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Remote working

 

As capital intensiveness increased there is likely to be a greater emphasis on achieving 24/7 (or three shift) operations in manufacturing to optimise this capital.

Higher bandwidth offers the prospect of remote robotic manufacturing.  Today pilotless drone aircraft operating on the Afghanistan border are flown by pilots safely stationed at remote consoles.  There are over 1,000 'da Vinci surgical systems' (medical robots) already operating in hospitals worldwide.  These and similar systems facilitate minimally invasive 'keyhole' and micro surgery that cannot be accomplished by a 'hands on' surgeon.  The surgeon sits at a remote consol.  It is expected that this technology will soon allow advanced surgical procedures to be carried out at sites remote from the surgeon – she or he may even be at home.  The same principles could be applied to the many manufacturing and industrial processes that are already robotocised or otherwise automated.

This may have profound implications for regional development as those parts of a business that are not geographically bound to a location for resource reasons will be increasingly free to go anywhere.  Knowledge industry workers and managers in particular will be able to locate where they prefer to live. Due to the issues of remote reporting, supervision and maintenance of organisational structure, the work paradigm may need to change accordingly.  This is likely to favour more payment for output or outcome (fee for service) in place of payment for input (time at work).

 

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Travel

Canada and the United States - Part2

 

 

In Part1, in July 2023, Wendy and I travelled north from Los Angeles to Seattle, Washington, and then Vancouver, in Canada, from where we made our way east to Montreal.

In Part2, in August 2023, we flew from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, down to Miami, Florida, then Ubered to Fort Lauderdale, where we joined a western Caribbean cruise.

At the end of the cruise, we flew all the way back up to Boston.

From Boston we hired another car to drive, down the coast, to New York.

After New York we flew to Salt Lake City, Nevada, then on to Los Angeles, California, before returning to Sydney.

Read more: Canada and the United States - Part2

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Time Lord

 

 

 

For no apparent reason, the silver haired man ran from his companion, shook a tree branch, then ran back to continue their normal conversation. It was as if nothing had happened. The woman seemed to ignore his sudden departure and return.

Bruce had been stopped in peak hour traffic, in the leafy suburban street, and had noticed the couple walking towards him, engaged in good humoured argument or debate.  Unless this was some bizarre fit, as it seemed, the shaken tree branch must be to illustrate some point. But what could it be?

Just as the couple passed him, the lights up ahead changed and the traffic began to move again. 

Read more: The Time Lord

Opinions and Philosophy

A Dismal Science

 

 

Thomas Carlyle coined this epithet in 1839 while criticising  Malthus, who warned of what subsequently happened, exploding population.

According to Carlyle his economic theories: "are indeed sufficiently mournful. Dreary, stolid, dismal, without hope for this world or the next" and in 1894 he described economics as: 'quite abject and distressing... dismal science... led by the sacred cause of Black Emancipation.'  The label has stuck ever since.

This 'dismal' reputation has not been helped by repeated economic recessions and a Great Depression, together with continuously erroneous forecasts and contradictory solutions fuelled by opposing theories.  

This article reviews some of those competing paradigms and their effect on the economic progress of Australia.

Read more: A Dismal Science

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