Want to cut healthcare costs? Try automation – The Hill (blog)

In the intense and ongoing debate over federal healthcarepolicy, the cost of prescription drugs has been a central and constant issue. Lawmakers from both parties have put forward dizzyingly diverse range of plans that aim to reducecostsand respond to constituent's demands.

But theres one straightforward technical tool for reducing drugcoststhat hasnt appeared in the high-profile debate.

When it comes to manufacturing pharmaceuticals, Americans should consider investing inautomation.

Its no secret:automationcan be a dirty word in U.S. politics. Its often synonymous with computers or robots taking jobs and shuttering factories. Theres some truth to this. The U.S. lost at least 5 million domestic manufacturing jobs over the past two decades,in large part due toautomation.

Still, a great deal ofautomationis inevitable. And, if we make the right investments ahead of our global competitors,automationcan work to our advantage including in terms job creation and reductions in consumer prices.

Consider howautomationis poised to change pharma manufacturing. The standard analog method of making drugs,batch manufacturing, is now more than 100 years old. This process requires numerousstops and starts, takes a lot of time, and involves serious risks of contamination or error.

In contrast, the newautomatedmanufacturing method calledcontinuousmanufacturing makes it possible to producemedicines more quickly and efficiently,without interruption and with a great deal more real-time control.Continuous manufacturing can lower the cost of drugs significantly, by decreasing the unit cost, by accelerating product development, and by improving quality.

This kind ofautomationisunquestionablythe future of pharmaceutical manufacturing.But, in this future,it'squestionable whether the United States will lead and, in turn, reap the rewards of new high-skilled jobs and reduced consumer prices.

While U.S. researchers including those at Rutgers University'sCenter for Structured Organic Particulate Systems(C-SOPS),which I direct have led the development of Continuous Manufacturing technologies, U.S.-based firms face challenges in making the transitionto commercial practice.

In particular, small and medium sized manufacturers struggle with the upfront technologicalcostsrequired to incorporate these new technologies into operations. And, yes, some stakeholders mayfearthe loss of old jobsassociated withatransition fromthe previous system of pharmaceutical manufacturing.

Drug making is a microcosm of the broader manufacturing economy asautomationand digitization take hold.

If we areserious aboutsucceeding in manufacturing and taking advantage of digitization andautomation, wewillneed to ensure that new transformativeinnovationsare anchored in America and that we do more informed cost-benefit assessments when thinking about employment.

While automationeliminatesthe need for some operator positions, itsimultaneouslymeans the creation ofbetteropportunities at multiple levels of skill from engineering and programming to design, assembly,optimization,maintenance, and monitoring.

Government, industry, and universities should work together tostandardize the technology processes and product development methods that can ensure the new methodstakehold herefirst.Different sectors should also cooperate to incentivize and invest in education, workforce training, and technology adoption.

Automationisnt the enemy. It simply means thatmanufacturing jobs follow real knowhow, not cheap labor.

This is a reality that we can turn to our advantage.

In todays political arena, we should see proactive investments in advanced manufacturing not only as a tool to create high-value, high-skill jobs but also to address other overarching challenges including the cost and quality ofhealthcare.

In a competitive world of constant innovation, these investments aren't optional.

Fernando J. Muzzio is Director, NSF ERC on Structured Organic Particulate Systems, and Distinguished Professor, Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Rutgers University.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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Want to cut healthcare costs? Try automation - The Hill (blog)

PLAN WELL & EXECUTE: Automation won’t stop, so humans must … – New Haven Register

Photo: Contributed Photo / Cornell Wright

Automated bartenders on the Las Vegas Strip mix up your favorite cocktails.

Automated bartenders on the Las Vegas Strip mix up your favorite cocktails.

PLAN WELL & EXECUTE: Automation wont stop, so humans must adapt and prepare

Automation is a competitor you do not wish to face in the world of economic competition, while at the same time expecting to win with a human solution.

I was reminded of this during a recent trip to Las Vegas. In one of the countless bars on the famous Las Vegas strip was an automated bartender. The automated bartender had a rack of bottles above the working surface and the technology, by robotic standards, was relatively straightforward. The drink, when completed, was delivered to the end of the preparation area by a short conveyor belt, where a human waitress delivered the drink to the customers table.

News headlines across the country are reporting of the advances being made with driverless cars. The reports often center on the features and benefits of driverless passenger cars. However, the big economic driver and job eliminator potentially will be the driverless trucks that currently deliver all of the goods we consume on a daily basis.

I say currently because some companies are attempting to leapfrog the vehicles and deliver small packages by drone.

It was not that long ago that the first automated teller machines (ATMs) appeared. During those early days of the ATM, very similar concerns were aired about safety of use and security of the transactions. Today most of us use ATMs without a second thought.

Remember when the Internet was scary because we did not want our credit card information moving electronically across the country and around the world? Additionally, I remember hearing concerns about buying clothes and food online because people believed that if they could not touch the items, they could not make the best selections.

If the various cyber-shopping days are any indication, we have moved past those concerns. Additionally, brick-and-mortar and salespeople are exposed to significant reductions in numbers. And as for food, we not only accept delivery from grocery stores, but there also is a growing business of pre-prepared food plans brought to us by meal plan companies.

The concern that I want to bring to your attention is not that automation is bad or that it can be stopped. The issue is, what do we do for human jobs when the robotics capabilities continue to improve with lower costs? What happens to people when the computers artificial intelligence capabilities increase to near-human levels?

To those who say that there will be new positions that will arise for those displaced workers, I say they are partially correct. There is a new team of developers who wrote the applications for the automated bartender. However, they were perhaps a team of 10 who by their labor could displace hundreds of bartenders. Also the application development team shrinks to four because it does not take as many people to maintain the application as it did to originally develop the code.

To my knowledge, there is increased automation in nearly every occupational field except politicians. We need our politicians to address real job issues because we know that retraining, if possible, takes time and money. Lets have a real debate with real numbers about jobs.

I, for one, liked the world of George Jetson; but I also remember the story of John Henry, the steel driving man. The drumbeat of automation continues. Lets be prepared.

Cornell Wright is the lead consultant and an Executive Coach at The Parker Wright Group Inc. in Stratford. The firm assists clients to increase their market share by improved customer service. He can be reached at 203-377-4226 or cornell@parkerwrightgroup.com.

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PLAN WELL & EXECUTE: Automation won't stop, so humans must ... - New Haven Register

Automation hits full stride at Belimo, highlighting need for retraining of workers – Danbury News Times

Photo: Carol Kaliff / Hearst Connecticut Media

James Furlong, left, president of Belimo Americas and John Forlenzo, a vice president/ customizing and logistics, give a tour of the Danbury facility, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, left, president of Belimo Americas and John Forlenzo, a vice president/ customizing and logistics, give a tour of the Danbury facility, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, left, president of Belimo Americas and John Forlenzo, a vice president, give a tour of the Danbury facility, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, left, president of Belimo Americas and John Forlenzo, a vice president, give a tour of the Danbury facility, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, is the president of Belimo Americas . Photo Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, is the president of Belimo Americas . Photo Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, is the president of Belimo Americas . Photo Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

James Furlong, is the president of Belimo Americas . Photo Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

John Forlenzo is the vice president/ customizing and logistics for Belimo Americas. Photo Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

John Forlenzo is the vice president/ customizing and logistics for Belimo Americas. Photo Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Souk Novuang operates a man up turret truck to move and place stored items at Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Souk Novuang operates a man up turret truck to move and place stored items at Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Souk Novuang operates a man up turret truck to move and place stored items at Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Souk Novuang operates a man up turret truck to move and place stored items at Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Lenny Engleman of Danbury, unpacks and places items into an automated storage and retrieval system at Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Lenny Engleman of Danbury, unpacks and places items into an automated storage and retrieval system at Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Stephanie Perez processes an order at a B/C pick up station at Belimo Americas in Danbury Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Stephanie Perez processes an order at a B/C pick up station at Belimo Americas in Danbury Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury operates with an automated storage and retrieval system, part of which is shown in this photograph, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Belimo Americas in Danbury, Wednesday, August 16, 2017.

Automation hits full stride at Belimo, highlighting need for retraining of workers

With acronyms such as ASRS, AGV, ISO and WMS guiding the factory operations at Belimo Americas headquarters in Danbury, it is clear the next generation of manufacturing has come to Connecticut.

Belimo, which makes actuators, valves and sensors for heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems, built its state-of-the-art, 200,000-square-foot headquarters on the top of a hill in west Danbury in 2014. With its highly automated manufacturing systems, it is a prime example of the need for advanced manufacturing employees in the state.

How do we do what we do more efficiently? When automation is a means to get us there, we employ it, James Furlong, president of Belimo Americas, said. If automation can reduce our lead times and make our delivery time more predictable those are the driving factors. It would be a very complex manual system to try to do this.

Belimos automated storage and retrieval system, or ASRS, area features 41-foot ceilings with a combination of machines and employees seamlessly receiving and fulfilling orders in real time. Every assembler on the floor has a computer monitor at their work station.

Larger containers are stored by turret trucks that allow operators to be eye level with storage spaces 40 feet high. The wire-guided trucks fit into narrow aisles and operators use computer monitors in the sitting area to view their next task. The cranes know where every piece of inventory is and can store or retrieve an item in seconds from any of the 15,000 bays that are stacked vertically to the ceiling.

We did an analysis of man vs. ASRS, John Forlenzo, vice president of customizing and logistics at Belimo Americas, said. I wont even throw a number out there, but ASRS is significantly faster and uses much less space because it can take advantage of vertical space.

Belimos manufacturing will soon become even more high-tech as it introduces an automated guided vehicle, or AGV, to its floor. Using lasers and reflectors, an AGV is basically a driverless forklift. At Belimo, AGVs will move products around the perimeter of the ASRS floor for more efficient delivery to different areas of the manufacturing floor.

It is part of the lean manufacturing process used at Belimo, which aims for maximum efficiency and with as little waste of time and space as possible.

Machines move more parts from place to place and people focus on tasks that require thinking, Furlong said.

Need for skilled labor

The shift to advanced manufacturing has created a dearth of trained employees in the state. In a 2017 study, the Connecticut Business and Industry Association, or CBIA, predicts that there will be more than 13,000 job openings in 14 manufacturing job categories by the end of 2018.

Community colleges and technical high schools have begun to expand their advanced manufacturing programs, but the need to fill such positions far outweighs the qualified candidate pool, CBIA officials said.

Theres a manufacturing renaissance going on in Connecticut, Pete Gioia, economist with CBIA, said.

Gioia pointed to last Thursdays job numbers released by the state Department of Labor that showed Connecticut lost 600 jobs in July and has recovered only 82.3 percent of the jobs lost from the recession that started in 2008. If we could fill those 13,000 jobs, that would be a home run, really, he said.

Naugatuck Valley Community College reported last week the job placement rate is 100 percent for graduates of its Advanced Manufacturing Training Certificate program. Forlenzo said Belimo uses students from Henry Abbott Technical High School in Danbury as apprentices and potential hires following graduation.

The last person we hired was from Abbott Tech, he said.

Gioia said automation could displace workers in the retail industry in the coming years, but automation in manufacturing creates as many jobs as it displaces. Workers, however, need to be trained or retrained.

The more robots we have, the more product we can push out, and the more product we can push out the greater the need is in fulfillment. Its a win-win, Gioia said. Machines are faster, cheaper, better. They dont take days off and theres no need for workers comp. But you still need people to build and service the robots.

We shouldnt decry the use of robots, he added. Its making the U.S. more competitive. What used to be done outside of the country is being done here.

Speaking at a meeting of her STEM advisory board earlier this month, U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty said: Automation is seen as an enemy. It just requires different skill sets and people need to be retrained.

According to CBIAs 2017 Survey of Connecticut Manufacturing Workforce Needs, there are more than 4,000 manufacturing firms in the state and 159,000 people working in the industry, representing nearly 10 percent of the states workforce. The survey showed that nearly all manufacturers plan to expand their workforce in the next three years.

Dont think for a minute we arent a manufacturing state, because we are, Donald Klepper-Smith, chief economist and director of research at DataCore Partners, said at the Greater Danbury Chamber of Commerces Economic Forecast Breakfast earlier this year.

Strong labor force

Furlong said Belimo has not had trouble finding skilled employees to fill its manufacturing positions. Belimo employs about 300 people in Danbury, 200 in production. While he described the labor pool as tight, he said Belimo has a strong reputation in the community and is known as a good place to work.

We dont have dozens of people knocking on our door every day looking for jobs, but we have been successful in attracting high-quality employees, Furlong said. Its a good labor force. Weve never had a reason to start disrupting our operation and look elsewhere for labor.

Like Danbury itself, Belimo prides itself on diversity. Furlong said 14 different languages are spoken by employees at the company. Belimo also employs 44 people from Ability Beyond, a Bethel-based nonprofit organization that, among other services, helps people with disabilities find employment.

Belimo was founded in Switzerland in 1975. It expanded to the U.S. in 1989 and expanded its Danbury operations in 1992, 1998 and 2014. The new facility, Furlong said, features the most sophisticated hydronics lab in the world.

The facility, despite being only three years old, will be a place of constant change, Furlong and Forlenzo said, as manufacturing evolves. Furlong said light assembly used to be the largest part of the companys manufacturing process; now it is the smallest.

The way we do things today is not the way it will be done in 2015, Forlenzo said. Theres continuous innovation. The bar is always moving.

cbosak@hearstmediact.com; 203-731-3338

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Automation hits full stride at Belimo, highlighting need for retraining of workers - Danbury News Times

Automation on the rise in Dubois County area manufacturing – Times-Mail (subscription)

With changing technologies, some Southern Indiana manufacturers say theres no doubt the amount of automation they use within their facilities will increase in years to come.

Its a game-changer, Kevin Ward, plant manager at Kimball Hospitality, said of automation. Kimball Hospitality is in the midst of a $4.4 million, two-year project the 16th Street Realignment Project which will install state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment in the plant, allowing the company to automate some of the labor performed by employees, such as moving products from station to station.

Automation is technology that automatically controls a process, such as tech involved with the manufacturing of a product. A recent study by Ball State Universitys Center for Business and Economic Research sought to find out how communities will be affected by automation. The study, How vulnerable are American communities to automation, trade & urbanization? suggests that about half of U.S. jobs are at risk because of automation. It puts about 59 percent of Dubois County jobs at risk.

As a workplace is automated, it is unlikely that all occupations will be eliminated, the study concludes. Rather, some jobs will be created, some will be destroyed, and others will be unaffected.

With Kimball Hospitalitys project, Ward doesnt expect the company to lose any employees.

The key before you automate is that you have to make sure your employees can accept that automation, he said, also saying that the company began cross-training employees about two years ago in anticipation of increased automation.

He said Kimball Hospitalitys most capable computer network-controlled machine is 19 years old and was the best technology for its time. It, as well as other machines, will soon be replaced with machines that are more automated, allowing for more flexibility.

For example, say a customer orders a hotel room of furniture. Ward said a new automated machine will be capable of automatically changing over to run each piece of different furniture one right after the other, a process called mixed-model. The older machine can do mixed-model, but Ward said that because the changeover is not automated, the process takes too long.

Its about synchronizing the plant to orders, he said of the companys increased automation efforts. We want to be flexible, so when a customer has a need, we can do it. We can now tailor the manufacturing process to a customers needs.

He said new technologies at the plant will allow the facility to produce more when demand increases. When that happens, he said, the plant will need to hire additional employees.

Our human resources are driven by customer demand, he said.

Jasper-based MasterBrand Cabinets has also integrated automation into its cabinet manufacturing. Much of the technology is used for the movement and handling of materials.

We also have some plants looking at pick-and-place robots, where an arm takes a piece and puts it in the machine and once finished, takes it out, said Scott Denhart, general manager of MasterBrands Ferdinand plant. The spraying of doors, theres robotics involved in that as well.

He said safety is one of the biggest drivers that led the company to automation.

Were always looking at reducing the opportunity for injury in the plant, Denhart said. A lot of injuries stem from the repetitive motion type of work.

He said automation can help with that. It also helps with quality control, keeping the product the same every time.

Theres also the old saying that a robot never takes a day off, he said. Theres reliability that that particular function is performed no matter what.

As automation evolves, Denhart said, a business typically grows. He remembers when MasterBrand was producing 2,000 to 4,000 units per day. Now daily business is at about 10,000 cabinets a day.

He believes the value of the employee has not been lost during MasterBrands move to automation. Theres a human element in the production process.

Theres a certain amount of fitting parts together that is challenging for robots, Denhart said. Everyone (employees) is also responsible for ugly to obvious defects and not letting them out of the plant. How does a machine do that?

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Automation on the rise in Dubois County area manufacturing - Times-Mail (subscription)

Automation the way forward, says Laois farmer – Agriland

A Co. Laois father and son who are dairy and beef farmers, and contractors, have availed of automation as they increased their herd size to boost efficiency.

Pierce and Michael Malone from Ballypickas, have automated their: milking; calf feeding; and yard cleaning systems to facilitate an increase in their dairy herd from 70 to 140 cows in the last three years.

The Malones who have 70ac of their own land, supplemented with rented ground, do a small amount of baled silage contracting in the Laois and Castlecomer areas.

They installed two Lely robots three years ago, with the plan of expanding the British Friesian herd that is being crossed with Holsteins.

It was a massive decision to install the robots, from an investment and efficiency point of view, said Michael Malone.

The Malones went to the first demonstration of the robots at the National Ploughing Championships where there was a plastic dummy cows udder, showing how the machine attached and functioned.

Shortly after that, my uncle installed robotic milking on his farm in south Kilkenny, Malone said.

Adapting to the robots in the first year was challenging, according to Malone. Training in the cows and getting everything set up took time.

They installed an underpass to allow cows access across the road to graze more of the farm.

Milking has now reduced to twice daily from three times daily, with the herd getting late into lactation.

The Malones previously ran an 8-unit milking parlour, where their electricity costs were 900 to 1,000 every two months. When the robots were installed in an existing building on the farm, with a small amount of building work required, that went up to 1,500 to 1,600, but when we changed supplier, it went down to 1,200.

With the robotic milking established and working well for the Malones, they installed an automated yard cleaning system, Lelys Discovery. Again, the increase in the volume of cows and increased calving spurred them on.

We have a lot of short passageways and it is able to tackle all of them. We previously used manual hand scrapers, and were up in the middle of the night, working them, while looking at the cows, during the calving season. The sheds were getting fuller.

This cleans the yard every couple of hours and can be programmed to go on different routes, said Malone.

Their newest piece of kit is an automated calf feeding system which assists in the rearing of calves on an out farm. The Lely automated calf feeder is another time saver.

Prior to its installation, we were trying to get warm milk one-and-a-half miles over to the out farm twice a day. Now the calves are getting milk powder whenever they want it, in exact amounts. You will always have a slow calf but its working very well. It has reared 90 calves this year.

It would be even more efficient if there was broadband on the out farm, Malone said.

That would eliminate the need to go over and check twice a day you would get away with once daily.

All the pieces of equipment work together and provide the Malones with flexibility. With the robotic milking, if youre out on the baler at 6:00pm, you dont have to rush away to do the milking, you can leave it until 8:00pm and the cows wont be agitated.

The Malones also invested in a Zero Grazer. To put lane ways into our rented land would have cost us, so we bought a Zero Grazer which brings grass into the cows for six hours during the night. We knew that if we wanted to increase the numbers, the grass had to come from somewhere.

While Malone doesnt believe Ireland is quite ready for driverless tractors the fields arent big enough he contends that automation is the way forward.

You cant fight it. Its the way things are going to go, and you cant get labour. You go into the supermarket and theres automation. Fighting it isnt going to work.

Automation on the family farm has allowed the family to streamline the processes. I was able to go and do an AI course, said Malone.

You have more time to manage the cows and the grass, but you still cant go 100 miles away. With the amount of cows we have, less labour is involved now, but the two of us are still doing the same amount of work.

There are so many different jobs to be done from AI to organising grass, spreading manure and topping paddocks. You wont pay for automation if you put your feet up.

What about future plans? There would always be things going on in your head, but you have to see what happens. Theres no such thing as standing still in farming.

Originally posted here:

Automation the way forward, says Laois farmer - Agriland

Reverence for robots: Japanese workers treasure automation – ABC … – ABC News

Thousands upon thousands of cans are filled with beer, capped and washed, wrapped into six-packs, and boxed at dizzying speeds 1,500 a minute, to be exact on humming conveyor belts that zip and wind in a sprawling factory near Tokyo.

Nary a soul is in sight in this picture-perfect image of Japanese automation.

The machines do all the heavy lifting at this plant run by Asahi Breweries, Japan's top brewer. The human job is to make sure the machines do the work right, and to check on the quality the sensors are monitoring.

"Basically, nothing goes wrong. The lines are up and running 96 percent," said Shinichi Uno, a manager at the plant. "Although machines make things, human beings oversee the machines."

The debate over machines snatching jobs from people is muted in Japan, where birth rates have been sinking for decades, raising fears of a labor shortage. It would be hard to find a culture that celebrates robots more, evident in the popularity of companion robots for consumers, sold by the internet company SoftBank and Toyota Motor Corp, among others.

Japan, which forged a big push toward robotics starting in the 1990s, leads the world in robots per 10,000 workers in the automobile sector 1,562, compared with 1,091 in the U.S. and 1,133 in Germany, according to a White House report submitted to Congress last year. Japan was also ahead in sectors outside automobiles at 219 robots per 10,000 workers, compared with 76 for the U.S. and 147 for Germany.

One factor in Japan's different take on automation is the "lifetime employment" system. Major Japanese companies generally retain workers, even if their abilities become outdated, and retrain them for other tasks, said Koichi Iwamoto, a senior fellow at the Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry.

That system is starting to fray as Japan globalizes, but it's still largely in use, Iwamoto said.

Although data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development show digitalization reduces demand for mid-level routine tasks such as running assembly lines while boosting demand for low- and high-skilled jobs, that trend has been less pronounced in Japan than in the U.S.

The OECD data, which studied shifts from 2002 to 2014, showed employment trends remained almost unchanged for Japan.

That means companies in Japan weren't resorting as aggressively as those in the U.S. to robots to replace humans. Clerical workers, for instance, were keeping their jobs, although their jobs could be done better, in theory, by computers.

That kind of resistance to adopting digital technology for services also is reflected in how Japanese society has so far opted to keep taxis instead of shifting to online ride hailing and shuttle services.

Still, automation has progressed in Japan to the extent the nation has now entered what Iwamoto called a "reflective stage," in which "human harmony with machines" is being pursued, he said.

"Some tasks may be better performed by people, after all," said Iwamoto.

Kiyoshi Sakai, who has worked at Asahi for 29 years, recalls how, in the past, can caps had to be placed into machines by hand, a repetitive task that was hard not just on the body, but also the mind.

And so he is grateful for automation's helping hand. Machines at the plant have become more than 50 percent smaller over the years. They are faster and more precise than three decades ago.

Gone are the days things used to go wrong all the time and human intervention was needed to get machines running properly again. Every 10 to 15 minutes, people used to have to go check on the products; there were no sensors back then.

Glitches are so few these days there is barely any reason to work up a sweat, he added with a smile.

Like many workers in Japan, Sakai doesn't seem worried about his job disappearing. As the need for plant workers nose-dived with the advance of automation, he was promoted to the general affairs section, a common administrative department at Japanese companies.

"I remember the work being so hard. But when I think back, and it was all about delivering great beer to everyone, it makes me so proud," said Sakai, who drinks beer every day.

"I have no regrets. This is a stable job."

See other Future of Work stories at https://www.apnews.com/tag/FutureofWork . Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at twitter.com/yurikageyama. Her work can be found at https://www.apnews.com/search/yuri%20kageyama

This is part of the first installment of Future of Work, an Associated Press series that will explore how workplaces across the U.S. and the world are being transformed by technology and global pressures. As more employers move, shrink or revamp their work sites, many employees are struggling to adapt. At the same time, workers with in-demand skills or knowledge are benefiting. Advanced training, education or know-how is becoming a required ticket to the 21st-century workplace.

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Reverence for robots: Japanese workers treasure automation - ABC ... - ABC News

This start-up added robots to help battle Amazon and Costco, but didn’t have to cut any jobs – CNBC

Boxed CEO Chieh Huang says the company's biggest challenge in its early days was not having enough manpower.

"When we used to have those deluge of orders, we used to empty the entire corporate office, get a bus, and bring them here to the fulfillment center," Huang says.

Boxed packages and ships bulky items to customers directly from its warehouses, and is taking on the likes of Amazon and Costco.

The company started in 2013, in Chieh's parents' garage. Since then, it's expanded to four fulfillment centers and has turned to automation to help it keep up with demand. Boxed just finished fully automating its headquarters in Union, New Jersey, and saw its picking productivity increase by 600 to 700 percent.

Surprisingly, the company was able to keep its entire workforce thanks to retraining.

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This start-up added robots to help battle Amazon and Costco, but didn't have to cut any jobs - CNBC

Automation on the rise in manufacturing – Vincennes Sun Commercial

With changing technologies, some Dubois County manufacturers say theres no doubt the amount of automation they use within their facilities will increase in years to come.

Its a game-changer, Kevin Ward, plant manager at Kimball Hospitality, said of automation.

Kimball Hospitality is in the midst of a $4.4 million, two-year project the 16th Street Realignment Project which will install state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment in the plant, allowing the company to automate some of the labor performed by employees, such as moving product from station to station.

Automation is technology that automatically controls a process, such as tech involved with the manufacturing of a product. A recent study by Ball State Universitys Center for Business and Economic Research sought to find out how communities will be affected by automation. The study (How vulnerable are American communities to automation, trade & urbanization?) suggests that about half of U.S. jobs are at risk because of automation.

It puts about 59 percent of Dubois County jobs at risk.

As a workplace is automated, it is unlikely that all occupations will be eliminated, the study concludes. Rather, some jobs will be created, some will be destroyed, and others will be unaffected.

With Kimball Hospitalitys project, Ward doesnt expect the company to lose any employees.

The key before you automate is that you have to make sure your employees can accept that automation, he said, adding that the company began cross-training employees about two years ago in anticipation of increased automation.

He said Kimball Hospitalitys most capable computer network-controlled machine is 19 years old and was the best technology for its time. It, as well as other machines, will soon be replaced with machines that are more automated, allowing for more flexibility.

For example, say a customer orders a hotel room of furniture. Ward said a new automated machine will be capable of automatically changing over to run each piece of furniture one right after the other, a process called mixed-model.

The older machine can do mixed-model, but Ward said that because the changeover is not automated, the process takes too long.

Its about synchronizing the plant to orders, he said of the companys increased automation efforts. We want to be flexible so when a customer has a need, we can do it. We can now tailor the manufacturing process to a customers needs.

He said new technologies at the plant will allow the facility to produce more product when demand increases. When that happens, he said, the plant will need to hire additional employees.

Our human resources are driven by customer demand, he said.

Jasper-based MasterBrand Cabinets has also integrated automation into its cabinet manufacturing. Much of the technology is used for the movement and handling of materials.

We also have some plants looking at pick-and-place robots where an arm takes a piece and puts it in the machine and once finished, takes it out, said Scott Denhart, general manager of MasterBrands Ferdinand plant. The spraying of doors, theres robotics involved in that as well.

He said safety is one of the biggest drivers that led the company to automation.

Were always looking at reducing the opportunity for injury in the plant, Denhart said. A lot of injuries stem from the repetitive motion type of work.

He said automation can help with that. It also helps with quality control, keeping the product the same every time.

Theres also the old saying that a robot never takes a day off, he said. Theres reliability that that particular function is performed no matter what.

As automation evolves, Denhart said a business typically grows. He remembers when MasterBrand was producing 2,000-4,000 units per day. Now daily business is at about 10,000 cabinets a day.

He believes the value of the employee has not been lost during MasterBrands move to automation. Theres a human element in the production process.

Theres a certain amount of fitting parts together that is challenging for robots, Denhart said. Everyone (employees) is also responsible for ugly to obvious defects and not letting them out of the plant.

"How does a machine do that?

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Reverence For Robots: Japanese Workers Treasure Automation – Manufacturing.net

Thousands upon thousands of cans are filled with beer, capped and washed, wrapped into six-packs, and boxed at dizzying speeds 1,500 a minute, to be exact on humming conveyor belts that zip and wind in a sprawling factory near Tokyo.

Nary a soul is in sight in this picture-perfect image of Japanese automation.

The machines do all the heavy lifting at this plant run by Asahi Breweries, Japan's top brewer. The human job is to make sure the machines do the work right, and to check on the quality the sensors are monitoring.

"Basically, nothing goes wrong. The lines are up and running 96 percent," said Shinichi Uno, a manager at the plant. "Although machines make things, human beings oversee the machines."

Thedebateover machines snatching jobs from people is muted in Japan, where birth rates have been sinking for decades, raising fears of a labor shortage. It would be hard to find a culture that celebrates robots more, evident in the popularity of companion robots for consumers, sold by the internet company SoftBank and Toyota Motor Corp, among others.

Japan, which forged a big push toward robotics starting in the 1990s, leads the world in robots per 10,000 workers in the automobile sector 1,562, compared with 1,091 in the U.S. and 1,133 in Germany, according to a White House report submitted to Congress last year. Japan was also ahead in sectors outside automobiles at 219 robots per 10,000 workers, compared with 76 for the U.S. and 147 for Germany.

One factor in Japan's different take on automation is the "lifetime employment" system. Major Japanese companies generally retain workers, even if their abilities become outdated, and retrain them for other tasks, said Koichi Iwamoto, a senior fellow at the Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry.

That system is starting to fray as Japan globalizes, but it's still largely in use, Iwamoto said.

Although data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development show digitalization reduces demand for mid-level routine tasks such as running assembly lines while boosting demand for low- and high-skilled jobs, that trend has been less pronounced in Japan than in the U.S.

The OECD data, which studied shifts from 2002 to 2014, showed employment trends remained almost unchanged for Japan.

That means companies in Japan weren't resorting as aggressively as those in the U.S. to robots to replace humans. Clerical workers, for instance, were keeping their jobs, although their jobs could be done better, in theory, by computers.

That kind of resistance to adopting digital technology for services also is reflected in how Japanese society has so far opted to keep taxis instead of shifting to online ride hailing and shuttle services.

Still, automation has progressed in Japan to the extent the nation has now entered what Iwamoto called a "reflective stage," in which "human harmony with machines" is being pursued, he said.

"Some tasks may be better performed by people, after all," said Iwamoto.

Kiyoshi Sakai, who has worked at Asahi for 29 years, recalls how, in the past, can caps had to be placed into machines by hand, a repetitive task that was hard not just on the body, but also the mind.

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Reverence For Robots: Japanese Workers Treasure Automation - Manufacturing.net

Build and control your own robots, home automation and more with this Raspberry Pi training – TNW

The creators behind the Raspberry Pi are pretty ingenious folks. After spending the past few years fine-tuning the Pi into a credit card-sized, single-board micro-computer that can run most operating systems and be used as a veritable Swiss Army knife of computing, its founders finally whipped out the Raspberry Pi Zero. For the uninitiated, the Zero is an even smaller, just as versatile micro-computer with the almost inconceivable price tag of $5.

So what can these crazy tiny, super cheap, but sneaky and powerful mini-computers do? You can start unlocking some of their potential with this Raspberry Pi Mastery Bundle, on sale right now for only $34 from TNW Deals.

With these eight courses, including 11 hours of instruction, youll find out many of the ways clever tinkerers have been utilizing the Pi in ridiculously cool ways. Youll also get the step-by-step guides to help create some of those projects for yourself.

After two courses walking you through the basics of the Pi and the Pi Zero (Automation with Raspberry Pi Zero; and Introduction to Raspberry Pi), your learning then turns to all the Pis incredible uses.

While you get training on how to mine Bitcoin for profit (Bitcoin Mining Using Raspberry Pi), the majority of this instruction comes back to using the Pis power to create real-world robotics and automation.

Youll learn about the mechanics of assembling hardware powered by the Pi (Hardware Projects Using Raspberry Pi), how to program and control a basic robot (Raspberry Pi Robotics), building your own robot arm (Build Your Own ArmBot Step By Step Using Raspberry Pi Zero), creating an automated home (Home Automation in 48 Hours Without Coding) or using sensors to gauge things like water temperature (Internet of Things Automation Using Raspberry Pi 2).

By the time youre done, youll have the know-how to whip up all kinds of cool tech to make your life easier not to mention a whole lot more fun. All this training would normally cost over $850, but you can get it now for over 90 percent off just $34 for a limited time.

Get this deal

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K2 Announces Velocity Global Tour in Eight Cities to Take Process Automation Around the World – GlobeNewswire (press release)

August 17, 2017 14:00 ET | Source: K2

BELLEVUE, Wash., Aug. 17, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- K2 today announced the K2 Velocity Global Tour, a series of must-attend events where the company will unveil the latest K2 process automation platform capabilities and deliver key industry insights to help propel businesses forward through the digital age.

Rather than having one large-scale event that would require customers and partners to travel from around the world, K2 is bringing the power of process automation to them. The tour, which consists of half-day events with a keynote, customer presentations, breakouts and receptions, will begin on October 3 in Washington, D.C. and continues across the globe for a month thereafter with stops in Houston, Seattle, London, Sydney, Singapore, Bangkok and Johannesburg.

Organizations around the world are under relentless pressure to digitize and automate, but it isnt a simple undertaking and can be very expensive. K2 aims to make this easier with a platform designed to empower developers, non-technical business users and everyone in-between, to build process applications at scale with a low-code, visual drag-and-drop design interface. This enables organizations to build and collaborate on enterprise-wide applications and rapidly scale the platform across all processes. Flexible and reusable components mean that when an application component has been built once, it can be reused over and over again.

We believe that every business process can and should be digitized and automated, however we recognize that many organizations dont have and cant afford the technical developer resources necessary to build process applications that span their entire organization to achieve true digital automation, said Adriaan van Wyk, CEO of K2. With the Velocity Global Tour, were bringing the power of K2 around the world so organizations of any size and in any location, can learn how they can automate their businesses too, without hiring massive development teams or spending millions of dollars.

Attendees will benefit from participating in the events in a number of ways:

Visit the K2 Velocity Global Tour website to learn more about dates, locations, venues, agendas and to register for an event near you.

ABOUT K2: With K2s process automation platform, organizations can rapidly build and deploy enterprise-grade business process applications that are agile, scalable and reusable, and scale the platform across all processes that move work between people, systems and machines. K2 solutions are being used by more than 1.5 million users in more than 4,000 organizations, including 30-percent of Fortune 100 companies.

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The Automation Conference & Expo: Call for Presentations – Automation World

The Automation Conference & Expo is seeking end user presentations about the use of automation technologies from across industry (discrete manufacturing, batch manufacturing and continuous processing). Past presenters have included representatives from Boeing, GM, BP, Stihl, ExxonMobil, Coca-Cola, Chevron, BASF, Nestle, Caterpillar, Sherwin Williams, Chobani and many others so you will be in good company at the event and have the opportunity to connect with your automation peers in industries of all types.

Automation technologies covered by the conference include anything related to controllers, actuators, sensors, motors/drives, software, industrial networking/communications, robotics, etc.

The conference will be held May 22-23, 2018 in Chicago. Presentation sessions are 40 minutes in length (30-35 minutes for the presentation, allowing 5-10 minutes for Q&A with the audience) and should focus on specific aspects of your automation technology use to improve production, quality, maintenance, delivery times, etc.

You can learn more about the event at: http://www.theautomationconference.com

Please send a brief description of your proposed presentation, highlighting the automation technologies to be focused on and the application to which they apply, to: David Greenfield, director of content, dgreenfield@automationworld.com.

Deadline for submission: September 15, 2017.

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Ethical Automation Decisions in An Age of Digital Disruption – CIO

This blog series, sponsored by KPMG, provides perspectives to help technology and business leaders drive technology strategy within their business.

Intelligent automation technologies, including robotic process automation (RPA) and artificial intelligence (AI), offer transformative opportunities for companies to shift the ways organizations do everything from running operations, moving through the supply chain and serving customers.

But making decisions about digital labor that is, an automated workforce with capabilities to complete work that largely mirrors our own abilities cannot be taken lightly. These efforts can have enormous and lasting effects on your workforce, on communities and on the entire world so they require significant thought and preparation, including digging into a companys deepest core values.

Companies need to monitor the evolution of digital labor in order to guide their decision-making, says Todd Lohr, principal, U.S. Intelligent Automation Leader at KPMG. They have to think about the profound impact of technology on their business, from how the work is done to who is doing the work, job replacement considerations, to the evolution of jobs and how it affects the work environment. He believes these efforts are the next wave of corporate sustainability, as more and more research shows that buying preferences are based on the perceived ethics of organizations.

The IT organization has a pivotal role in this, adds Cliff Justice, principal, Innovation & Enterprise Solutions at KPMG. The CIO is often charged with ensuring new technology is in line with company values; to ensure data systems are fed are not compromised and that data would not lead systems to learn the wrong things. The biggest mistake companies can make is to not include IT and CIOs in these decisions from the outset, he says.

In a new paper authored by Lohr and Justice, An Ethical Compass in the Automation Age: Decisions Require Deep Dive into Company Core Values, they hone in on a variety of ways organizations can begin to tap into company core values and processes or create new ones as the ethical compass to guide automation decisions, including:

Overall, companies need to determine their overarching strategy to deal with the ethics of automation: They need to weigh some of what theyre hoping to get out of it, says Lohr. There are short-term and long-term impacts on the operating model and a lot of decisions will hit corporate sustainability standards, enterprise strategy and overall corporate policies.

Paving New Ground with Automation: The Early Tip of Change

Digital labor and automation efforts are new and quickly-evolving, so companies are seeing only the early tip of the disruptive changes that will unfold over the next generation, says Justice. As a result, discussions about the ethics surrounding these new technologies are just beginning. Were paving new ground, and there isnt a playbook, or a lot of case studies out there, he says. We have never had a wave of artificial intelligence sweep through mainstream business in the past thats the reason weve decided to share what were learning as we go through this in our own enterprise.

All companies, however, need to start addressing these dilemmas, as automation-centered industry disruptions happen faster and more often: More and more CIOs feel the urgency to be the disruptor as opposed to disrupted, he adds. As companies deal with a new class of technologies on a new class of platforms and offer services and products that have traditionally been offered through different business models, organizations need to consider how they want to work. Issues related to automation and digitization overall will be some of the biggest decisions CIOs have to face.

With automation, organizations need to start thinking further ahead about technology, people and culture than in the past, because the disruptive impacts are so significant, says Justice. No industry is immune to new operators coming in on cloud platforms and moving into traditional businesses. They have to determine the extent to which they will transform and protect their business growth while maintaining their culture and taking care of employees and customers, as well as maintaining their brand and values in the market, he adds.

According to the paper, Justice and Lohr agree its up to companies to have these discussions and make tough decisions regarding the ethics of automation: We believe in the power of corporate leaders to make the right choices. With the right tools, knowledge and attention, technology can be the great enabler. But company and personal ethics must serve as the compass. You are the steward of powerful technology. Its up to you to use it right.

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Automation may take our jobsbut it’ll restore our humanity – Quartz

For humans to survive the automation revolution, we need to double down on our humanity.

The argument goes like this: Artificial intelligence is getting better and better at automating things that humans do. Not just repetitive tasks like assembling parts in a factory, but complex tasks that have traditionally been the domain of humans. Pretty soon, these machine agents will take all the jobs. Humans need not apply.

Weve seen this movie play out beforeand after a gritty fight, we won. The advent of agriculture put hunters and gathers out of business. Then industrial farming put farmers out of business. But each time technology ate one type of jobs, new ones appeared to take their place. Human ingenuity did its thing, we adapted, and we survived to live (and work) another century.

But, say the naysayers, this time is different. Were not talking about dumb machines programmed to do very specific taskswere talking about AIs that learn and get better by watching us and parsing our data for patterns. Globally networked AIs that learn and cooperate with each other will be very powerful, according to author and futurist Yuval Harari. In order to replace most humans, he says, the AI wont have to do very spectacular things.

I do not buy into that version of the future, and here are some reasons why.

AI is smart, but it really isnt as smart as we think. Its true that AI is getting better at tackling complex problems, but its equally true that AI is still not very good at doing many of the things associated with human jobs.

Automation will take away the parts of our jobs we dont like and leave room for more meaningful work.AIs have gotten pretty good at a believable facsimile of humanity in tightly controlled situationslike scheduling meetings. But a general-purpose AI that truly understands you and can respond with creativity and empathy, like the android Ava from Ex Machina? Not so much. AI isnt very good at jobs that require creativity, empathy, critical thinking, leadership, artistic expression, and a whole host of other qualities we traditionally think of as human. Which is why, according to Michael Chui of the McKinsey Global Institute, entire jobs or industries wont often be automated away.

Rather, automation will release humans from the need to perform specific tasks. Those will mostly be non-creative and non-personal tasks that can be broken down into relatively predictable parts. These are chores you didnt want to do to begin with. A lot of people arent hired to schedule meetings, submit receipts for reimbursements, or book flights, anywayfor a lot of folks, theyre just a dreadful set of tasks that came along with your otherwise pretty exciting job.

As venture capitalist Marc Andreessen points out, theres a subtext to the-robots-are-taking-our-jobs argument that is rarely discussed: It presupposes that humans are not smart enough to think up new industries and jobs.

But when industrialization killed the agriculture jobs that employed almost three quarters of the population, people dreamed up new ways to keep fellow humans working. We crisscrossed the country with highways. We took to the skies in flying machines. We built computers. We birthed entire industries around entertainment, healthcare, and education.

I have more faith in humans, and I have yet to see any real evidence to support the pessimism. As Andreessen says, people 100 years ago would marvel at the jobs we do today. The optimist in me finds it difficult to imagine why it will be any different 100 years from now.

AI can seem dystopian because its easier to describe existing jobs disappearing than to imagine industries that never existed appearing, tweeted Box CEO Aaron Levie. Hes right. Theres just no compelling reason to bet against humans when the past 200 years of history shows that were pretty damn good at adapting to technological change.

Not only havent we reached our full potential, but AI can help us reach higher. The debate between artificial intelligence (machines replace us) vs intelligence augmentation (machines help us) has been raging for decades. One side wants to engineer humans out of the equation, while the other thinks the role of machines is to help people perform better.

AI will make us better at our jobs, and better at being human.But that debate misses the point. The two ideas arent mutually exclusive. Its true that AI can do certain things far better than humansIve staked my entrepreneurial future on that. But its also true that when AI starts doing those things, it will make us better at our jobs, and better at being human.

Take a job in sales, for example. Right now, a sales assistant likely spends a lot of time doing things that could be automated: prospecting for and qualifying leads, sending follow-up emails, updating Salesforce, building reports, etc. Once all thats taken over by intelligent machine agents, whats left for you as a salesperson? Its the emotional and creative stuff. Youll spend your day building relationships and serving your clients with creative solutions to their problems. By freeing you from the mundane tasks you used to have to do, often grudgingly, AI will let you focus on things that form the core of your job: the stuff that only you, a human, can do.

This is already happening. Lets stick with the sales example. My companys AI assistant, Amy, removes the tedious task of scheduling meetings from your plate. A sales-specific assistant like Tact automatically captures sales data, reducing administrative load, and then Troops.ai automates the process of organizing it in Salesforce. When it comes time to communicate with leads, Crystal builds personality profiles based on social-media use and suggests ways to personalize your messages. These AI assistants are helping salespeople today by augmenting their existing skills and allowing them to focus on the human side of the job.

One implication of all this is that for humans to succeed in the AI-powered future, we need to double down on our humanity. Technical skills will no doubt remain important in the future of work, but as AI allows us to automate repetitive tasks across many industries, these will in many cases take a back seat to soft skills. Communication, emotional intelligence, creativity, critical thinking, collaboration, and cognitive flexibility will become the most sought-after abilities. To prepare for that future, we need to emphasize developing higher-order thinking and emotional skills.

While our formal education system catches up to the shifting definition of human intelligence, here are three basic ideas for improving your prospects in the future of work.

I see a bright future for humans. In fact, I believe there will be plenty of challenging work for humans because of AI, not in spite of it. I build AI agents for a living, but when it comes to creativity and innovation, Ill continue to bet on humans. Well come through with new ideas, new industries, and new ways to keep ourselves busy and productive, this time buttressed by AI helpers. Our imagination will carry us forward. It always does.

Learn how to write for Quartz Ideas. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.

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Automation may take our jobsbut it'll restore our humanity - Quartz

Raising the minimum wage spurs these companies to replace workers with automation – MarketWatch

Raising the minimum wage may be one of the biggest factors in creating more automated jobs.

A sharp minimum wage increase in the U.S. will most severely impact low-skilled workers, according to an analysis of U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey data from 1980 to 2015 by economists Grace Lordan from the London School of Economics and David Neumark from the University of California at Irvine. The findings imply that groups often ignored in the minimum wage literature are in fact quite vulnerable to employment changes and job loss because of automation following a minimum wage increase, the paper distributed by the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass. concluded.

The highest concentration of industrial robots occurs in the Midwest and Upper South of the U.S., according to data released this week by the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, D.C. More than half of the nations 233,305 industrial robots are burning welds, painting cars, assembling products, handling materials, or packaging things in 10 Midwestern and Southern states, led by Michigan (28,000 robots or 12% of total number), Ohio (20,400 or 8.7%), and Indiana (19,400 or 8.3%). The entire West accounts for just 13% of the nations industrial robots.

Increases in minimum wage give firms incentives to adopt new technologies that replace workers. Their increased payroll costs effectively cause them to make investments in new technologies that they hope will save them money. While these adoptions undoubtedly lead to some new jobs, there are workers who will be displaced that do not have the skills to do the new tasks. While roughly half are under the age of 24, minimum-wage workers represent 15% of the overall workforce, Neumark said. This vulnerability among minimum-wage workers is greater for older workers, he said. For a 50-year-old, the opportunities and likelihood of retraining are a lot harder.

The political debate between Democrats and Republicans over the impact of the minimum wage has been raging for decades. One side says it puts pressure on small (and large) businesses, while the other argues that raising the minimum wage helps lift people out of poverty. The national minimum wage has risen only 116% over the last three decades, from $3.35 an hour to $7.25. But some 19 states have minimum wages that are higher than the federal rate. (Since 1985, Wall Street bonuses soared 890%, seven times the rise in the federal minimum wage, according to recent data by the New York State Comptroller released in March.)

Dont miss: When Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg sound the same dire warning about jobs, its time to listen

Many of these automation-heavy states voted for President Donald Trump in Novembers election. We know that many of the voters who propelled Donald Trump to victory were in rural areas, says Mark Hamrick, Washington, D.C. bureau chief at personal finance website Bankrate.com. Generally, these are areas of the country, like my own hometown in Kansas, which have seen declining population precisely because of a lack of economic opportunity. By contrast, people are attracted to areas where jobs are available or even plentiful, which tends to reinforce the cycle.

Robots are expected to create 15 million new jobs in the U.S. over the next 10 years, equivalent to 10% of the workforce, Forrester Research found. The downside: Robotics will also kill 25 million jobs over the same period. And the better a job pays, the less likely it is to be replaced by automation: Theres an 83% chance that automation will replace a job that pays $20 per hour, a White House report released last year concluded. That falls to 31% for a job that pays between $30 and $40 per hour, and only a 4% chance for a job that pays $40 per hour or more.

U.S. wages have been flat. The average CEO of an S&P 500 company made 347 times more money than the average worker, according to separate data released in May by Executive Pay Watch, a report conducted by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations. Last year, CEOs were paid 335 times the average worker who has seen his/her pay rise 3% per year. The average production and non-supervisory worker earned $37,600 annually in 2016. When adjusted for inflation, the average wage has remained stagnant for 50 years, the report concluded.

Lordan and Neumark did find that hikes in the minimum wage had a more positive effect on females in higher-wage jobs. This suggests that employment prospects for some workers in higher-wage occupations are boosted by minimum wage increases, consistent with a story in which some jobs are lost to automation, while others are created. Those that are created are for higher-wage workers among the lower-skilled workers, and perhaps given that result emerges for women among jobs less likely to involve manual or physically demanding labor.

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Raising the minimum wage spurs these companies to replace workers with automation - MarketWatch

Ag automation the theme at Future Farm Expo – East Oregonian (subscription)

The Future Farm Expo kicked off Tuesday with talks on drones, smartphone apps and how automation will save farming.

Staff photo by George Plaven

Austin Hawkins, right, territory manager for Intelligent Ag, discusses wireless blockage monitoring technology for tillers and seeders Tuesday with Tom Jackson during the Future Farm Expo in Pendleton.

Staff photo by George Plaven

John Church, professor of precision ranching at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia, Canada, flies a drone as part of a presentation on managing cattle Tuesday during the Future Farm Expo.

George Kellerman has four predictions for the future of farm technology.

Speaking before a crowd of several hundred registered guests at the Happy Canyon Arena, Kellerman said he expects all farm equipment will be eventually be connected to the Internet, rigged with sensors, capable of artificial intelligence and able to operate autonomously in the field.

The future is now, Kellerman said. If we build the right kinds of vehicles, equipment and technology, I think its doable.

Not only is it doable, but Kellerman insisted it will become imperative as farm industries contend with a growing labor shortage.

A lot of people think robots are going to take jobs in agriculture, Kellerman said. Its just the opposite.

Kellerman, a founding member and chief operations officer of Yamaha Motor Ventures & Laboratory Silicon Valley, delivered the keynote address Tuesday morning at the Future Farm Expo in Pendleton, where he discussed how robotics and automation will save farming in the 21st century.

With that in mind, the Future Farm Expo serves as a forum where high-tech innovators from around the world can rub elbows with Eastern Oregon growers and explain how the latest developments from drones to smartphone apps will boost efficiency and production of local crops.

More than 250 people registered for the three-day conference. Jeff Lorton, who manages the Oregon UAS Future Farm program in Pendleton, said the goal is to build connections that can ultimately unlock the potential of agricultural technology.

The Columbia Basin is one of the worlds most productive agricultural areas, Lorton added, with a farm gate value of $20 billion.

This is the perfect place for the creation of a future farm, he said.

Day one of the three-day expo featured presentations about precision agriculture and how technology is steering farms from automation to autonomy. John Church, professor of precision ranching at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia, Canada, provided a live indoor demonstration of drones he uses to manage livestock from the sky.

Drones can be used on the ranch to find lost cattle, map pastures and take livestock inventory using multi-spectral cameras, Church said.

We can not only manage the cattle, but the pasture these cattle are on with these (unmanned aerial vehicles), he said.

The final panel of the day brought together industry experts who fielded questions about where they see farm technology heading in the next five to 10 years.

Mel Torrie, founder and CEO of Autonomous Systems Inc., said adoption of any new technology boils down to trust.

I think the route is going to be just greater and greater automation until that trust catches up to the technology, Torrie said.

The Future Farm Expo continues Wednesday, including UAV field demonstrations at Echo West Vineyard. The conference wraps up Thursday with a pancake summit back at the Pendleton Convention Center.

Contact George Plaven at gplaven@eastoregonian.com or 541-966-0825.

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Global Float Switch Market 2017-2021 – Increasing Need for Process Automation is Driving the Market – PR Newswire (press release)

The global float switch market to grow at a CAGR of 3.48% during the period 2017-2021

Global Float Switch Market 2017-2021, has been prepared based on an in-depth market analysis with inputs from industry experts. The report covers the market landscape and its growth prospects over the coming years. The report also includes a discussion of the key vendors operating in this market. To calculate the market size, the report considers new installations, retrofit, replacement, aftermarket, and services market.

One trend in the market is increasing use of automated wireless pump control products. Vendors have introduced automated wireless pump control products to improve the efficiency of pump control. These products can be connected to float and mechanical switches. These devices help in remotely controlling the functions of the pumps, such as the flow of liquids and speed of the motor.

According to the report, one driver in the market is increasing need for process automation. Many end-user industries are upgrading their existing manufacturing facilities to improve the efficiency of the plants and reduce the operating costs. With the help of automation and robotic solutions, manufacturing facilities can improve the quality of their production, thereby improving the efficiency. With the help of IIoT, these manufacturing facilities can collect data, which can be used for analytics and strategic decision making. With the help of automation, the precision and quality of work can be maintained, which helps in improving the output of the products.

Further, the report states that one challenge in the market is premature failure of float switches. Certain models of float switches are not suitable for certain applications, which causes float switch failure. Failure may occur due to the temperature of the liquid, which could affect the functioning of the switches, corrosion of float switches of due to exposure of these switches to various viscous liquids, and improper installations. These factors can damage the float switches and raise the need for their replacement on a frequent basis. The lack of awareness during the selection of float switches is the major reason for the premature failure.

Key Vendors

Other Prominent Vendors

Key Topics Covered:

Part 01: Executive Summary

Part 02: Scope Of The Report

Part 03: Research Methodology

Part 04: Introduction

Part 05: Market Landscape

Part 06: Market Segmentation By Product Type

Part 07: Market Segmentation By End-User

Part 08: Geographical Segmentation

Part 09: Decision Framework

Part 10: Drivers And Challenges

Part 11: Market Trends

Part 12: Vendor Landscape

Part 13: Key Vendor Analysis

Part 14: Appendix

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/wrl8cx/global_float

Media Contact:

Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager press@researchandmarkets.com

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Global Float Switch Market 2017-2021 - Increasing Need for Process Automation is Driving the Market - PR Newswire (press release)

Ingram Micro to Invest $10 Million in Warehouse Automation Startup … – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


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Ingram Micro to Invest $10 Million in Warehouse Automation Startup ...
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How 27-year-old Akash Gupta built the largest automation startup of India – YourStory.com

For Akash Gupta, a journey which started with building humanoids has shaped into one of the largest automation companies of the world today. Our candidate for this weeks Techie Tuesdays, Akash is the Co-founder and CTO of GreyOrange, an automation startup that provides warehousing solutions.

What does it take to be the CTO of one of the largest hardware and automation startupsin India and the world at the age of 27? The secret, according to Akash Gupta, the Co-founder and CTO of GreyOrange, lies in having strong fundamentals, the ability to quickly learn and unlearn new technologies and learning from the mistakes/failures even more quickly.

A BITS Pilani graduate in Mechanical Engineering, Akashs interest in building robots (humanoids) was strong that he built one in his college days. Unlike most students who tend to get emotionally attached to college life, our Techie Tuesdays candidate of the week, Akash, was was happy to finish his degree in three years and be out of the college.

YourStory caught up with Akash recently at his Gurgaon office to retrace his journey.

Akash was born in Auraiya district of Uttar Pradesh, situated 400 km from Delhi. His father worked in railways and was posted at Dibiyapur railway station. He studied there till class IV. When his family moved to Kanpur he joined the Puranchandra Vaidyaniketan school there.

Akash started coding in class VI with GW-BASIC and learnt C the next year from his sisters book Let Us C. Subsequently, he developed an interest in 3D animation and learnt 3ds Max and Maya. This kept him busy in class IX and X. Akash believes that his interest in 3D animation plateaued partly because of limited exposure to algorithm at the time.

Incidentally, this geeky student was the 100m champion in school. However, the IIT JEE preparation in class XI and XII weaned him away from track and field activities forever.

Akash joined the Mechanical Engineering department at BITS Pilani in 2008. One of the predominant thoughts in his mind then was that he had solved enough problems on paper, and now wanted to do things in real life. He says,

I could draw a DC or an AC motor on paper very well, but looking at the motor of the ceiling fan, I couldnt tell which one of those it was.

Related read Meet Kiran Bhatthe man who engineered Hulk and Tarkin to win 2017 sci-tech Oscar

In his first year, Akash saw a demo of the AcYut humanoid project. To join the team, he gave the AcYut test where he was asked to make a 3D emblem of BITS Pilani on Inventor software. Being good at 3D animation, Akash made the cut easily and started working with the team AcYut in his very first month in college. He wanted to learn as much as possible.At AcYut, Akash started by designing the mechanical parts and then manufacturing them.

As a team member, he had full access to the CNC (Computer Numerical Control) Lab for manufacturing. He learnt to write G Code (input for CNC machines) and to run CNC machines. In the first year, the team made three versions of the complete mechanical structure of AcYut. Akash says,

I was so much into it that I couldnt see anything else and fortunately BITS (Pilani) gives you that flexibility.

In October 2008, Akash went to Japan to participate in a robotic competition. This was his first exposure to an international technology-based competition which helped him understand the global benchmarks for such competitions. Team AcYut was then planning to participate in the Robo Games next year (2009) for which they started building two robots. Akash picked up micro-controller programming and took his understanding of robotics further.

In AcYut-II, the team used bust motors (motors serially connected to each other using RS-485). There were two series of 16 motors each and hence, writing fool-proof protocols was not easy for them. Akash says,

In humanoids, the most complicated thing is stability. We underestimate how easily we walk (and balance). Walking is very difficult to simulate. With a lot of enthusiasm, we chose six DOF (degree of freedom) leg and then we spent good two months solving the inverse kinematics for them.

Even after figuring out the right inverse kinematics model, it took the team another six months to put it in codes and ensure that those signals go to the motors at the right time and they behave as intended. Team AcYut used ATmega1280 for controlling the complete bot and 3mm sheets of 6061 aluminium to manufacture the brackets (chassis structure on which you mount motors etc) of AcYut.

Since the workshop occupied the day time, Akash (and team AcYut) got to work only at night.

Eventually, the team won the bronze model at the Robo Games in San Francisco..The main competition at the Robo Games was humanoid Kung-Fu where the robot which can knock down the other robot three times wins.

At the end of his first year, Akash and Samay Kohli (Co-founder GreyOrange and team member AcYut) got an internship at University of Louisiana where they worked at the CajunBot Lab on an autonomous vehicle project for some time. At the university, they met Thomas Chance, CEO, C&C Technologies, which built equipment for underwater surveying. This was their first exposure to industrial robotics. The duo worked at C&C Technologies in the areas of mechanical design, electronics and microprocessors.

One of the major projects Akash worked on was the SONAR stabilising system which solved the problem of mapping the ocean bed accurately and get rid of the inconsistency caused by the waves. This included fair amounts of mechanics and electronics. Since Akash and Samay had time on their hands, they went on to build a kind of Disney ride (by joining two trailers) in a haunted house owned by Thomas. Akash says,

One could sit on a trolly and go through the rooms which were themed differently like earthquake room, laser room. More than 200 microcontrollers were working in sync with 5 computers and 1,000 air pistons (for doing a lot of actuations) to make it all happen. The entire setup cost almost $250,000.

In his second year, Akash spent a lot of time on electronics, designing and manufacturing PCBs end to end. The AcYut team won the gold and silver medal at the Robo Games. They built an exoskeleton suit wherein if a person wears this suit and moves his/her hands, then the robot will copy/replicate it. They went to the Ideen Expo in Germany with this project. Akash visited the BMW manufacturing plant there which helped him understand the importance of factors like reliability in the automation industry.

Akash recalls meetingWolfgang Hoeltgen during the visit. He is one of the earliest angels and a strategic mentor to the founding team at GreyOrange.

In January 2011, Akash and Samay were invited to take part in a humanoid hand (robotics) workshop at IIT Bombay. Soon, other colleges too invited them and thats when they started thinking about starting a company. Also, since the work had started, Akash was very keen to come out of college as soon as possible. At the time he was juggling between AcYut, GreyOrange and his studies (curriculum). He used to be in Delhi from Saturday to Monday (running GreyOrange) and back in Pilani from Tuesday to Friday (to attend the labs, as a part of the curriculum were on Tuesdays and Fridays).

Akash and Samay started making kits for the workshops which gave them an experience of doing things at scale. By now, they were done with the Robo Games and started targeting the Robo Cup. While the Robo Games had remote controlled robots, the Robo Cup had completely autonomous (robot) 2*2 soccer.

While preparing, Akash got into image processing, cognitive understanding,vision systems andstarted solving the localisation problems. He understood the complexities of gyroscope, magnetometer, accelerometer.

Akash finished his college degree in three years somehow and took the final-year internship at GreyOrange. In June-July 2011, he shifted to Samays house in Delhi marking the formal start of GreyOrange.

Also read From UP to the US: The journey of Abhinav Asthana and his affair with APIs

Even though Akash and Samay were making good money through workshops, they were clear that they were not going to do it for long. Soon, they started building white labeled products for other companies. These included:

This gave Akash an exposure to different standards of coding and manufacturing. He used Qt language (application development framework based on C++) for the software. He says,

I started understanding the importance of getting the right abstraction (very well structured in programmes) from the real world. For example, while programming for a pump, youve to make sure that all the different attributes of that pump are kept in your data structure in order to perform different actions on it. This becomes even more important when were building longer-term products.

After building 3-4 white label products, Akash realised that he (and Samay) were playing with way too many technologies and products. Hence, they decided to choose an industry and build products only for that. While researching to finalie the industry, they wrote down some rules to help them choose the right industry:

They finally zeroed in on three industries:

They chose option #1 and built a prototype. They proposed the idea of maintenance of tanks to a company. They even gave them the design. Unfortunately, the company floated the tender with their requirements sharing the design submitted by GreyOrange and somebody else bought the tender. Akash recalls, Being a startup we were left with nothing. We even filed a complaint but couldnt give more time to it and had to let it go.

They then moved to supply chain. Akash visited a lot of warehouses, enough to convince him that a lot needed to be done there. He started looking at goods to person systems and found that it could be made much more efficient using Grey Pranges solution of using an elegant hardware and a complex software. The first thought was to build a bot.

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According to Akash, building a butler system is almost like bringing four large products together to make a complete system. It will have bots, pick-put stations, MSUs (mobile storage units) and a software that runs robots and business logic of inventory management. Akash and Samay spent the first few days understanding the entire problem and figuring out what the solution will be like. Akash says,

Our thought process was slightly different than what Kiva Systems (now Amazon Robotics) was doing. Kiva had a lot of Swan robotics which refers to distributed intelligence. Only the main server didnt have the onus of being intelligent. Bots were intelligentas well. We wanted to have a simple hardware and table up all the complexity on the server side.

This gave Grey Orange a flexibility which is desirable in the warehouses. Keeping the product software centric helped it and the hardware acted as more of generic agents.

Akash and Samay knew that its going to take them more than two years to build a butler system. And they also understood that survival of a startup for two years without revenues is very difficult. This thought coupled with an opportunity to build a sortation system for warehouses, made the duo explore it after visiting Flipkarts first ever warehouse. Akash says,

We decided to build a sortation system on the side while working on the butler system. It was a hard decision to take as we were a team of only ten people and bulter system itself was hard enough problem to solve. Technically its not advisable to do such a thing.

For two years, the team kept switching between sortation system and butler systems as working in parallel wasnt possible.

Lifting (500 kg weight) was one of the most challenging problems to be solved in order to build a butler system. The team at GreyOrange used a complex dual scissor lift mechanism to lift and built multiple prototypes. Akash says, In the hardware world, its better to build as many prototypes as possible and fail rather than getting stuck with building a perfect prototype.

Akash drew the architecture of the robot (butler) with safety system, navigation system and communication system. On server side, the team chose Erlang as the language for the main system. It was a hard decision as there were very few programmers who knew the language. Akash says,

At that point we had a dream to run 1,000 robots in a single warehouse. We couldnt find any other language or stack which allowed so many agents running in a soft real-time system.

Initially, the team used Hub motors where the motor and suspension was on wheels but later on scrapped it as it created a lot of problems. After three revisions, they got the design and production of the gear box right. Akash adds, Lack of prototyping ecosystem in India created further problems and delays. We resorted to doing things in-house as we couldnt be dependent on outside shops.

Finally, in November, Grey Orange launched its first prototype. Now, the challenge was to make them manufacturable (so that robots arent handcrafted). That took another 8-9 months. In the meanwhile, the team received an order for building sortation system. They decide to build a completely modular sortation system, so that even when one of the arms stops functioning, the rest can still work. An overall control system was designed for this. Akash says, Because PLCs (programmable logic controllers) had a lot of limitations, we built our own control systems. The sortation system was relatively less complex on the server side and fairly complex on the embedded side.

The first butler system was installed in Hong Kong. It had a small ten bot system, 200 MSUs, 2 pick-put stations, auto charging.

Related read Meet the co-creator of Julia programming language, Viral Shah

Usually, sortation systems are built to sort boxes. Akash too thought so and used IR (infra red) sensors. But when he received the sample packs from Flipkart, he realised they are poly packs (and not boxes). The IR sensors behaved very differently for these poly packs. Akash adds, This was the first ever sorter built for e-commerce company in India. And outside India, everyone used a box. So, this problem was left virgin.

Akash and his team fixed the problems of motor heating, slipping of belt, incorrect counting of the package, before installing the system at Flipkart warehouse. Moving the sorter from Gurgaon to Bangalore was very challenging. It was only now that the team started thinking about transporting the machine. It was a 40-45-ft-long machine which had to be dis-assembled and transported. It was a humongous task which taught that designing to make it work isnt enough. One has to design while making sure that the system is assembled, dis-assembled, supported, moved comfortably.

From the current capacity of supporting 1,500 to 2,000 butlers (bots), GreyOrange wants to build systems which can support infinite number of bots. The team has converted its monolithic architecture to micro services based architecture to achieve scale.

For GreyOrange, if servers go down, its not just the website which will go down, but also hundreds of robots with 500 kg weight on each will crash with each other. Hence, Akash and his team has to be even more careful while writing algorithms and ensure that any path reserved by a bot isnt taken by anyone else and that the orders are optimised in the best possible ways. According to Akash, right choices of architecture, stacks, thinking it through, being flexible and ensuring that the team focuses in-depth into modules has helped the company.

Some of the key challenges which Akash and his team are solving at GreyOrange are as follows:

In the last few months, rapid expansion to multiple geographies has brought in some operational problems like translating documentation, communication, screens, APIs, databases in five languages. To solve this, the team has built a clear framework and web interface for translators who get notifications sprint by sprint of new strings that are coming.

Akash believes that the hardware ecosystem in India has definitely evolved in this decade but the change is minimal. He says, People have become more supportive of working for prototypes of startups because somewhere they have seen startups becoming big.

Four years ago, when Akash went to a company which produced suspensions for automobiles, he was turned down immediately because of the low production volume requirement (relative to what the company produced for automobiles) and a lack of understanding of startups. But a year ago, when he spoke to them again, they agreed.

In the early days of GreyOrange, Akash used to hire people who were ready to learn and had a good understanding of basic sciences physics and mathematics. Lately, he has changed his approach and now he looks for the following kinds of people:

Also read How a small-town commerce graduate became CTO of a multibillion-dollar company

Akash is a big fan of flexibility and believes that the way supply chain is growing, the only way to build an efficient supply chain is by making it extremely flexible. He says,

In next three to five years, were looking at warehouses running with mobile platforms with changeable accessories. We really want to get to the point where you dont have any fixed infrastructure thats running in the warehouse. These mobile platforms can attach themselves with different accessories and can work as lifting units, or conveyers or robotic arms or static platform.

In order to get there, therere certain technology platforms that need to be built which will enable that. Akash and his team is already working on it at the moment (along with architecturing the entire solution). Once thats done, itll take another year or two to integrate with the system. The team is also working towards introducing the concept of unibots (similar to human beings) in the next five to seven years.

Akash wants to run one of the largest warehouses with 10,000 robots very soon. He is also keen to build GreyOrange as a company where he would still want to work ten years hence. Hes making sure that the company retains the culture of innovation and building new products. He adds, GreyOranges products are disruptive. For example, while other companies in the world offering linear sorters have a lead/installation time of at least three-four months, we do it in as less as four weeks.

He wants to stick to producing simple elegant hardware with extremely complex software which disrupts the industry.

Akash believes in being sincere to oneself and ones work. For the first three-four years of the company, he was always the first to reach office and last to leave. He felt it as a responsibility that till any employee was in the office, he should be there with him/her to support, to help.He says,

The biggest fear that you have as an entrepreneur is that if you fail, then you shouldnt have this in your heart that you didnt give your best.

You can connect with him on Linkedin or Twitter.

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How 27-year-old Akash Gupta built the largest automation startup of India - YourStory.com

ThinkSmart Automation Platform Launches New, More Powerful Features – Markets Insider

SACRAMENTO, Calif., Aug. 15, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --ThinkSmart, a leading provider of Business Process and Workflow Automation software and solutions, launched new features on its Automation Platform (TAP) today expanding integration capabilities and improving the end user experience to further enable organizations to digitally transform the way they work.

In order to better serve enterprise and government, ThinkSmart has developed tools to allow users toconfigure integrations with any system that has an API ranging from Salesforce to Google, with no rip-and-replace required. Users can now configure and deploy flexible integrations utilizing the following new capabilities:

"Our expanded integration capabilities are not an afterthought," said ThinkSmart's CEO Paul Hirner. "Since day one, our platform was built to enable easy integration with nearly any system. This is a huge benefit to government entities that have to work within the constraints of legacy systems as well as businesses that need to grow and scale quickly in the cloud."

These intregration features are beneficial to companies like Australasian legal start-up, lexvoco, which provides custom legal services to in-house teams, with the aim of bringing together legal expertise and technology to enhance in-house value, effectiveness and performance. By leveraging TAP, lexvoco becomes an all-in-one management consultant, law firm and technology vendor, and offers an integrated end-to-end solution to assist its clients to automate and optimize in-house legal workflows, processes and documentation.

"The new integration features are going to open numerous new possibilities for workflow builders," said Claire Vines, Head of Technology & Senior Legal Counsel, lexvoco. "We can't wait to get them incorporated into our processes and explore what new systems we can create with TAP."

ThinkSmart has incorporated form and workflow updates to improve ease of use in a number of ways. Form updates include Google address integration, expanded field types, more flexible wizard form views, and speadsheets within a form. The Designer workflow building toolset has also been expanded and allows users to configure more advanced workflows using a wide set of features including group roles, expanded auto-submit triggers, user self-registration, enhanced workflow revision management and expanded formulas.

A new and improved Learning Center is also now available to customers and houses product support and documentation in one centralized portal. The portal includes training videos, release notes and new product and feature updates making it easier for users to find answers to common questions.

ABOUT THINKSMART

ThinkSmart LLC, a leading SaaS provider of Digital Transaction Management (DTM) software, helps people to design, deploy and build smart automated workflows that accelerate their business processes and operations and transform their enterprises. The ThinkSmart Automation Platform (TAP) provides intuitive drag and drop tools enabling companies and government entities to quickly design, build and implement any workflow with no additional IT support required. TAP easily integrates with any internal legacy system, platform, or top tier eSign solutions, making it easy for organizations that need to operate more efficiently, cutcosts and save time. TAP operates anytime, anywhere and on any device; mobile app available to download in iTunes or Android app stores.

For more information, visitwww.thinksmart.com, call +1-888-489-4284, or follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

ThinkSmart LLC is the owner of ThinkSmart LLC and all of its other marks. All other marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

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ThinkSmart Automation Platform Launches New, More Powerful Features - Markets Insider