亚洲欧美日韩国产一区二区精品_亚洲国产精品一区二区动图_级婬片A片手机免费播放_亚洲国产成人Av毛片大全,男女爱爱好爽好疼视频免费,中文日韩AV在线,无码视频免费,欧美在线观看成人高清视频,在线播放免费人成毛片,成 人 网 站 在 线 视 频A片 ,亚洲AV成人精品一区二区三区

機(jī)械社區(qū)

 找回密碼
 注冊會員

QQ登錄

只需一步,快速開始

搜索
查看: 3313|回復(fù): 7
打印 上一主題 下一主題

The Future of Manufacturing Is in America, Not China

[復(fù)制鏈接]
跳轉(zhuǎn)到指定樓層
1#
發(fā)表于 2014-7-3 16:20:44 | 只看該作者 回帖獎(jiǎng)勵(lì) |倒序?yàn)g覽 |閱讀模式
A furor broke out last week after it was reported that the uniforms of U.S. Olympians would be manufactured in China. "They should take all the uniforms, put them in a big pile, and burn them," said an apoplectic Sen. Harry Reid. The story tapped into the anger -- and fear -- that Americans feel about the loss of manufacturing to China. Seduced by government subsidies, cheap labor, lax regulations, and a rigged currency, U.S. industry has rushed to China in recent decades, with millions of American jobs lost. It is these fears, rather than the Olympic uniforms themselves, that triggered last week's congressional uproar.$ e0 V. [% H' u% p0 ^4 e6 M) o- E
But Ralph Lauren berets aside, the larger trends show that the tide has turned, and it is China's turn to worry. Many CEOs, including Dow Chemicals' Andrew Liveris, have declared their intentions to bring manufacturing back to the United States. What is going to accelerate the trend isn't, as people believe, the rising cost of Chinese labor or a rising yuan. The real threat to China comes from technology. Technical advances will soon lead to the same hollowing out of China's manufacturing industry that they have to U.S industry over the past two decades.
# G5 n! ~4 p5 N4 S! g/ USeveral technologies advancing and converging will cause this.
8 ]) p0 B3 l% W: D* n2 r) g; NFirst, robotics. The robots of today aren't the androids or Cylons that we are used to seeing in science fiction movies, but specialized electromechanical devices run by software and remote control. As computers become more powerful, so do the abilities of these devices. Robots are now capable of performing surgery, milking cows, doing military reconnaissance and combat, and flying fighter jets. Several companies, such Willow Garage, iRobot, and 9th Sense, sell robot-development kits for which university students and open-source communities are developing ever more sophisticated applications.* L" G, A- @; V, @( y; P
The factory assembly that China is currently performing is child's play compared to the next generation of robots -- which will soon become cheaper than human labor. One of China's largest manufacturers, Taiwan-based Foxconn Technology Group, announced last August that it plans to install one million robots within three years to do the work that its workers in China presently do. It has found even low-cost Chinese labor to be too expensive and demanding.( B$ ?) I# q% {+ o" L+ p
Then there is artificial intelligence (AI) -- software that makes computers, if not intelligent in the human sense, at least good enough to fake it. This is the basic technology that IBM's Deep Blue computer used to beat chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov in 1997 and that enabled IBM's Watson to beat TV-show Jeopardy champions in 2011. AI is making it possible to develop self-driving cars, voice-recognition systems such as the iPhone's Siri, and Face.com, the face-recognition software Facebook recently acquired.
! G3 b# S# q% M: q. Y; {Neil Jacobstein, who chairs the AI track at the Silicon Valley-based graduate program Singularity University, says that AI technologies will find their way into manufacturing and make it "personal": that we will be able to design our own products at home with the aid of AI design assistants. He predicts a "creator economy" in which mass production is replaced by personalized production, with people customizing designs they download from the Internet or develop themselves.5 t0 f- ?2 _- Z+ W, \! D
How will we turn these designs into products? By "printing" them at home or at modern-day Kinko's -- shared public manufacturing facilities such as TechShop, a membership-based manufacturing workshop, using new manufacturing technologies that are now on the horizon.5 a% s) e* K5 P9 r
A type of manufacturing called "additive manufacturing" is now making it possible to cost-effectively "print" products. In conventional manufacturing, parts are produced by humans using power-driven machine tools, such as saws, lathes, milling machines, and drill presses, to physically remove material until you're left with the shape desired. This is a cumbersome process that becomes more difficult and time-consuming with increasing complexity. In other words, the more complex the product you want to create, the more labor is required and the greater the effort.
* K# l3 [+ @# g2 x8 C$ @In additive manufacturing, parts are produced by melting successive layers of materials based on three-dimensional models -- adding materials rather than subtracting them. The "3D printers" that produce these parts use powered metal, droplets of plastic, and other materials -- much like the toner cartridges that go into laser printers. This allows the creation of objects without any sort of tools or fixtures. The process doesn't produce any waste material, and there is no additional cost for complexity. Just as, thanks to laser printers, a page filled with graphics doesn't cost much more than one with text (other than the cost of toner), with 3D printers we can print a sophisticated 3D structure for what it would cost to print something simple.$ E& N0 z6 @( _& B# S  f
Three-D printers can already create physical mechanical devices, medical implants, jewelry, and even clothing. The cheapest 3D printers, which print rudimentary objects, currently sell for between $500 and $1,000. Soon, we will have printers for this price that can print toys and household goods. By the end of this decade, we will see 3D printers doing the small-scale production of previously labor-intensive crafts and goods. It is entirely conceivable that, in the next decade, manufacturing will again become a local industry and it will be possible to 3D print electronics and use giant 3D printing scaffolds to print entire buildings. Why would we ship raw materials all the way to China and then ship completed products back to the United States when they can be manufactured more cheaply locally, on demand?
3 `5 o; t8 M6 P7 o4 f9 MOther advances in the next decade will likely affect manufacturing, particularly advances in nanotechnology that change the equation further. Engineers and scientists are today developing new types of materials, such as carbon nanotubes, ceramic-matrix nanocomposites, and new carbon fibers. These new materials make it possible to create products that are stronger, lighter, more energy-efficient, and more durable than existing manufactured goods. A new field -- "molecular manufacturing" -- will take this one step further and make it possible to program molecules inexpensively, with atomic precision. "Over the next two decades," Jacobstein says, "molecular manufacturing will do for our relationship with molecules and matter what the computer did for our relationship with bits and information -- make the precise control of molecules and matter inexpensive and ubiquitous."  K5 o8 ~8 l+ G5 \& g/ Z4 K
All of these advances play well into America's ability to innovate, demolish old industries, and continually reinvent itself. The Chinese are still busy copying technologies we built over the past few decades. They haven't cracked the nut on how to innovate yet.
" p! n8 D8 u- A' r) S4 `4 xIt's a near certainty that robotics, AI, and 3D-printing technologies will advance rapidly and converge. American companies are already finding the rising cost of labor, shipping costs and time lags, and intellectual-property protection to be major issues in doing business in China. And the Chinese government has done itself no favor by hoarding key raw materials such as rare-earth minerals, forcing Western manufacturers to start looking for alternatives. The most advanced automobile of today -- the Tesla Roadster -- is already being manufactured in the United States using robotic and AI technologies. Google just announced that it will produce its highly-acclaimed Nexus 7 tablet in the United States. This is just the beginning of the trend." C; Q% X! u" c" J
So, let me predict a future headline: "Protests break out in China over 2020 Summer Olympic uniforms, 3D-printed with U.S.-made technology."

本帖子中包含更多資源

您需要 登錄 才可以下載或查看,沒有帳號,?注冊會員

x
2#
 樓主| 發(fā)表于 2014-7-3 16:21:32 | 只看該作者
就當(dāng)學(xué)習(xí)學(xué)習(xí)吧  
3#
發(fā)表于 2014-7-3 17:00:47 | 只看該作者
下班了,,回去看。雖然英語很差看不懂,。
4#
發(fā)表于 2014-7-3 17:51:07 | 只看該作者
老美的自動(dòng)化看來要干掉中國的人力了
5#
 樓主| 發(fā)表于 2014-7-3 22:01:22 | 只看該作者
水泵專家 發(fā)表于 2014-7-3 17:51 ) j2 L2 I3 z8 x7 i& w5 j' E2 a; }
老美的自動(dòng)化看來要干掉中國的人力了
# `4 G' j3 ]8 P9 a* z4 C% }
帝國主義的報(bào)紙寫的~~ 搞的老嚇人了
6#
發(fā)表于 2014-7-9 13:25:10 | 只看該作者
制造業(yè)的未來在美國,,而非中國。
7#
發(fā)表于 2014-7-9 13:44:19 | 只看該作者
8#
發(fā)表于 2014-8-12 09:15:40 | 只看該作者
這篇文章:大意美國奧運(yùn)會制服由中國制造而引發(fā)一波輿論,。作者就現(xiàn)在美國在機(jī)器人制造,,3D打印,,納米技術(shù)的領(lǐng)先地位進(jìn)行了闡述,并指出目前很多美國企業(yè)在回歸,。機(jī)器人技術(shù)可以取代人工,,3D技術(shù)可以在減少人工的情況下,進(jìn)行產(chǎn)業(yè),;納米技術(shù)可以使高精度變?yōu)楝F(xiàn)實(shí)而且成本降低,。另外,作者批評中國政府對商業(yè)活動(dòng)的干預(yù),,例如稀土資源的保護(hù),,同時(shí)指出中國還停留在一味的模仿美國的階段,并沒有打破這種局面,,沒有創(chuàng)新,。因此他預(yù)言的 2020夏季奧運(yùn)會在中國會發(fā)生同樣的事件,但是這一次運(yùn)動(dòng)服是由美國3D打印制造的,。
您需要登錄后才可以回帖 登錄 | 注冊會員

本版積分規(guī)則

小黑屋|手機(jī)版|Archiver|機(jī)械社區(qū) ( 京ICP備10217105號-1,,京ICP證050210號,浙公網(wǎng)安備33038202004372號 )

GMT+8, 2025-2-11 11:57 , Processed in 1.078114 second(s), 20 queries , Gzip On.

Powered by Discuz! X3.4 Licensed

© 2001-2017 Comsenz Inc.

快速回復(fù) 返回頂部 返回列表