A dystopia of job loss and surveillance or a utopia of transformation and progress: This conundrum sums up the intense debate around automation and its impact on the future of work. Optimistic ...
A conversation with Tim Dawson of Interact Analysis on the future of the automation market with some key insights for manufacturing and automation industry business executives. I recently spoke with ...
When people think about automation, the focus is almost always on what it takes away. They see it as machines taking over tasks, making jobs disappear. But there’s another side to the story that’s ...
Automation robotics jobs are transforming industries by automating repetitive tasks, allowing humans to focus on complex decision-making. Future of work technology predicts that by 2025, 85 million ...
NEWARK, DE / ACCESS Newswire / March 11, 2026 / The global Software Defined Automation (SDA) Market is entering a transformative phase as manufacturers increasingly decouple industrial control ...
What would happen if AI becomes capable of performing essentially all economically valuable work? In a wide-ranging Q&A, Yale economist Pascual Restrepo dives into how economists view the future of ...
The future of artificial intelligence and work is often discussed in the context of automation versus augmentation. "Automation" signifies replacing human labor with technology, while "augmentation" ...
In recent years, cockpit automation has transformed aviation, enhancing safety and efficiency. While reducing pilot workload and minimizing human error, automation has also introduced concerns ...
Power grids are evolving to accommodate a 40% increase in demand and higher renewable energy integration by adopting advanced automation strategies. Centralized protection architectures consolidate ...
Most people still picture science as a person in a white coat, pipette in hand. That image is stubbornly accurate. Even in 2025—after decades of lab robots, high‑throughput screening, and cloud ...
When people talk about automation in paving, I've noticed that the conversation usually veers toward extremes. Either we’re moments away from handing over the job to machines, or we’re still decades ...