Jolly good! Harry ****************************** Henry George School of Los Angeles Box 655 Tujunga CA 91042 (818) 352-4141 ****************************** From: Sandwichman [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Saturday, December 25, 2010 2:03 PM To: [email protected]; RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION Subject: Re: [Futurework] A Robot Stole My Job: Automation in the Recession I suspect, Michael, that this whole subject would be enjoyed by the 19th century Luddites.
Harry, I would like to recommend a 180-year old book to you. It is called The Working-Man's Companion. The results of Machinery, namely cheap production and increased employment, exhibited and was published by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge in 1831 in response to the machine-breaking Swing Riots. The Companion is a rather cheerful and optimistic tract, which attributes the machine-breaking riots of agricultural workers to ignorance of the great value that machinery contributes to their way of life. Patiently and in a most amiable and charitable manner, the author explains to the reader what life would be like without machines and all the wonderful benefits they confer. The book's analytical core was a popularization of Say's Law of Markets: "There is no truth so clear, that as the productions of industry multiply, the means of acquiring those productions multiply also. The productions which are created by one producer, furnish the means of purchasing the productions created by another producer; and, in consequence of this double production, the necessities of both the one and the other are better supplied. The multiplication of produce multiplies the consumers of produce." The consequence of this law is that there is no such thing as a limit to the wants of consumers or to the means available to consumers to satisfy their wants. Thus the amount of work to be done is also unlimited and, in fact, expands as a consequence of machinery. The introduction of machinery may indeed displace workers in one particular occupation for a short while but will soon open new opportunities. The advice given to the ordinary worker is to become a capitalist and put aside enough funds so that if wages become depressed one can "go out from the market": "There is a glut of laborers in the market. If you continue in the market of labor during this glut, your wages must fall. What is the remedy? To go out of the market. Become capitalists. When there is too much labor in the market, and wages are too low, do not combine to raise the wages; do not combine with the vain hope of compelling the employer to pay more for labor than there are funds for the maintenance of labor: but go out of the market. Leave the relations between wages and labor to equalize themselves. When wages fall by a glut of labor, you not only continue to work, but you work harder; and thus you increase the evil. You have, in too many cases, nothing but your labor for your support. We say to you, get something else ; acquire something to fall back upon. When there is a glut of labor, go at once out of the market; become yourselves capitalists." There are only one thing wrong with the book. The workers (for the most part, anyway) who broke machines had nothing against machines, per se. What they were up in arms about was their misery and impoverishment. Breaking the machines was SYMBOLIC. In a piece about feminism in the New Yorker a few years ago, Ariel Levy wrote, "There are political consequences to remembering things that never happened and forgetting things that did." She was referring to the alleged incidents of "bra burning" that took place in the 1970s. Reports of bra burning were, to paraphrase Mark Twain, "greatly exaggerated." Rather than being a story about an actual event, the alleged bra-burning incident was a simile that a reporter used in comparing feminists to draft resisters who burned draft cards. If the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge had still been around in the 1970s, perhaps they could have issued a tract explaining to women the support and comfort provided by brassieres. On Sat, Dec 25, 2010 at 11:12 AM, Harry Pollard <[email protected]> wrote: I suspect, Michael, that this whole subject would be enjoyed by the 19th century Luddites. I repeat, it's a red herring designed to avoid the real problems. Or, as is the newly popular phrase to describe US politicians, it's kicking the can down the road! Merry Christmas! Harry ****************************** Henry George School of Los Angeles Box 655 Tujunga CA 91042 (818) 352-4141 ****************************** -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mike Spencer Sent: Wednesday, December 22, 2010 11:52 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [Futurework] Re: A Robot Stole My Job: Automation in the Recession Pitfalls of automation on the way to the singularity: As scary as this scenario is, taken as a model for the larger trend, it's heartwarming that the financial cohort was reduced to the role of gofers for the people who actually *do* stuff and that at least *some* critical stuff got done under the circumstances. RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Monday 20 December 2010 Volume 26:Issue 25 Also at: http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/26.25.html Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2010 18:07:20 -0500 From: "Robert L Wears, MD, MS" <[email protected]> Subject: Health information technology risks Since the ECRI Institute recently moved health IT to its 'top 10 list' of hazardous healthcare technologies for 2011, I thought I would offer this case in point. Shortly before midnight on a Monday evening, a large urban academic medical center suffered a major IT system crash which disabled virtually all IT functionality for the entire campus and regional outpatient clinics. The outage affected ADT, financial, medical records, laboratory ordering and reporting, imaging ordering and reporting, and pharmacy systems. (Two semi-independent subsystems, EKG, and picture archiving, were still functional in a limited sense). The outage persisted for 67 hours, and forced the cancelation of all elective procedures on Wednesday and Thursday, involving 52 major procedures and numerous minor procedures (such as colonoscopies). All ambulance traffic was diverted to other hospitals during the outage (estimated 70 diversions). There were substantial delays in obtaining laboratory and radiology results on existing inpatients, so despite the reduction in the numbers of incoming patients, it was difficult to clear out the hospital as physicians delayed discharges pending those results. Not surprising to the readers of RISKS, the outage was due to a concatenation of small failures and long-standing but unapparent underlying latent conditions. The triggering event was a hardware failure in a critical network component. This was repaired but required major servers to be manually restarted. During restart, the servers halted and reported critical errors; it was then discovered that certain file permissions had been changed that prevented the clinical systems from rebooting, and operators from reverting to prior versions. (It should be noted that these systems had not been rebooted for over 26 months). Ultimately it was found that these changes resulted from an attempt to install "high availability" failover capability two years prior. The high availability project had been plagued with problems from the start, and eventually was halted prior to completion, but some changes that had been made were never completely rolled back, unknown to the system's managers. These changes, in the presence of the network fault, had the effect of triggering an attempt to execute high availability failover processes that were nonexistent and thus led to the reboot failures. Once this issue was discovered and corrected, clinical servers could be restarted. The databases then underwent extensive integrity checks, and when these were satisfactory, services were resumed on Friday at 1600. Backloading the clinical and financial data accumulated during the outage took considerably longer than the downtime did. There was no evidence this event was due to external agency, malware, hacking, etc. Interestingly, no pre-existing data were lost during the crash and downtime. A previous risk analysis had estimated direct costs for complete downtime at $56,000 per hour, so the total direct cost (not including lost revenue from canceled cases or diverted patients) is likely close to $4 million. As far as is known, no patients were injured during this event. The risks here are multiple, but a few salient point are worth emphasizing. First, it was difficult initially for frontline workers to convince help desk personnel that the system was unavailable due to the partitioning of the network secondary to the initiating hardware failure. Second, it was difficult to understand the nature of the failure or to uncover the ultimate cause of the event. Third, the organization was slow in activating its own internal disaster plan - an incident management group was not convened until 1530 Tuesday, roughly 16 hours into the incident. Fourth, the social element of the sociotechnical system that is a hospital was able to quickly reorganize in multiple ways and keep essential services operating in at least some fashion for the duration. Many of these adaptations were made "on the fly"; one of the most interesting was rescheduling financial staff (who now had nothing to do, since no bills could be produced), using them as runners to move orders, materials, and results around the organization. Fifth, as has been frequently noted in RISKS, maintenance played an important part in this failure. The irony of the role of "high availability" resulting in unavailability is rich indeed. Sixth, as Richard Cook has pointed out, a working system, even with known flaws, is a precious resource, so the reluctance to ever submit to a full restart over the course of two years, which included multiple large and small maintenance downtimes, is understandable, even though that might have identified problems like the undocumented permission and script changes at a time when they might have been more easily recognized and corrected. As more and more care delivery organizations with little experience in managing clinical, as opposed to business, systems install more and more advanced, clinical HIT systems -- systems that have not been developed from a safety-critical computing viewpoint -- more frequent and potentially more consequential failures are likely. Robert L Wears, MD, MS University of Florida 1-904-244-4405 (ass't) Also Imperial College London [email protected] +44 (0)791 015 2219 _______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [email protected] https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework _______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [email protected] https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework -- Sandwichman
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