How Immigrant Workers Are Preparing For Automation In Agriculture – 90.3 KAZU

Inside Taylor Farms' massive, 120,000-square-foot warehouse in Salinas, millions of pounds of lettuce, cabbage and spinach are processed each day. It's loud, and the temperature is kept at 35 degrees, so workers wear earmuffs and multiple layers of clothing.

Vegetables from nearby fields are sent here to get chopped, washed, dried and packaged. When they're ready for packing, a yellow robotic arm called a Quik Pick & Pack uses suction to pick up a 5-lb bag of greens and carefully place it in a box with the help of cameras and sensors. This job used to be done by humans.

In another room, nine large robotic arms stack boxes into pallets, which are then shipped off to restaurants, schools and commissaries. Just two years ago, people did the stacking. But now, human workers are monitoring the robots.

Ana Gutierrez, an immigrant from Guadalajara, Mexico, has worked for Taylor Farms for 23 years. She has seen big changes in the agriculture industry since she started working in the fields as a teenager in 1984. Back then, she harvested vegetables by hand.

Today, American agriculture businesses are turning to automation, using computerized machines to take on tasks that used to be done by humans, as a way to alleviate a nationwide farmworker shortage. And immigrants like Gutierrez are getting education and training to ensure they won't be left behind.

Gutierrez remembers when she first saw what the robots can do.

"I thought that it was something good because I thought it would make work easier," she said.

The work has gotten easier, to an extent. Now, machines do most of the heavy lifting. Gutierrez welcomes the changes and signed up for training to learn how to run the robots. But she said other workers are concerned automation will eliminate the need for their jobs.

"I see that many people are worried that this is the future," she said.

As many as 800,000 farmworkers are employed in California, according to some estimates. Automation is changing the way they work. Job security for this largely immigrant workforce hinges on people's ability to change with technology and become a new type of worker, one who is more technically skilled. One survey from the US Department of Agriculture found that 90% of crop workers in California are foreign-born. Many have not completed education beyond high school.

"The machines, they don't run themselves," said Marcus Shebl, vice president of operations at Taylor Farms. "We don't want [employees] to feel in any way threatened [by the new technology]. We want to bring them along for the ride."

That means major US farm businesses, including Taylor Farms, are investing in preparing their workers.

A solution to a worker shortage -- or a scourge?

The turn to automation in the agriculture industry has been spurred, in part, by worker shortages. A recent survey of California farmworkers found that 56% of businesses reported difficulty recruiting workers to harvest and process their crops. Existing farmworkers are getting older, and there isn't a younger generation in the US willing to replace them. Meanwhile, the flow of immigrants from Mexico, historically a major source of farm labor, is decreasing.

To alleviate the shortage, companies have increased wages. But the work both in the field and inside plants is not attractive, it's tedious, difficult and often seasonal. And while more agriculture businesses are using a visa program that allows them to bring in temporary overseas workers, it's not enough. The Trump administration's restrictions on immigration are compounding the problem, according to industry experts.

That's where machines and robots come in, said Christopher Valadez, president of the Grower-Shipper Association of Central California.

"Automation may be another tool that will help you as the employer get some handle onto these tasks that must be performed in a way where you're not as dependent on labor to perform each and every job," Valadez said.

But there are concerns that automation will displace workers. Crescencio Diaz is president of Teamsters Local 890, a union that represents workers in the Salinas Valley, including at Taylor Farms. He understands why companies are depending more on technology; it's harder to recruit workers under the Trump administration's anti-immigrant policies, and companies have to stay competitive in a world where consumers demand cheaper goods.

But he is skeptical that automation will create enough new jobs for everyone.

"They will eliminate hundreds, thousands of jobs," said Crescencio Diaz, president of Teamsters Local 890.

"There's going to be a job for two or three mechanics, five or six technicians, but that's about it," he said. "I mean, they will eliminate hundreds, thousands of jobs."

Shebl said no Taylor Farms employees have lost their jobs because of automation. Instead, he said, jobs are changing.

Related: Automation could have a disproportionate effect on women's jobs

Education for changing jobs

Agriculture researchers and industry experts say education is one way to ensure workers are not left behind. Some companies are providing in-house training and development, while colleges and universities are creating programs to help students of all experience levels.

Automation is happening about four times as fast as we can keep up within education, said Clint Cowden, dean of career technical education and workforce development at Hartnell College. The community college is located four miles from the Taylor Farms processing plant.

Cowden says Hartnell educates two primary groups of people theres the younger generation that is being introduced to computer and plant science for the first time. Then, there are programs for experienced farmworkers, who are learning electric theory and basic hydraulics.

So when the plant changes, we don't have to do a complete retooling of the employee with a complete retraining but only small amounts, to keep them moving forward, Cowden said.

Last year, Taylor Farms created its own training facility next door to its processing plant. The idea is for longtime workers to gain new skills and to become operators and technicians.

Matias Ramrez, director of facilities and automation at Taylor Farms, recently conducted a training on automation. About 25 workers sat behind long desks while listening to him go through a PowerPoint in Spanish. Afterward, these employees took a close look at a Quik Pick & Pack, the machine that puts packaged vegetables into boxes.

In the past you rode a bike. Now you drive a car, you better [know how to] check your air pressure, your oil levels, maintain the equipment, Ramrez told them. As we've been through this technology change in our business, you need a lot more tech-savvy people. Or someone that knows the [production] line that's been there for a long time that could adapt to a more tech-savvy piece of equipment.

Gutierrez wants to be one of those workers who can adapt. Though she never went to college, she said she likes to learn and wants to keep training.

It wasnt difficult learning about the new robots, she said. Because Ive seen how they work, and I can learn by watching.

At age 50, Gutierrez is now an operator, manning the Quik Pick & Pack robot and another machine that puts the vegetables in a bag. She makes about $22 per hour.

The pay isnt a big jump, considering shes been at the company for more than two decades. She started at Taylor Farms making $11 an hour. But her job today is less physically demanding, and she said she sees herself working for the company for a long time.

Gutierrez said she wants to keep looking ahead.

I want to learn, I want to move forward, I dont want to get stuck, she said. If you set your mind on something, you can achieve them, and transform for yourself and your work.

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How Immigrant Workers Are Preparing For Automation In Agriculture - 90.3 KAZU

Warehouse Automation: A New Age of Workplace Safety and Efficiency – Supply and Demand Chain Executive

We live in an age where automation is advancing across nearly every industry. Self-driving trucks are being tested on our highways, drones are delivering packages, kitchen robots can whip up your favorite dish and robotic surgeons are performing complex surgeries. Along with these innovations come mounting fears over the future of the workforce. Some experts have predicted widespread unemployment in the coming years, with human workers being replaced by robotic counterparts and once-vital careers becoming obsolete.

Automation, however, can have quite the opposite effect on industries experiencing major labor shortages. Technology can fill existing gaps in the workforce by taking over repetitive, strenuous or dangerous tasksultimately creating safer, more productive work environments for employees and driving the emergence of new, tech-driven job roles. In short, automation is not eliminating jobs; its improving them.

This is particularly true in the warehousing industry where available labor is scarce. Many of todays facilities are struggling to retain staff as aging baby boomers retire in droves and young jobseekers show declining interest in material handling careers. In the 2019 MHI Annual Industry Report, 65 percent of survey respondents cited hiring qualified workers as extremely or very challenging, while an overwhelming 91 percent ranked it as at least somewhat challenging.

Warehouse staffing shortages are further compounded by operational challenges surrounding e-commerce demands, SKU proliferation and seasonal order peaks. Altogether, these issues are particularly taxing on manual warehouses where all orders are picked, packed and shipped by hand. Existing staff need to work harder and faster, sometimes taking on extra hours and overnight shifts, just to keeps orders flowing out the door on time.

In a field where on-the-job danger is a daily reality, added strain on manual warehouse workers raises the risk of injury even higher. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 5.1 out of every 100 warehouse and storage workers experience injuries or work-related illnesses each year, and many of these cases result in days away from work, job restrictions or transfers.

For manual order pickers, the most common safety risk is injury to muscles, joints, tendons and nerves, caused by repetitive, strenuous motions (twisting, bending, reaching, heavy lifting, etc.). Injuries can range from minor sprains, strains and pulled muscles to chronic conditions like repetitive stress injuries, repetitive motion injuries, musculoskeletal disorders, cumulative trauma disorders and cumulative trauma injuries.

Considering these safety risks, its no wonder that facilities have difficulty recruiting new workers to fill vacant positions.

Warehouse managers can protect their employees to an extent through preventative measures like proper ergonomics training and adherence to health and safety regulations outlined by OSHA. While better education and regulatory compliance minimize some risk, facilities can invest in automation to drastically improve ergonomic conditions, alleviate labor issues and enhance overall productivity.

Robotic hardware controlled by advanced software can take over the many demanding tasks of order fulfillment. From conveyers and automated guided vehicles (AGVs) to automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RSs) and order picking systems, these systems run with utmost efficiency, fulfill orders with complete accuracy, and use significantly less space than a traditional, manual layout. Facilities can thereby keep up with increased fulfillment demands without putting humans at risk.

An automated layer picking solution, for example, combines gantry robots, a picking tool, and sophisticated software to pick goods in layered quantities from products stacked on the warehouse floor. The system can pick up one layer, multiple layers to create rainbow pallets, or entire pallet loadscompletely eliminating manual labor from picking and pallet building. And due to its speed and flexibility, the system enables warehouses to easily keep up with the flood of orders during peak periods.

Further, a goods-to-man picking solution can automate the movement of goods stored in totes, bins or trays. An AS/RS, shuttle device and high-speed conveyor system work together to transport goods directly to workers at ergonomic picking stations where they can rapidly pick the required items for an order. This type of system can be up to six times more efficient than a manual operation, and its speed makes it an ideal solution for e-commerce fulfillment.

With automation running 24/7, existing staff no longer have to risk injury by performing repetitive, physical labor or overexert themselves working overtime hours and overnight shifts.

Instead, tasks for employees are elevated into more sophisticated roles ranging from supervising automated operations and equipment maintenance to analyzing performance data and managing products with special handling requirements. Ultimately, the need for this kind of expertise will create new, tech-drivenand safewarehouse positions that will attract a whole new generation of tech-savvy jobseekers.

Martins Famous Pastry Shoppe, Inc. in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania previously used a completely manual process for fulfilling orders of its popular bread, rolls and baked goods. All products were picked by hand, so warehouse staff had to plan and prep orders hours in advance of dispatch. This process involved safety risks for staff who had to manually move products around the warehouse, and resulted in inefficiencies as order spiked during the busy summer season. Today, Martins Famous Pastry Shoppe, Inc. has a fully automated order fulfillment process from storage to palletizing and loading. The facility can now schedule and prepare orders within just one hour of a trucks arrival and is fully equipped to keep up during seasonal peakswithout compromising employee safety.

Todays warehouses and distribution centers can leverage new technologies made possible by the dawn of the fourth Industrial Revolution, or Industry 4.0. By embracing automation, they can transition into more modern facilities where humans, robotics and intelligent software collaborate to cultivate a greater culture of safety and productivity. With numerous automated systems available today, look to a systems provider that can analyze your current operations and identify the best fit for your facility. The right solution will help you safely overcome the challenges of today and easily meet the demands of tomorrow.

As Distribution Systems Sales Manager, Derek Rickard works closely with Cimcorps global customers to develop robotic order fulfillment systems designed to meet their warehousing needs. With over 20 years of supply chain experience, Rickard has worked on many of the first fully automated robotic picking systems in North America, with some of the largest ones exceeding 1 million cases per week.

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Warehouse Automation: A New Age of Workplace Safety and Efficiency - Supply and Demand Chain Executive

2020 Priorities: Sanitation, Automation and Brand Transparency in Supply Chain – FoodSafetyTech

In a Q&A with Food Safety Tech, Eddie Hall, business development director and food safety expert at Vital Vio looks ahead to 2020 and how technology will be impacting food safety, the additional measures that the industry will be taking to protect consumers, and the critical emphasis on sanitation.

Food Safety Tech: What are some of the touch points for food safety innovation in the supply chain in 2020?

Eddie Hall: When we think of the supply chain, we often imagine food traveling during transportationby road, rail and air. During transit, our food comes into contact with countless surfaces, hands, tools and bacteria that travels from the farm to the table. However, transit isnt the only place for germ spread and bacteria growth. When food reaches the factory for processing and packaging, there are opportunities for contact with debris, mold and dust, along with un-sanitized machinery and employees. Not only does this negatively affect the health of our workers, but also the cleanliness and safety of the food that consumers are buying off the shelves. In food manufacturing plants, Zones 1 and 2 are the most obvious for safety innovation in the supply chain, given food is bound to come into contact with tools, conveyor belts, etc. However, processors must consider the touch points in Zones 3 and 4 as wellsuch as employee break rooms, bathrooms and offices around the plant that foster bacteria. If these areas are not cleaned, food manufacturers have a significantly higher chance of breeding bacteria in food production areas, even if the right protocols are put in place in those zones.

FST: How will the retail sector step up to the consumer demand for safer food?

Hall: Consumers are increasingly demanding transparency around how food ends up on their plate, and prioritizing purchasing from brands that they trust to be safe. Food suppliers are being careful to remove harmful chemicals from the manufacturing process, along with displaying ingredients and supply chain information. For example, Bumble Bee Foods is using blockchain technology for its tuna fish, allowing consumers to access detailed information around the tunas origin, authenticity, freshness and sustainability by scanning the QR code on its packaging. Panera Bread has been consistent in offering customers ingredient transparency [by] providing calorie counts on menu items and removing antibiotic-treated animal proteins, as well as vocalizing recent efforts to perform safety audits throughout its supply chain. Not only does tracking technology and clarity meet consumers demands, but [it] also helps retailers pinpoint locations of outbreaks, foodborne illness and mislabeling. Were already seeing retailers step up to meet the growing demand for safer food, but in 2020 we will see an uptick in brand transparency around supply chain information, safety programs and ingredient clarity within restaurants, fast food chains, processing companies and grocery stores.

FST: How will automation play a role in advancing food safety?

Hall: Food processing companies and retailers are implementing remote monitoring technologies that track data and help measure protocol, temperature controls, sanitation, record-keeping and food traceability. Automation can also help advance food safety through methods such as enhance sanitation and sterilization efforts. It is critical for food industry employees to maintain clean environments, but continuously cleaning every hour of every day can become labor-intensive, and sometimes fall off the to-do list. Automated technologies can take on some of these tedious tasks and work in our favor to heighten food safety. For example, Stop and Shops new robot, Marty, patrols the aisles to detect food on the floor, torn packaging, empty shelves and more. However, robots arent the only place were seeing automation in action. Vital Vio has found a way to automate killing bacteria through antimicrobial LED lighting technology, which continuously kills pathogens with the flick of a switch. Automated tech isnt meant to replace workers, but to enhance their work around cleaning, sanitizing and meeting safety requirements. In 2020, automation is expected to explode and its important for leaders in the food and beverage industry to take advantage of safety tech innovations to advance food safety in 2020 and beyond.

FST: How will food companies continue to work towards reducing contamination issues and recalls?

Hall: The U.S. government has stepped in to tackle issues in the food industry by implementing new regulations, such as FSMA. This regulation urges food companies to shift from reactively responding to safety and contamination issues, to proactively working to prevent them. In an effort to reduce recalls, retail giant Walmart recently employed blockchain to track its lettuce supply chains all the way back to the grower. For food companies to reduce contamination, they must also implement more automated sanitation technologies along the supply chain. The most common food contaminants are usually invisible to the naked eye, such as mold, Listeria, Salmonella and E. coli. Sanitation automation techsuch as antimicrobial LED lightingcan continuously kill microscopic bacteria and prevent regrowth, ensuring clean food and equipment. Not only will food companies begin implementing more sanitization technologies, but also focus on other ways, like blockchain traceability, to prevent food recalls and bacteria growth that pose serious health risks to their customers.

FST: Any additional comments?

Hall: Our Dirty Truth report reveals disturbing stats around Americans cleaning habits, such as 1 in 4 (27%) do not sanitize their hands after traveling on public transportation. This means that factory or grocery employees that commute to work via bus, train, etc. are bringing bacteria and other germs with them. Whats worse, 1 in 6 Americans get sick and 3,000 die each year from consuming contaminated foods or beverages. This alarming rate can only be improved if we see effort from all sides of the industryincluding food processors, manufacturers, workers throughout the supply chain and retailers. Continuous cleaning and sanitation measures can be labor-intensive and sometimes impossible to tackle throughout the day. Luckily, automated technology exists and is expected to address this growing issue of contamination, the spread of bacteria, recalls, and consumer demand for safety and transparency.

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2020 Priorities: Sanitation, Automation and Brand Transparency in Supply Chain - FoodSafetyTech

What the HiQ vs. LinkedIn Case Means for Automated Web Scraping – CPO Magazine

Data plays a prominent role in our lives today, even if we arent aware of its presence. There are many complex moral, legal, and philosophical questions about how we gather and use data; not least who actually owns it. After all, if I tell you how tall I am, do you now own my height? If you write the number down and sell the information on to someone else, am I entitled to a cut?

A case between data aggregator HiQ and social media platform LinkedIn highlights some of the difficult questions facing data scientists today.

The implications of the litigation between LinkedIn and HiQ are profound, but the case itself is simple enough to understand. It centered around LinkedIns invocation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act in a cease-and-desist letter to HiQ.

HiQ is a data analytics firm that provides business intelligence based on publicly-available data scraped from LinkedIn. Like many businesses today, they depend on access to public-facing data to be able to function. One of the unspoken but very salient questions raised by the case is where the line between public and private data lies.

Before you continue reading, how about a follow on LinkedIn?

The data that LinkedIn holds belongs to the company, inasmuch as it is being stored on their systems. However, the data itself consists only of what other people have submitted to LinkedIn. At the time of the case, the data was accessible to anyone who visited LinkedIn. From HiQs perspective, this meant that the data on LinkedIn was fair game for scraping. From LinkedIns perspective, their ToS prohibited the use of automation tools. They had a right to enforce those ToS by banning IP addresses associated with scraping.

With a growing number of entities scraping LinkedIn for data, the platform took action to terminate the accounts of suspected offenders. One of the businesses caught up in the bans was HiQ. They were able to easily circumvent the IP ban, by utilizing proxy services to mask the IP addresses they used for scraping.

LinkedIn responded by sending a cease-and-desist letter to HiQ. They asserted that not only had the firm breached LinkedIns ToS, but they had also violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), along with some other laws. HiQ responded with a lawsuit seeking an injunction against LinkedIn to prevent them from hindering HiQs access to data until the case was resolved.

In an opinion published in September 2019, the Ninth Circuit, while stopping short of issuing a definitive ruling, appeared to be leaning towards HiQs side. The Ninth Circuit made the significant decision to disregard some of its own prior rulings. This case was far from the first concerning how online services use the CFAA to enforce their own terms of service.

For example, a case back in 2012, United States v. Nosal, led to a ruling from the Ninth Circuit that the CFAA should not be turned into a sweeping internet-policing mandate. The CFAA was originally conceived to provide a legal framework for responding to hacking and the court chose to maintain the Acts focus on hacking when issuing their decision. In that case, it was decided that violating a websites terms of use would not constitute a violation of the CFAA.

Giving the CFAA a broader focus so that it could be used to enforce a websites user agreement would have had a chilling effect on the then-nascent data scraping industry. In fact, the potential impact on internet users would have been far-reaching. Just about any internet user could be criminally liable for even minor infractions of a social media services ToS. The Ninth Circuits ruling in Nosal suggested that its interpretation of the CFAA was relatively narrow and that violations of the Act required more than a ToS violation.

However, two other decisions taken by the Ninth Circuit muddied the waters. One of these concerned a second decision in the Nosal case. The other was a ruling in an unrelated case, Facebook v. Power Ventures. In the second Nosal ruling, the court held that the term without authorization in the CFAA is not limited to circumventing access control using technical methods. A user gaining unauthorized access with legitimate login credentials could still be in violation of the act.

In the Power Ventures ruling, the court found that even though the data scraper had permission to access Facebook accounts using passwords and scrape data, it continued to do so after Facebook issued a cease-and-desist letter. This put Power Ventures in violation of the CFAA. Facebook had also blocked the IP address Power Ventures had initially used, although Power Ventures circumvention of this block was not in itself considered to be a violation.

A number of organizations, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), have taken a particular interest in the case because it has far-reaching implications for data scraping. The case also presented an opportunity to overturn or limit the impact of the Ninth Circuits earlier rulings. The EFF feared this would have a chilling effect on innovation and web scraping.

In their cease-and-desist to HiQ, LinkedIn cited the Power Ventures case as evidence that continuing to access its data would mean HiQ was in violation of the CFAA. HiQ decided to beat LinkedIn to the punch and filed for a preliminary injunction. Despite the earlier Power Ventures ruling, the Ninth Circuit found that HiQ was likely to be successful in their claim that automated access to public-facing data was not a violation of the CFAA.

The Ninth Circuit ultimately upheld the preliminary injunction, but there is still potential for the case to come back to court.

During the case, the EFF filed an amicus brief that emphasized to the court how vital scraping is to a number of industries. Web scraping isnt just used commercially. It is vital for research and has a number of other beneficial uses.

The Ninth Circuit affirmed that any data that required no authorization to access and was freely available by default was fair game for scraping. As the court pointed out, authorization to access data is implicit unless steps are taken to restrict general access.

The ruling in HiQ v. LinkedIn means that judges in the future will have more leeway. It limits the significance of earlier rulings in the Power Ventures and Nosal cases. In those cases, the court was of the opinion that requiring a login before providing access to data would render it as private, not public, data.

This raises another problem, however. Upon logging in to Facebook, a wealth of otherwise private data is now easily available without restrictions. LinkedIn appears to have interpreted the courts ruling as meaning that any and all data that requires a login is private and LinkedIn can revoke access to it. As a result, LinkedIn is now requiring users to login before being able to browse the platform.

However, for many people, the most significant finding of the Ninth Circuit was that the CFAA exists to combat hacking and cannot be used as a catch-all enforcement document for enforcing a websites ToS.

Finally, the case touches on one of the most important data and privacy issues of our time. Who actually owns our personal data? The Ninth Circuits ruling would appear to affirm that it is us that owns our data. Any platforms we share that data with are merely licensed to use it, they dont own it outright.

Data scraping is an integral part of the modern internet ecosystem. It isnt about to go anywhere. LinkedIns interest in pursuing HiQ may have more to do with them competing to provide the same services than it does about any legitimate security or privacy concerns. It is worth noting that the Ninth Circuit listed a number of other potential legal remedies for businesses in LinkedIns position. The case will now return to the district court for a trial. A lot of people will be watching developments with great interest.

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What the HiQ vs. LinkedIn Case Means for Automated Web Scraping - CPO Magazine

The roadmap to implementing automation and AI must include ‘people’ – Tech Wire Asia

Adopting new technologies must be an enterprise wide movement. Source: Shutterstock

ARTIFICIAL Intelligence (AI) and automation are two technologies that have become an integral part of businesses. Industries across the board are being disrupted, and rightly so.

The opportunities that AI and automation can offer a business are endless.

Automation can take care of the back-end, routine tasks, avoiding human errors in the bargain. Time to value for any process can be accelerated with automation. Shaving minutes off an operational process increases throughput, and companies can deliver high value to customers in a short period of time.

AI, on the other hand, is transforming all facets of a business. It can learn from a continuous input of real-time data, and spot trends and predict outcomes in all possible scenarios and perform other amazing feats.

Implementing automation and AI arent simple, and tangible results accrue only to those that scale projects across the enterprise.

This holds especially true for organizations that were not born as digital natives. As change and transformation trickle down the hierarchy, business executives must recognize and drive home the fact that embracing technologies is not optional.

Business goals should be reoriented around these technologies, especially around tangible ideas such as expense reduction where employees can see and drive the change.

To encourage and support tech-oriented activities, companies can start by building centers of excellence (COE) and shared services with core competencies in automation and AI.

The COE team in place should have clear deliverables such as creating business road maps and establishing partnerships among business units (BU). They should also be given the green light to execute projects with some flexibility.

With clear ROI metrics, COE teams can adjust goals as the organization builds up its core competencies within these technology areas.

At the end of the day, were living in the age of automation and AI. These are revolutionary technologies and can work wonders for an organization. They can also serve as a competitive differentiator, creating new and exciting opportunities for those that can harness technology effectively.

Investing in technology cannot be an afterthought. However, care must be taken to ensure that they can be integrated into the business as seamless as possible.

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The roadmap to implementing automation and AI must include 'people' - Tech Wire Asia

Capgemini makes the case for intelligent process automation – Gigabit Magazine – Technology News, Magazine and Website

Adam Bujak, Global Head of Intelligent Automation at Capgemini explains why the thing he does for a job is very important.

Intelligent process automation (IPA) has the potential to enrich the business and IT landscape in front, middle and back-office, creating a radical shift towards a digitally augmented workforce that can deliver accelerated value for the client. Despite the growing appetite for process automation, many organisations are failing to successfully incorporate it into their value chain. Capgemini research found that only 16% of enterprises are deploying intelligent automation at scale demonstrating the gap between the reality and ambition of IPAs transformational impact.

What is IPA?

IPA can be seen as the golden triangle consisting of an intelligent blend of robotic process automation (RPA), artificial intelligence (AI), and smart analytics creating digitally augmented workforce of the future.

IPAs main objective is to cultivate a digitally augmented workforce that breaks organisational silos to secure value for the customer. A digitally augmented workforce also holds more value for the organisation, allowing employees to move away from routine or monotonous tasks reliably taken over by IPA and focus on more value-adding activities.

For example, RedBalloon[1], an Australian online gift retailer, is using an AI-powered digital marketing platform to process a large database of customer interactions and transaction history. With the help of AI, the company was able to reduce the total cost of acquisition[2] by 25% in one month. The time spent by the marketing team on manually executing search campaigns or altering social media audiences was redirected to more strategic activities, such as devising campaigns that targeted niche and high-value audiences uncovered by AI.

How to implement IPA successfully

To drive IPA at scale, organisations need to overcome a range of business, technology, and talent-related challenges. Taking advantage of intelligent automation isnt simply a question of layering it on top of existing infrastructure or a current business process.

Its essential to recognise that harnessing IPAs full potential involves not only thinking about technology toolkits, but also processes transformation, change management and humans being an integral part of the process. Below, I list key success factors for implementing IPA.

Create your vision and roadmap: By setting a vision for IPA, organisations will have clarity on what they want to achieve. This means not just seeing IPA as a route to operational gains, but also to drive customer engagement and, ultimately, revenue. An IPA roadmap is critical to achieving these objectives. It identifies and prioritises the processes for IPA, assesses the potential impact on people, and assesses the technology options available.

Ensure processes have been optimised and identify quick wins: A proper selection and assessment of the suitability of business processes for IPA is crucial for success, especially when evaluating the automation of existing processes. Capgeminis ESOAR approach helps in the identification of the right processes to automate and robotise. Its also recommended that organisations start with quick-win use cases that are not too complex and offer strong benefit and value upside.

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Be agile: A proof of concept (PoC) shows the technical feasibility of rule-based solutions within the organisations IT environment and the minimum viable product (MVP) demonstrates the minimum functionalities of the AI solution. PoCs and MVPs not only test the operating model, but can also address any doubts or concerns that leaders have about the benefits of IPA. An agile approach involving small steps, small failures, and fast recovery can deliver quick results demonstrating IPAs value. Organisations should also capture successes, identify ambassadors in the organisation, and keep the relevant stakeholders updated on the progress of the IPA journey.

Ensure AI needs are accounted for at the beginning of your IPA journey and use analytics more strategically: New use cases in artificial intelligence are emerging every day and are particularly compelling in instances where rule-based automation only delivers a fraction of IPAs potential. Organisations should evaluate AI technology platforms at the onset of their IPA planning exercise. They also need to make sure they get their data basis right as the algorithms cannot be smarter than the underlying data provided. Organisations need to align their data and IT security to identify all fields of data which can be used based on technical feasibility and data security constraints.

Focus on change management and cultivate digital talent: Given the potential impact of automation on people, many organisations struggle with change management, for fear of job losses and employee resistance. Actions such as involving employees in initiatives, clearly communicating the vision, and encouraging people to actively participate are therefore critical. Communications should emphasise that IPA can be used to remove the mundane, repetitive tasks from their day-to-day work, providing them with an opportunity to focus on more value-adding activities. According to Capgeminis report, nearly 80% of automation leaders say that they encourage their employees to suggest IPA initiatives. To gain success, engage a dedicated team of change and communication, in charge of raising awareness in the business of the benefits of IPA.

IPA has significant potential, from the radical transformation of efficiency to new revenue opportunities. The successful combination of business and IT allows organisations to realise the full upside, but many are still struggling to accomplish scale and value by dwelling on siloed PoCs, not targeting real business problems. One thing is sure: data rich IPA solutions bring in a plethora of exciting opportunities to drive tangible value for customers as well as top-line growth. We are just taking off on a great journey.

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Capgemini makes the case for intelligent process automation - Gigabit Magazine - Technology News, Magazine and Website

Who is afraid of automation displacing jobs? – Livemint

Mumbai: The perceived threat of robots stealing human jobs has become so real that there are now blogs and websites such as willrobotstakemyjob.com and replacedbyrobots.info that tell you the likelihood of your job being stolen by robots or being replaced by artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled technology.

An International Monetary Fund (IMF) working paper suggests that such fears may be overestimated. Based on a survey of 11,000 workers conducted in May 2018 across advanced and emerging market economies, including the UK, the US, Japan, India and China, the authors of the study led by Carlos Mulas-Granados found that most workers view automation positively, especially in emerging markets.

This is possibly because advanced economies have suffered greater job losses on account of technological advancement. Notably, the survey on which this analysis is based deliberately excludes highly-educated workers and focuses on understanding the perceptions of less educated, lower income, and middle-skilled workers.

The authors found that in advanced economies, it is the women and older respondents who are more pessimistic about AI-led technological transformation. More generally, the authors find that negative views about automation and AI are prevalent among older, poorer workers, and among those who have suffered recent job volatility. Worries about AI displacing jobs is more in countries with high robot penetration such as Japan and Sweden.

Workers with higher levels of job satisfaction and higher education are more likely to have a more positive outlook about AI-enabled technology, the researchers found. These workers also expect governments to play a role in preparing workers for managing the impact of automation on the future of work through re-education and training.

Also read: Automation, Skills and the Future of Work: What do Workers Think?

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Who is afraid of automation displacing jobs? - Livemint

25 Benefits of Robotic Process Automation in Today’s Time – TechFunnel

Robotic Process Automation is becoming a popular topic, especially since it helps companies and businesses in many different ways, including by removing tedious tasks from employees.

But what is robotic process automation? Robotic process automation RPA is a system that learns small tedious tasks to complete in the graphical user interface or GUI by watching a user perform the task. After that, the RPA robots can continue the tasks while the employee can start on other projects that they didnt have time for before.

Table of Content

However, there are more RPA benefits than just that. Heres a list of the top 25 benefits.

Automated work can not only get tasks faster, but they can also get tasks done at a lower cost. This helps you get more tasks done for a much lower rate.

Repetitive and tedious tasks can slow down your employees, grabbing their time away from more significant tasks. However, with the RPA, your employees will have more time on their hands to complete those other tasks.

With more time on their hands and away from those tedious tasks, your employees can invest themselves more in their work and feel as if theyre doing more for the company.

Humans will inevitably leave some type of error; thats just humans being humans. But the RPA runs with little to no errors, which lowers operational risk.

Unlike robots, humans cannot do every task the same for hours. RPA, however, can duplicate tasks at a constant rate with little to no ways of being distinguishable from the last.

Some RPA complete tasks that humans used to fill out on paper. But now, with RPA, those same tasks can be completed electronically.

The RPA can also find ways to simplify processes when they are automated if possible. This could help create better practicable processes.

[Also Read: How AI Is Posed to Take Robotic Process Automation to the Next Level]

Since RPA does not need a timecard to clock out with, the automation processes can work 24/7 without stopping. This helps companies provide a higher level of service.

The RPA is meticulous, which helps companies have more valuable analytical data and fewer risks of any leakages. The robots can also help collect data that humans could not possibly get, opening up a wider range of critical information for companies to have.

Since RPA can work 24/7, customers can get service at any time for many tasks including processing a credit check and completing a payment.

RPA helps employees give more time to other, more important tasks like customer service.

Tasks, such as internal reports, can be completed faster without any mistakes, so tasks inside the company, like setting up a new employee, can be done faster.

RPA forces organizations to come to an agreement about who owns each application, which helps define governance structures. This allows the robots to have the same access to every application as a human does.

The RPA does not require you to replace your existing IT systems. Instead, it can use your existing systems just as an employee could.

Since the RPA is scalable, companies can scale down or upon their operations to ensure that their company can make an adjustment as needed.

RPA can work for the companies as long as they are needed since they do not need to ever go home, change jobs, or retire. They also do not hack or damage the companies data.

For any company, IT included, the focus is critical. Having less tedious work to do allows IT workers to focus on more important tasks at hand.

Since RPA is doing tedious work, more employees can focus on other tasks, such as creating more sophisticated analysis and core domains. They can develop work areas that they never had the time to before.

Since the RPA produces little to no errors, customer pain points will dramatically decrease. Customers will be able to have fewer problems with each company since robots get more work done in a timely manner.

Companies who use RPA can see benefits from having robots in weeks, if not days. RPA robots can be a quick solution.

RPA can let the company know about the Service Level Agreement (SLA) analysis in real-time, which helps the companies understand how their company is improving or not.

RPA robots make logical decisions that are designed by the best small and medium-sized enterprises (SME). The SMEs can help the RPA find the best practices that will ensure that the companys RPA workforce is performing at a high standard.

The RPA robots automatically document everything they have done, which gives the company a clear audit and a way to easily recover if an unexpected shutdown was to occur.

Some people believe that in the future, the workforce will consist of robots and humans working together to produce the best content. Nothing will fully be automated. By joining the new cutting-edge technology, known as the RPA, companies are becoming more innovated.

The RPA is helping humans have time to generate new, revolutionary ideas to help transcend into the next level of company service and products.

New technology changes can be stressful for employees for many different reasons, including the fact that their current roles and responsibilities may shift. Making sure that employees are kept up to date on the whole RPA process will help the transformation process become smoother.

Companies have different processes, including repetitive ones or more complex activity-based ones where the RPA would interact directly with customers. Its critical for companies to decide which work processes they have are appropriate for their RPA, so everything can run effortlessly.

Companies, upfront, need to realize and understand the limits of what any RPA can and cannot do. Some tasks are not meant to be automated as much as the companies desire them to be. Set realistic goals and continue discussions about expected results from the RPA company-wide.

With the rise of robotic process automation, there are many robotic process automation tools. Heres a list of the top five tools to consider for 2020:

[Also Read: Robotic Process Automation Tools for CIOs]

RPA is something that every company, especially IT, should consider bringing onto their team. Despite the cons, the RPA has many pros that can help a company in expediential ways.

Robotic Process Automation Tools for CIOs TechFunnelImportance of Robotic Process Automation in Content IntelligenceImprove New Employee Onboarding with Robotic Process Automation 4 YouTube Social Media Marketing StrategiesBenefits of Intelligent Process Automation for Your Business

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25 Benefits of Robotic Process Automation in Today's Time - TechFunnel

Mindtree Recognized as an Innovator by Avasant in Intelligent Automation Services – PRNewswire

WARREN, New Jersey and BANGALORE, India, Dec. 24, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Mindtree, a global technology services and digital transformation company, has been recognized as an 'Innovator' in Avasant's Intelligent Automation Services RadarView 2019 report. The report identifies digital leaders that demonstrate innovation and maturity with their intelligent automation offerings, such as robotic process automation (RPA), machine learning (ML), artificial intelligence (AI) and chatbots.

The report cites Mindtree's strategic partner automation ecosystem, investments in collaborative digital innovation centers and competency in reimagining traditional enterprise processes.

The report also recognizes Mindtree's practice maturity and global automation initiatives across industries, including:

"Mindtree has made concerted investments to advance our automation capabilities through strategic partnerships, research and innovation hubs. This allows us to play an integral role in developing and deploying next generation solutions for our clients," said Manas Chakraborty, Global Head of Enterprise Service Lines for Mindtree. "It's great to see Avasant recognize our deeply ingrained digital culture and automation expertise to bring ideas to fruition and help our customers reimagine enterprise transformation."

"As the intelligent automation industry transitions from simple RPA implementations to complex process automation, Mindtree's automation strategy is moving in tandem with the industry roadmap", said Swapnil Bhatnagar, Research Director, Avasant. "The company offers automation as an integral part of its project delivery using RPA, AI, and analytics and is further developing industry-specific solutions by leveraging its robust partner ecosystem. This project delivery approach, in conjunction with continued investments made in cognitive technologies by its automation business unit has made Mindtree an Innovator in Avasant's Intelligent Automation Services RadarView for 2019"

This is Avasant's second annual report on intelligent automation services, created to address the shift towards digital services that enable enterprise transformation. Avasant's RadarView is an independent assessment that reflects the true capabilities of service providers, with a view of evaluating them as long-term partners for digitally evolving global organizations.

Read the complete Intelligent Automation Services RadarView 2019 report here.

About Mindtree

Mindtree (NSE: MINDTREE) is a global technology consulting and services company, helping enterprises marry scale with agility to achieve competitive advantage. "Born digital," in 1999 and now a Larsen & Toubro Group Company, Mindtree applies its deep domain knowledge to 350+ enterprise client engagements to break down silos, make sense of digital complexity and bring new initiatives to market faster. We enable IT to move at the speed of business, leveraging emerging technologies and the efficiencies of Continuous Delivery to spur business innovation. Operating in 18 countries and over 40 offices across the world, we're consistently regarded as one of the best places to work, embodied every day by our winning culture made up of over 21,000 entrepreneurial, collaborative and dedicated "Mindtree Minds."

All product and company names herein may be trademarks of their registered owners.

For more information, contact:

INDIA Swetha Ganesan Mindtree Ltd +91-9789061981 Swetha.Ganesan@mindtree.com

UNITED STATES Erik Arvidson Matter 978-518-4542 mindtree@matternow.com

EUROPE Edward Stevenson Hotwire +44 783 459 7877 Edward.Stevenson@hotwireglobal.com

SOURCE Mindtree

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Mindtree Recognized as an Innovator by Avasant in Intelligent Automation Services - PRNewswire

PayClip taps TreasuryXpress for treasury automation – IBS Intelligence

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Payclip (Clip), a Mexican FinTech has selected TreasuryXpresss treasury management solution (TMS) to achieve straight-through processing of their treasury operations.

Clip is a payment aggregator that offers a mobile point of sales solutions for businesses in Mexico. TreasuryXpresss treasury management solution is expected to help the firm achieve comprehensive visibility, accurate and easy-to-achieve cash forecasting, and improved payment controls and efficiencies, according to a statement.

Our solution was strategically designed from inception to enable treasury teams to achieve automation quickly, effectively, and securely, Thomas Leitch, chief operating officer at TreasuryXpress commented.

TMS eliminates the need for multiple spreadsheets and bank portal management giving treasury teams of all sizes a single point of management for their entire treasury operations.

Powered by sustainable, digital technology, TreasuryXpress is a provider of on-demand treasury management software. Its TMS model is characterized by a frequent and controlled Agile development methodology, immediate logon access for clients, short implementation times, and digital integrations and bank connectivity.

The company delivers solutions that work for the treasury, making it easy to achieve 100% bank visibility, consolidate cash information, manage end-to-end payment processing, and automatically distribute useful and critical reports to all internal stakeholders.

TreasuryXpresss solutions centralize more than 10,000 bank accounts daily and process electronic payments for over $7 billion each year. It provides better, more innovative solutions that solve business problems.

Clip enables any business to accept card payments, at any time, and anywhere by turning a smartphone or tablet into a card terminal via an easy sign-up process in less than 5 minutes.

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PayClip taps TreasuryXpress for treasury automation - IBS Intelligence

Process Automation Systems Market 2019, Trend, CAGR Status, Growth, Analysis and Forecast to 2025 – AnalyticSP

The Global Process Automation Systems Market 2019-2024 report gives an overview of the relevant market including analysis, latest market trends and developments including features, technology and market chain types, applications and top manufacturers. Process Automation Systems market research report also gives an analysis of the key players along with upcoming industry supply, market demand, price, competition and industry forecast from 2019 to 2024. The report is the opinion of industry experts and gives an overview of the past. Year and current market condition.

Sample report can be viewed in a PDF form by visiting @ researchunt.com/report/global-process-automation-systems-market-research-report-2019-2025/#Free-Sample-Report

The global Process Automation Systems market is valued at xx million USD in 2018 and is expected to reach xx million USD by the end of 2024, growing at a CAGR of xx% between 2019 and 2024.

Process Automation Systems Market Segment by Manufacturers include:

Process Automation Systems Market Segment by Regions includes:

North America (USA, Canada and Mexico)

Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy)

Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia)

South America, Middle East and Africa

By Types, the Process Automation Systems Market can be Split into:

PLC Process Automation Systems

HMI Process Automation Systems

Other

By Applications, the Process Automation Systems Market can be Split into:

Read Detailed Index of full Research Study at @ researchunt.com/report/global-process-automation-systems-market-research-report-2019-2025/

Report Objectives:

Browse Detailed TOC, Tables, Figures, Charts And Companies Mentioned In Process Automation Systems Market Research Report [emailprotected] researchunt.com/report/global-process-automation-systems-market-research-report-2019-2025/#Buying-Enquiry

Request customized copy of Process Automation Systems report:

If you wish to find more details of the report or want customization, contact us. You can get a detailed of the entire research here. If you have any special requirements, please let us know and we will offer you the report as you want.

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Process Automation Systems Market 2019, Trend, CAGR Status, Growth, Analysis and Forecast to 2025 - AnalyticSP

Global Automation Testing Market Quantitative Information of Size, Leading Players, Shares, Threats and Trends – Neptune Pine

The latest study added by MarketResearch.biz titled, Global Automation Testing Market Research Report. Our analysts offers an complete analysis of global Automation Testing market. The study analyses the various aspect of the market by studying its historic and forecast data from 2020-2029. The report provides SWOT analysis, Porters five force model, and PESTEL analysis of the Automation Testing market. The different areas covered in the report are market size, segment analysis, drivers and restrains, major players, geographic outlook of the market, and competitive landscape.The market study on the global Automation Testing market will encompass the entire ecosystem of the industry, covering major regions namely Asia Pacific, South America, North America, Europe, Middle East & Africa, China and the major countries falling under those regions.

Qualitative information will discuss the key factors driving the restraining the growth of the market, and the possible growth opportunities of the market, regulatory scenario, value chain & supply chain analysis, export & import analysis, attractive investment proposition will be a part of qualitative information. The report covers detailed assessment of the Automation Testing market including enabling technologies, regulatory landscape, market drivers, key trends, challenges, standardization, deployment models, future roadmap, operator case studies, opportunities, value chain, ecosystem player profiles and strategies. The report also presents forecasts of Automation Testing Market investments from 2020 to 2029.

The Automation Testing report provide market value for base year and forecast year with an estimated CAGR value. To know the exact data and values, fill your information so that our sales team can get in touch with you.

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Market Segmentation:

Segmentation by testing type:

Functional TestingNon-functional TestingCompliance TestingPerformance TestingApplication Programming Interface (API) TestingUsability TestingSecurity TestingCompatibility TestingSegmentation by service:

Support and MaintenanceAdvisory and ConsultingImplementationPlanning and DevelopmentDocumentation and trainingOthers (Assessment Services, Framework Services, etc.)Segmentation by organization size:

Large EnterprisesSmall and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs)Segmentation by vertical:

Defense and AerospaceLogistics and TransportationHealthcare and Life SciencesBanking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI)Energy and UtilitiesTelecom and ITAutomotiveRetailManufacturing

Top Companies in the Global Automation Testing Market: CA Technologies, Microsoft Corporation, International Business Machines Corporation, Tricentis GmbH, Ranorex GmbH, Micro Focus International plc, Cigniti Technologies Limited, SmartBear Software Inc, Parasoft Corporation and Capgemini SE.

KEY BENEFITS FOR STAKEHOLDERS

The study offers analysis of the Automation Testing market size along with the current trends and future estimations to elucidate the imminent investment pockets.

Data about the key drivers, restraints, and opportunities and their impact analysis on the market size is provided.

Current and future Automation Testing market trends are outlined to determine the overall attractiveness of the market.

Porters five forces analysis illustrates the potency of buyers and suppliers operating in the industry.

The quantitative analysis of Automation Testing market share is covered to determine the market potential.

Table of Contents

Market Overview: The report begins with this section where overview and highlights of segments of the global Automation Testing market are provided. Highlights of the segmentation study include price, revenue, sales, growth rate, and market share.

Competition by Company: Here, the competition in the global Automation Testing market is analyzed, taking into consideration price, revenue, sales, and market concentration rate, market share by company, competitive situations and expansion, trends, merger and acquisition.

Company Profiles and Sales Data: As the name suggests, this section gives the sales data of key players of the global Automation Testing market as well as some useful data on their business. It talks about the price, revenue, products, gross margin, and their competitors, specifications, applications, manufacturing base, and the main business of players operating in the global Automation Testing market.

Market Status and Outlook by Region: In this section, the report discusses about gross margin, sales, market share, CAGR, revenue, production, and market size by region. Here, the global Automation Testing market is deeply analyzed on the basis of regions and countries such as North America, Europe, China, India, Japan, and the MEA.

Application or End User: This part of the research study shows how different application segments contribute to the global Automation Testing market.

Market Forecast: Here, the report offers complete forecast of the global Automation Testing market. It also offers global sales and revenue forecast for all years of the forecast period.

Upstream Raw Materials: The report provides analysis of key raw materials used in the global Automation Testing market, manufacturing cost structure, and the industrial chain.

Marketing Strategy Analysis and Distributors: This section offers analysis of marketing channel development trends, indirect marketing, and direct marketing followed by a broad discussion on distributors and downstream customers in the global Automation Testing market.

Research Findings and Conclusion: This is one of the last sections of the report where the findings of the analysts and the conclusion of the research study are provided.

Appendix: Here, we have provided a disclaimer, data triangulation, our data sources, market breakdown, research programs and design, and our research approach.

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Global Automation Testing Market Quantitative Information of Size, Leading Players, Shares, Threats and Trends - Neptune Pine

Intelligent Process Automation Market Generate Massive Revenue In Upcoming Future 20192027 – News Cast Report

Intelligent Process Automation Market Growth Assessment

The Intelligent Process Automation Market is forecasted to witness a significant growth over the course of the forecast period according to a newly published report by Fact.MR. The study highlights the critical trends that are likely to mold the growth of the Intelligent Process Automation Market in the forecast year 2018 to 2027. Further, the report introspects the various factors that are expected to influence the overall dynamics of the Intelligent Process Automation Market.

The report is an essential tool for stakeholders, upcoming market players, established companies, and investors who are looking to establish a strong presence in the Intelligent Process Automation Market landscape. A detailed understanding of the raw material suppliers, vendors, manufacturers, and other components of the supply chain is provided in report.Request 100 Page Sample Report Now athttps://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=S&rep_id=2983Key Takeaways from the Report

Current and future prospects of the Intelligent Process Automation market in over the forecast period 2018 to 2027Opportunity analysis for investors and market players in various regional marketsRegulatory and government policy framework relevant to the Intelligent Process Automation MarketMergers, acquisitions, collaborations, and partnerships in the Intelligent Process Automation MarketGrowth potential of the emerging market players in the Intelligent Process Automation Market

The report caters to the following questions related to the Intelligent Process Automation Market:

What is the anticipated value of the Intelligent Process Automation market in 2029?Who are the leading market players in the Intelligent Process Automation Market in region 1 and region 2?Which region is expected to witness the highest growth in terms of value during the forecast period?How are market players in the Intelligent Process Automation Market adjusting to the economic slowdown worldwide?Which country in region 3 is expected to have a majority of the market share during the assessment period?Access Research Methodology Prepared By Experts athttps://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=RM&rep_id=2983

key players operating in the Intelligent Process Automation market are Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., UiPath Inc., Nintex Global Ltd., Accesa, WORKFUSION, INC.. , Software AG, Red Hat, Inc., IBM Corporation, K2 Inc. and Bonitasoft, Inc.Regional Overview

The intelligent process automation market is segmented across North America, Latin America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, China, SEA and others of APAC, Japan and Middle East & Africa. North America is expected to be a large market for intelligent process automation as a majority of the intelligent process automation vendors such as Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., UiPath Inc., and Nintex Global Ltd. are based in the region. The significant traction towards adoption of automation technologies are driving adoption of intelligent process automation in European countries, such as Germany and UK. The growing popularity of intelligent process automation in developing regions, such as APEJ, Latin America and parts of Africa, are characterized by the increased spending automation technology in the regions. Rising disposable income among people in the countries mentioned above is likely to increase the scope of penetration of intelligent process automation in these regions in the near future.Report Highlights:

Detailed overview of parent marketChanging market dynamics in the industryIn-depth market segmentationHistorical, current and projected market size in terms of volume and valueRecent industry trends and developmentsCompetitive landscapeStrategies of key players and products offeredPotential and niche segments, geographical regions exhibiting promising growthA neutral perspective on market performanceMust-have information for market players to sustain and enhance their market footprintRequest Customized Report As Per Your Requirements athttps://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=RC&rep_id=2983Why Our Business Insights Make a Difference

Data collection strategies are well-defined and highly systematicOur analysts interview industry experts to collect accurate and relevant dataCountry-wise analysis of each regional marketCustomized reports include relevant and insightful data in accord with the clients requirementsWe leave no stone unturned while curating market studies

I have formerly spent over 3 years as a trader in U.S. Stock Market and is now semi-stepped down. I work on a full time basis for News Cast Report specializing in quicker moving active shares with a short term view on investment opportunities and trends.

Address: 4026 Armbrester Drive Rancho Dominguez, CA 90220, USAPhone: (+1) 310-537-4242Email: Randymorales@newscastreport.com

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Intelligent Process Automation Market Generate Massive Revenue In Upcoming Future 20192027 - News Cast Report

Global Process Automation Software Market Size, Growth, Industry Analysis and Forecast 2019 To 2026 – Testifyandrecap

A new informative report on the global Process Automation Software market titled as, Process Automation Software has recently published by Contrive Datum Insights to its humongous database which helps to shape the future of the businesses by making well-informed business decisions. It offers a comprehensive analysis of various business aspects such as global market trends, recent technological advancements, market shares, size, and new innovations. Furthermore, this analytical data has been compiled through data exploratory techniques such as primary and secondary research. Moreover, an expert team of researchers throws light on various static as well as dynamic aspects of the global Process Automation Software market.

Research Snapshot:

Historic Period: 2013-2017

Base Year: 2018

Forecast Period: 2019-2026

Key Segments: Type, Application and Regions

Key Players: Adobe, AppSheet, Automation Anywhere, Blue Prism, Celonis, Creatio and others.

Different leading key players have been profiled to get better insights into the businesses. It offers detailed elaboration on different top-level industries which are functioning in global regions. It includes informative data such as company overview, contact information, and some significant strategies followed by key players.

For Sample Copy of Reports: http://www.contrivedatuminsights.com/Home/RequestaSample/6191

The Top Key Players include: Adobe, AppSheet, Automation Anywhere, Blue Prism, Celonis, Creatio, Datamatics TruBot, Epicor, Intellibot, K2, kintone, Kissflow, Laserfiche, Minit, Ninox, Nintex, Pega, Pipefy, Process Street, ProcessMaker, Quick Base, Salesforce, Scoro, UiPath, WinAutomation, Zoho Creator and more.

The global Process Automation Software market is the professional and accurate study of various business perspectives such as major key players, key geographies, divers, restraints, opportunities, and challenges. This global research report has been aggregated on the basis of various market segments and sub-segments associated with the global market.

Global Process Automation Software Market Key Segments:

On the Basis of Type:

Business Process Management Software

Digital Process Automation (DPA) Software

Process Mining Software

Robotic Process Automation (RPA) Software

On the Basis of Application:

Large Enterprises

SMEs

On the Basis of Region:

North America

Europe

Asia-Pacific

Latin America

Middle East and Africa (MEA)

Geographically, the global Process Automation Software market has been analyzed in various regions such as North America, Latin America, Middle East, Asia-Pacific, Africa, Europe, and India. The global Process Automation Software region is dominating this market in the upcoming future.

Get Special Discount: http://www.contrivedatuminsights.com/Home/GetSpecialPricing/6191

The study objectives of global market research report:

To analyze the global Process Automation Software market on the basis of several business verticals such as drivers, restraints, and opportunities

It offers detailed elaboration on the global competitive landscape

To get an informative data of various leading key industries functioning across the global regions

It offers qualitative and quantitative analysis of the global Process Automation Software market

It offers all-inclusive information of global market along with its features, applications, challenges, threats, and opportunities

The major key questions addressed through this innovative research report:

Table of Content (TOC):

Chapter 1 Introduction and Overview

Chapter 2 Industry Cost Structure and Economic Impact

Chapter 3 Rising Trends and New Technologies with Major key players

Chapter 4 Global Process Automation Software Market Analysis, Trends, Growth Factor

Chapter 5 Process Automation Software Market Application and Business with Potential Analysis

Chapter 6 Global Process Automation Software Market Segment, Type, Application

Chapter 7 Global Process Automation Software Market Analysis (by Application, Type, End User)

Chapter 8 Major Key Vendors Analysis of Process Automation Software Market

Chapter 9 Development Trend of Analysis

Chapter 10 Conclusion

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Global Process Automation Software Market Size, Growth, Industry Analysis and Forecast 2019 To 2026 - Testifyandrecap

ChatBook Raises $1M to Strengthen Its Social Media Automation Platform – MarTech Advisor

The new investment round will enable ChatBook to further capitalize on its position as the market leader in social media automation to strengthen their solution offering.

Tokyo:Tokyo based startup ChatBook has raised a$1 millionfunding round led by from Monex Ventures Co., Ltd., Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance, VOYAGE VENTURES Co., Ltd., and East Ventures Co., Ltd., The startup has managed to attract key partnerships with Facebook, Salesforce and Marketo and has fully integrated ChatBooks chatbots into the fast-growing B2B enterprise landscape and with processed more than 1 million data points of customer information, since their start in 2018.

Marketing Technology News:Rubicon Project Partners With Telaria to Enhance Sell-Side Advertising Platform

The new investment round will enable ChatBook to further capitalize on its position as the market leader in social media automation to strengthen their solution offering through product innovation and sales growth as it will be the key area of focus for ChatBook, which will enable customers and businesses transform their social media campaigns. ChatBook CEOMaiko Kojima, We are in an era where marketing and sales pipeline development strategies are quickly becoming outdated at a faster pace. ChatBook actively works with smart marketers and advertising agencies that are striving to maintain control of the customer journey and deepen their customer relationships.

Marketing Technology News:Airship Appoints Marketing Veteran, Michael Lavoie as Senior VP of Customer Success

ChatBook is changing how an enterprise sales organization can automate the tedious process of using social media as a channel to develop a sales pipeline, says Kojima. Many fast growing organizations adopting chatbots notice that utilizing chatbots in social media environments quickly help identify opportunities and freeing employee resources to focus on more strategic tasks. Kojima adds, Our chatbots will augment and automate the task of lead generation and provide rich data from customer interactions, as we anticipate seeing more companies looking to build a better customer experience through the use of ChatBook.

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ChatBook Raises $1M to Strengthen Its Social Media Automation Platform - MarTech Advisor

‘No such thing as a responsible user of heroin’, says judge – Herald.ie

Alan Lynch was described as a very mannerly drug addict

Alan Lynch (37) used his busking proceeds to get drug money and was "not a typical" addict, his defence said after he admitted possession of heroin and crack cocaine.

Giving him a two-month suspended sentence, Judge Paula Murphy said there was "no such thing as a responsible heroin user" and that it was not a victimless crime.

Lynch, of Somerville Drive, Walkinstown, pleaded guilty to possession of drugs at Grove Park, Rathmines, on October 13 last year.

A garda told Dublin District Court he had seen the accused, identified himself and told him he was going to be searched.

Lynch co-operated and handed over a small wrap of heroin and crack cocaine worth 70.

He had four previous convictions for offences including robbery.

Unusual

While the case was at the lower end of the scale, the criminal drug trade was "fuelled by people who buy drugs" and the accused was aware of that, his barrister Glenn Lynch said.

The accused had had a heroin addiction since he was 17. It was very unusual for someone who was addicted for that long to have so few previous convictions, Mr Lynch said.

Lynch had studied music in college and did a lot of busking.

"The money he receives from busking he uses to spend on drugs, it's not like an ordinary heroin addict who uses thefts to fuel his heroin addiction," Mr Lynch said.

"He is not someone who is a typical heroin user, he's a responsible heroin user.

"He doesn't go out and commit crimes to fuel his heroin addiction."

The previous conviction for robbery involved "pulling a bag away from someone", and Lynch was in debt at the time.

Addiction was an ongoing battle for him, and one he was trying to address with the use of methadone.

He was "very mannerly, even when he's under the influence of drugs", Mr Lynch said.

The judge suspended the sentence for a year.

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'No such thing as a responsible user of heroin', says judge - Herald.ie

What did Lexington read this year? Here are the most popular books at Cary Library in 2019 – Wicked Local Watertown

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Last year, Lexingtons Cary Memorial Library was one of the largest and most popular in the state, despite the fact the towns population does not rank among the top 50 in Massachusetts. Cary Librarys 208,968 print holdings are the 11th most in the state. Also, it is the sixth busiest library in the state, coming in just behind the libraries of Boston, Newton Cambridge, Brookline, and Worcester, according to data from the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners. The fact Lexingtons library is able to keep pace with those of much larger communities speaks to Carys significant and longstanding importance for residents of Lexington and the surrounding area.

This popularity did not wane in 2019, as visitors to Cary expressed their interest in a wide variety of books. Below is a list of the 10 books, in order, that were most frequently checked out in Lexington this year, according to information provided by library staff.

"Becoming" byMichelle Obama

The former first ladys memoir takes the top spot in 2019. Here, Obama takes readers from her childhood in Chicago through her time at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and beyond. Critics have praised Becoming for the intimacy and candor Obama imbues her writing with.

"Educated: a memoir" byTara Westover

Lexington readers loved memoirs this year. In Educated, Westover details her childhood in Idaho, where she was raised by survivalist parents in near-isolation. After going to school for the first time at age 17, Westovers world opened up. She went on to earn a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge and is now a bestselling author.

"Where the Crawdads Sing" byDelia Owens

When a North Carolina man is found dead in 1969, locals immediately suspect the marsh girl, a mysterious young woman who lives alone in the reeds outside of town. The novel that follows is one part murder mystery, one part bildungsroman, and entirely a hit with local readers.

"Transcription" by Kate Atkinson

This novel dives into and beyond the world of WWII-era espionage, following a woman who is recruited by MI5 to keep keep tabs on fascist sympathizers in England. After a time jump, her past comes to light and she must face the consequences of her actions.

"Unsheltered" by Barbara Kingsolver

Kingsolvers latest tells two simultaneous stories. In one, a husband and wife struggle to make ends meet despite their best efforts. In the other, a science teacher and contemporary of Charles Darwin tries to make his voice heard in a repressive village initially envisioned as a utopia. As the tales grow, Kingsolver deftly intertwines them, creating another bestseller.

"Nine Perfect Strangers" by Liane Moriarty

The author of Big Little Lies sets her sights on a new age, remote health resort and the nine strangers who have decided to attend for a variety of reasons. Eventually, shocking secrets are uncovered about the resorts owner and the nature of their gathering there in the first place.

"The Witch Elm" byTana French

With this stand-alone thriller from the author of the Dublin Murder Squad series, French tells the story of Toby, a cocky young man whose world is upended when he is nearly beaten to death by burglars. While he struggles to recover his memory, a mysterious skull is found in a tree on the family estate and an investigation begins. Through Toby, French explores the nature and origin of upper-class white privilege while also crafting another acclaimed pageturner.

"Past Tense: A Jack Reacher Novel" by Lee Child

The latest in this long-running blockbuster series follows former soldier Jack Reacher as he searches for the truth surrounding his father in an isolated New England town.

"Normal People" by Sally Rooney

In Normal People, Rooney acquaints readers with Connell and Marianne, two childhood friends whose differences continue to draw them together through college and beyond. Critics have praised Rooneys book for its insight into class dynamics and its compelling love story.

"Little Fires Everywhere" by Celeste Ng

This novel details what happens when an enigmatic single mother and her teenage daughter become tenants of Elena Richardson, a buttoned-up woman from a seemingly idyllic Midwestern suburb. Ngs book has been praised for its unflinching look at the force of motherhood and the secrets that can accompany it.

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What did Lexington read this year? Here are the most popular books at Cary Library in 2019 - Wicked Local Watertown

How Humans Can Compete Against Machines in the Workforce – Worth

Although we have not yet reached the point where automation threatens to displace vast swaths of the labor force, a narrative of techno-disruption will continue to frame debates about work, education and economy policy. That narrative should make allowance not just for the future of work, but also for the possibility of leisure.

LONDON The most depressing feature of the current explosion in robot-apocalypse literature is that it rarely transcends the world of work. Almost every day, news articles appear detailing some new round of layoffs. In the broader debate, there are apparently only two camps: Those who believe that automation will usher in a world of enriched jobs for all, and those who fear it will make most of the workforce redundant.

This bifurcation reflects the fact that working for a living has been the main occupation of humankind throughout history. The thought of a cessation of work fills people with dread, for which the only antidote seems to be the promise of better work. Few have been willing to take the cheerful view of Bertrand Russells provocative 1932 essayIn Praise of Idleness. Why is it so difficult for people to accept that the end of necessary labor could mean barely imaginable opportunities to live, in John Maynard Keyness words, wisely, agreeably and well?

The fear of labor-saving technology dates back to the start of the Industrial Revolution, but two factors in our own time have heightened it. The first is that the new generation of machines seems poised to replace not only human muscles but also human brains. Owing to advances in machine learning and artificial intelligence, we are said to be entering an era of thinking robots; and those robots will soon be able to think even better than we do. The worry is that teaching machines to perform most of the tasks previously carried out by humans will make most human labor redundant. In that scenario, what will humans do?

The other fear factor is the increasing precariousness of wage laborthough this concern is seemingly belied by headline statistics suggesting that unemployment is at a historic low. The problem is that an economy at full employment now contains a large penumbra of what economist Guy Standingcallsthe precariat: under-employed people who work less and for lower pay than they would like. A growing number of workers, seeming to lack any kind of job (and pay) security, are thus forced to work well below their ability.

It is natural that one would interpret the onset of precariousness as the first stage in a broader trend toward workforce redundancy, especially if one pays attention to alarmist predictions of the next category of jobs at risk. But this conclusion is premature. The penetration of robotics into the world of work has not yet been sufficient to explain the rise of the precariat. So far, cost cutting in the West has largely taken the form of offshoring to the East, where labor is cheaper, rather than replacing humans with machines. But onshoring work that was previously offshored will offer cold comfort to workers if machines get most of the jobs.

According to the first viewlet us call it job enrichmenttechnology will eventually create more, better human jobs than it destroys, as has always been the case in the past. Simple, mundane tasks may increasingly be automated, but human labor will then be freed up for more interesting and creative cognitive work.

In late 2017, the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) publishedJobs Lost, Jobs Gained, which claimed that as much as 50 percent of working hours in the global economy could theoretically be automated; the authors suggested, however, that not more than 30 percent actually would be. Further, they estimated that less than 5 percent of occupations could befullyautomated; but that in 60 percent of occupations, at least 30 percent of the required tasks could be.

In line with the usual mainstream assessment, MGI believes that while there will be no net loss of jobs in the long run, the transition may include a period of higher unemployment and wage adjustments. It all depends, the authors say, on the rate at which displaced workers are re-employed: A low re-employment rate will lead to a higher medium-term unemployment rate andvice versa.

MGIs proposal for massive investment in education to lower the unemployment cost of the transition is also conventional. The faster the labor reabsorption, the higher the wage growth. Lower re-employment levels will cause wages to fall, with a greater share of the gains from automation accruing to capital, not labor. But the authors hasten to add:

Even if the particulars of historical experience turn out to differ from conditions today, one lesson seems pertinent: Although economies adjust to technological shocks, the transition period is measured in decades, not years, and the rising prosperity may not be shared by all.

This assessment is typical, and it has led many to call on governments to invest heavily in so-called upskilling programs. In acommentaryforProject Syndicate,Zia Qureshiof the Brookings Institution argues that, with smart, forward-looking policies, we canensure that the future of work is a better job. In this view, automation is simply the continuation of the move toward more, higher-quality jobs that has characterized capitalist growth since the Industrial Revolution.

History is on the optimists side. Mechanization has been the durable engine of productivity and wage growth as well as reductions in working hours, albeit usually with a considerable lag. Although the Roberts loom cost hundreds of thousands of handloom weavers their jobs in the nineteenth century, the broader wave of new industrial technologies enabled a much larger population to be maintained at a higher standard of living.

But, according to the second viewcall it job destructionthis time is different. The programming of machines to perform ever more complex tasks with ever-increasing speed, accuracy, precision and reliability will result in mass unemployment. InRise of the Robots, author and entrepreneur Martin Ford addresses the techno-optimists head-on. There is a widely held beliefbased on historical evidence stretching back at least as far as the industrial revolutionthat while technology may certainly destroy jobs, businesses, and even entire industries, it will also create entirely new occupationsoften in areas that we cant yet imagine. The problem, Ford argues, is that information technology has now reached the point where it can be considered a true utility, much like electricity.

It stands to reason that the successful new industries that will emerge in the years ahead will have taken full advantage of this powerful new utility and the distributed machine intelligence that accompanies it. That means they will rarelyif everbe highly labor-intensive. The threat is that as creative destruction unfolds, the destruction will fall primarily on labor-intensive businesses in traditional areas like retail and food preparation, whereas the creation will generate new industries that simply dont employ many people.

On this view, the economy is heading for a tipping point where job creation will begin to fall consistently short of what is required to employ the workforce fully. We will soon reach the stage where the machine-driven destruction of existing human jobs far outpaces the creation of new human jobs, resulting in inexorably rising mass technological unemployment.

Optimists response to such concerns is that the workforce simply needs to be trained or upskilled in order to race with the machines. Typical of this outlook is the following headline on acommentarypublished by the World Economic Forum: How new technologies can create huge numbers of meaningful jobs. According to the author, concerns about the looming devastation that self-driving technology will have on the 3.5 million truck drivers in the U.S. are misdirected. Augmented-reality technology, we are told, can create loads of new jobs by enabling people to work from home. All that will be needed is training of the kind offered by Upskill, an augmented reality company in the manufacturing and field services sectors, which uses wearable technologies to provide step-by-step instructions to industrial workers.

The author, himself the co-founder of an augmented-reality company, goes on to argue that, With the pace of technological progress only accelerating and with increasing specialization becoming the norm in every industry, reducing the time necessary to retrain workers is pivotal to maintaining the competitiveness of industrialized economies. There is no mention of the wages that will be offered to these upskilled workers in their meaningful new jobs. We are simply told that they will be relocated to lower cost areas more in need of job creation. Only at the very end of the commentary does the author acknowledge that, in fact, Technology is a force that has the potential to eliminate entire industries through robotics and automation, and for that we should be concerned.

The retraining argument should give us pause. In portraying upskilling as the solution to the labor displacement caused by new technologies, optimists rarely admit that if predictions about thinking robots turn out to be anywhere near true, workers would need to be trained in technical skills to an extent that is unprecedented in human history.

Moreover, the time it takes to upgrade the skills of the workforce will inevitably exceed the time it takes to automate the economy. This will be true even if claims about an imminent deluge of automation are greatly exaggerated. In the interval, there will be under- and unemployment. In fact, this has already been happening. Although automation is not yet bearing down on workers to the extent that has been predicted, it has nonetheless pushed more of them into less-skilled jobs; and its mere possibility may be exerting downward pressure on wages. There are already signs of the new class structure envisioned by the pessimists: lovely jobs at the top, lousy jobs at the bottom.

A more fundamental question is what we mean by upskilling, and what its consequences might be. Often, heavy emphasis is placed on the importance of better technological education at all levels of society, as if all people will need to succeed in the future is to be taught how to write and understand computer code.

As the technology writer James Bridle hasshown, this line of argument has a number of limitations. While encouraging people to take up computer programming might be a good start, such training offers only a functional understanding of technological systems. It does not equip people to ask higher-level questions along the lines of, Where did these systems come from, who designed them and what for, and which of these intentions still lurk within them today? Bridle also points out that arguments for technological education and upskilling are usually offered in nakedly pro-market terms, following a simple equation: The information economy needs more programmers, and young people need jobs in the future.

More to the point, the upskilling discourse totally ignores the possibility that automation could also allow people simply to work less. The reason for this neglect is twofold: It is commonly assumed that human wants are insatiable, and that we will thus workad infinitumto satisfy them; and it is simply taken for granted that work is the primary source of meaning in human lives.

Historically, neither of these claims holds true. The consumption race is a rather recent phenomenon, dating no earlier than the late nineteenth century. And the possibility that we might one day liberate ourselves from the curse of work has fascinated thinkers from Aristotle to Russell. Many visions of Utopia betray a longing for leisure and liberation from toil. Even today, surveysshowthat people in most developed countries would prefer to work less, even in the workaholic United States, and might even accept less pay if it meant logging fewer hours on the clock.

The deeply economistic nature of the current debate excludes the possibility of alife beyond work. Yet if we want to meet the challenges of the future, it is not enough to know how to code, analyze data and invent algorithms. We need to start thinking seriously and at a systemic level about the operational logic of consumer capitalism and the possibility of de-growth.

In this process, we must abandon the false dichotomy between jobs and idleness.Fullemployment need not meanfull-timeemployment, and leisure time need not be spent idly. (Education can play an important role in ensuring that it is not.) Above all, wealth and income will need to be distributed in such a way that machine-enabled productivity gains do not accrue disproportionately to a small minority of owners, managers and technicians.

Robert Skidelsky, a member of the British House of Lords, is Professor Emeritus of Political Economy at Warwick University. The author of a three-volume biography of John Maynard Keynes, he began his political career in the Labour party, became the Conservative Partys spokesman for Treasury affairs in the House of Lords and was eventually forced out of the Conservative Party for his opposition to NATOs intervention in Kosovo in 1999.

Project Syndicate, 2019

An indispensable guide to finance, investing and entrepreneurship.

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How Humans Can Compete Against Machines in the Workforce - Worth

A year of more Netflix progress – The Irish Catholic

As I write this review every year the more recent programmes tend to have unfair advantage.

And so The Crown (Netflix) gets first mention this year. I reviewed two particularly good episodes from Season 3 (November) in a recent column the ones that focused on the Aberfan disaster and Sr Alice, Prince Philips mother and later a nun. Faith themes were picked up again in Episode 7, Moondust which explored Philips religious life in more detail, and tied his faith development into his obsession with the 1969 moon landings.

His private audience with his moon walking heroes (different planets, almost literally!) contrasted with his heartfelt opening of heart and mind with a group of troubled clergymen in a retreat house he supported. Rarely has religion been treated so seriously and maturely in a TV drama.

Another drama that featured religion quite regularly was The Kids Are Alright (RT 2) where an adult narrator recalled events from his past, growing up in a Catholic family in the US in the 1970s. I thoroughly enjoyed it and found it funny and touching. It helped that it didnt have a laugh track, and that all the characters were so believable, if exaggerated. Was it looking back fondly or was it more jaundiced?

Of all the regular programmes Leap of Faith (RT Radio 1) with Michael Comyn continues to maintain a high standard

There were plenty of jibes at the Church and some predictable Catholic stereotypes, but perhaps of the type that comes from people who are sticking to the faith despite the flaws of the flock.

Also making an impression on the drama front, last January, was a new BBC production of Les Misrables where religion was also treated positively and themes of justice, forgiveness and redemption were prominent, though there was some brief but unnecessary adult content.

Dark Money impressed in July a story about the abuse of a child actor in Hollywood and the destructive consequences for the child and his family.

Also in January RTs War of Independence drama Resistance was better than I expected, despite some lazy stereotyping of nuns.

A new series of Derry Girls (Channel 4) started in March, and while it was undeniably funny, it was marred by gratuitous foul language and over-the-top irreverence. One scene became iconic where the priest on a cross-community youth retreat tried to get the youngsters to outline what Catholics and Protestants had in common, but all they could come up with were differences.

Good Omens (Amazon Prime Video) was a curious adaptation of a book by Terry Pratchet and Neil Gaiman, with uneasily comical struggles between the forces of good and evil, with humanity seen as caught in the middle. It was intriguing though it could have been more religiously literate.

RT featured several worthwhile documentaries during the year. In January the one-off documentary Pope Francis in Ireland Behind the Scenes was a useful recap on the previous summers papal visit.

In March Guns and Rosaries was an excellent documentary about Fr Patrick Peyton, the Irish Rosary Priest who enlisted the help of various Hollywood celebrities different times!

Divorcing God, in June, was comedian Oliver Callans look at the Church in Ireland, interesting, not hostile, but could have been more unpredictable and incisive.

In Father Delaney: Silent Witness (RT 1, November), Joe Duffy presented a fascinating documentary about the cine films of Irish life taken by Fr Jack Delaney, from the 1930s on. Even better, shown in early November, was his film Children of the Troubles, a sad and moving programme about the children killed during the Troubles in Northern Ireland.

BBC had its share of fine documentaries in March BBC2 Northern Ireland had a very impressive series Oilithreacht, about young people taking on the Lough Derg pilgrimage their faith and enthusiasm was inspiring.

In April, Pilgrimage: Road to Rome (BBC2) had various celebrities walking to Rome and reflecting on their faith or lack of it. Though irritating at times there were inspiring moments and a moving meeting with Pope Francis at the end.

Fern Brittons Holy Land Journey followed a similar path and gave insights into modern Jerusalem.

Our Dementia Choir, with actress Vicky McClure was an emotional exploration of the power of music.

In September, Inside the Vatican on BBC2 was an impressive, very human and insightful look behind the scenes of day to day life in the Vatican, including Pope Francis visit to Ireland.

Eugenics: Sciences Greatest Scandal (BBC4) was one of Octobers scariest programmes, tracing the history of eugenics and showing how the arrogant underlying attitudes are still very much alive today.

January saw the introduction of liberal abortion legislation into Ireland. The programmes that covered it then and still have largely failed to ask any hard questions of those who promote this unjust and cruel practice.

Pro-life voices are sidelined as pro-choicers continue to get a free pass with easy interviews and if they are pushed by interviewers its usually politicians being pressed on why they arent introducing more liberal laws.

By May we were hearing about the abortion of a baby that did not have a fatal abnormality on Today With Sen ORourke (RT Radio 1). The media outrage ranged from muted to non-existent.

In July, Panorama (BBC1 did a special on the abortion controversy in the US and by usual standards it was reasonably balanced, though generally on BBC I find interviewers favouring the pro-choice side. No mainstream debate I heard during the UK General Election challenged the parties on their abortion policies which were very extreme in some cases.

In August, a new Frontline documentary The Abortion Divide on PBS America was reasonably fair, food for thought for the viewer without strong opinions either way.

The excesses of political correctness became more pervasive during the year, though Prime Time (RT) did have a reasonably balanced programme on transgenderism in January, while Newsnight (BBC) had a robust item in November that asked some hard questions about the issue and highlighted those who de-transition.

Of all the regular programmes Leap of Faith (RT Radio 1) with Michael Comyn continues to maintain a high standard, a programme that promotes reflective discussions and builds bridges in a world becoming more polarised and fractious. I particularly remember a programme last January that highlighted the widespread persecution of Christians around the world, and also flagged to persecution of Muslims in China, nearly a year before this became hot news after a Panorama (BBC) documentary in November.

In February, Comyn featured a reflective discussion on the difficult issue of clerical child abuse, there was an interesting special for St Patricks Day and a considered coverage of the massacre of Christians in Sri Lanka in April. More recently I enjoyed his interview with religious affairs journalists Anne Thompson and Ins San Martn.

Life and Soul (RT1 and Radio 1 Extra), launched in July, was an excellent, though occasional, addition to RTs Sunday morning line up. It replaces Sunday Service though, Id prefer if it was in addition. That being said it is imaginative and innovative, with a mixture of personal stories of faith, prayers and some fine contemporary Christian music.

Songs of Praise (BBC) continued its long run and among the episodes I liked were specials on St Valentines Day, St Marys University in Twickenham and Lourdes. Sunday Sequence (BBC Radio Ulster) continued to be one the best religious programmes on radio, with unique insights into the religious life of Northern Ireland and beyond, with frequent contributions from Irish Catholic Managing Editor Michael Kelly.

He was particularly insightful discussing the canonisation of John Henry Newman in October. The Big Questions and Sunday Morning Live (both BBC1) alternated, maintaining high standards on Sunday mornings, with quite a diverse range of opinions.

After initially being doubtful, the regular slot where a comedian and one other reviewed the religious stories of the week grew on me and now Ill miss it for the winter season.

EWTN News Nightly continued to make a valuable contribution in getting a Catholic perspective on news from around the world and provided a useful balance to the secular media.

In general the EWTN channel is a valuable resource for following papal visits, most recently the trip to Thailand and Japan.

And so, happy new year to all media folks I hope you will resist the temptation to polarise and offend but that you will provide us with imaginative programmes that will entertain, challenge, inspire and unite.

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A year of more Netflix progress - The Irish Catholic

NASA Issues Warning Over Pack Of Comets That Can Wipe Out The Human Race – The Buzz Paper

Another type of celestial killer thats the packs more of a punch than asteroids, Nasa has warned and continuously researching over it for since past few months.

NASA has reported that Pack of Comets could appear out of nowhere and can collapse wiping out every species living on the Earth.

And even some scientists have now believed that made of ice, gas, and rock. Comets are often likened to dirty snowballs that have wiped the dinosaurs species rather than the asteroids. NASA expert said in one of his interviews early December that Comets are essentially asteroids which are heavy on ice

Throughout history, comets have been seen as wicked, predicting terrible events, such as hunger, plague, and war. This fear of comets is also present in most modern times. In 1910, word spread that Halleys comets tail is a deadly gas that will cover the Earth. Anti-kite bullets and gas masks did an energetic business despite the guarantees of most astronomers.

You are likely to kill comets in eccentric orbits that increase your risk of slipping on Earth. Comets may appear in the first months or years of impact, meaning that we may have very little time to destroy or destroy an object on a collision course with Earth.

Objects called long-term comets present a particular challenge. They follow huge orbits, revolve around the Sun for more than 200 years, and their movements are much harder to predict.

Those pieces will rain automatically, destroy cities and cause devastating for all civilization. Anyone who has lived through this initial bombardment would be involved in a difficult battle to survive since the impact would throw so much dust and debris that sunlight is blocked and planets cannot grow.

NASA wrote earlier: it would have been disastrous if it had an object of a similar size to hit the Earth. The effect can send dust and debris to the sky, creating a fog that will calm the atmosphere and absorb sunlight, covering the entire planet in the dark. If the fog lasts a long time, the life of the plants will die, along with those and animals that depend on it to survive.

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NASA Issues Warning Over Pack Of Comets That Can Wipe Out The Human Race - The Buzz Paper