence and automation are going to be taking over so much of what gives humans a feeling of purpose.

I see incredible opportunities for transportation to benefit from rapidly advancing automation, connectivity, and information technologies.

Advances in automation, artificial intelligence and robotics, while increasing productivity, will also cause major upheavals to the workforce.

Income taxes are very poor at generating income from automation because the gains are realized by technology companies that are experts at not paying taxes.

As technology advances, it reverses the characteristics of every situation again and again. The age of automation is going to be the age of 'do it yourself.'

I see three forces militating in favor of growing inequality: increasing measurement of worker value added, automation through smart software, and globalization.

When the manufacturing decline began in earnest in 2001, the main culprits were the offshoring of jobs to China, with which we have no trade deal, and automation.

My biggest worry is that no one seems to notice that we are not going to stop the technical progress that is going to continue to displace people through automation.

Automation is no longer just a problem for those working in manufacturing. Physical labor was replaced by robots; mental labor is going to be replaced by AI and software.

An organised system of machines, to which motion is communicated by the transmitting mechanism from a central automation, is the most developed form of production by machinery.

People at the very top of the income scale also benefited from globalization and automation. But the income of working- and middle-class people in the developed world has stagnated.

Our aspiration must be to reform, upgrade and enlarge our education system - and to make it relevant to 21st century realities of the digital economy, genomics, robotics and automation.

The automation of automation, the automation of intelligence, is such an incredible idea that if we could continue to improve this capability, the applications are really quite boundless.

When I think about strong innovations in term of automation, robotics, cognitive computing, and artificial intelligence, they are coming a lot from the Philippines and from India as well.

In many cases, jobs that used to be done by people are going to be able to be done through automation. I don't have an answer to that. That's one of the more perplexing problems of society.

We know growing technological developments in artificial intelligence, automation and big data mean that democratic socialism in the 21st century must adapt to such a rapidly changing world.

Documenting and recording paperwork, managing services like passport renewals, and processing patent applications are practices that could all be dramatically improved with robotic automation.

One would expect that a surge of new automation opportunities in highly paid work would catalyze a surge of corporate investment in computer hardware and software. Instead, the opposite occurred.

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