Showing posts with label obsolescence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obsolescence. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Those Three ConeSpun Mills

2020 rings in another hyped-up year,
as traffic rumbles o’er this city’s streets.
The people slog through their habitual gears
as nights pass by and days repeat.

ConeMillsWO

My stopping by this mill’s ancient smokestack tower 
drums up crumbling dreams of 120 years ago
When rev-upped steam drove industrial power 
as workers toiled to make America go.

ConeFactry

Except for this site’s massive piled-up, silent heaps
no remnant’s here of their past incredible productivity
We hear no rumbling of gears, no wheeling peeps
Nothing but our clueless, wizzing auto-driven activity.

But down beneath those obsolete smokestack towers
under jagged rebar heaps and brickish piles
behind walls of long gone, humming industrial power
rolled miles and miles of denim 'n flannel styles.

TextilMachn

’T’was there and then through toiling sweat and flowing tears
workers spun off vast bolts of denim cloth;
in feats of toiling ’20’s roar, then Depression fears,
cranking textile miles, yet with no thread of slouching sloth.

 A shrill whistling of the factory call is no longer heard at all,
just a sunny breeze in unseasonably warm December.
These three landmark chimneys stand so stubbornly, so tall
commanding us by their stature, to remember.

As if we could remember, but no; this legacy is lost to us.
For we, so enamored, or ensnared, by electronic spell,
cannot attain to the fierce pace of their spinning, weaving opus.
Now we demolish their wornout legacy, no more to tell.

But massive was their output--their product so dearly spun;
‘though its flannel flappings waiver yet in this, our age’s fatal breeze.
Soon our bulldozing might will render this heritage undone
as fiberoptic spinning of our  sorcery now weaves.

ConeRevStak


Sunday, September 15, 2019

Got Education?


You’ll have to smarten up to find a productive place in today’s economy.

The old 20th-century way of doing things that my baby boomer generation grew up in has gone the way of the buffalo.
You already know this, right?

I came across an instigating article on Seeking Alpha a few days ago. As I read John N. Mason’s piece about the “New” corporation, it struck me that he had put together some pretty important observations and statistics about this 21st-century economy and where we are headed with it.
My take on his presentation is that he is, obviously, writing about a 21st-century work environment in which using your brain will be more important than ever before, more important than acquiring the old hands-on skills that enabled folks to get ahead in times past.

Oh, the developing digital work of our present work scenario is still “hands-on.” But it seems the hands will be mostly on keyboards that electronically deliver commands and programs that will run, automatically, the nuts and bolts, the widgets and equipment that will perform most of the tasks that we humans used to do, back in the day.

This whole progression got seriously cranked up about 170 years ago with the Industrial Revolution. There was a time, for instance, when a man could get on a horse, start riding westward, and eventually make it from Boston to San Francisco.
Then along came the railroads and changed all that.
Then along came the automobiles and changed all that even more.
And then there was a time when a person would mail a letter from Boston to San Francisco. The Pony Express or Wells Fargo or somesuch would deliver the letter cross-country, and yes it would get to the west coast, but it took a while.
A long while.
Then along came the trains, to make that delivery happen in just a week or so.
Then came the planes to make the airmail delivery in a day or two.

Now the message, or an order, is delivered with the push of a few buttons on your computer, or a scan on barcode, along the way.
You know that’s a “hands-on” technology that is fundamentally, quicker, easier and better than the old way of many different sets of hands that set themselves to crank up machinery and maintain it and oil it and fuel it and guide it all the way to some faraway delivery point.
As those technology changes revolutionized transportation, so shall the coming tech changes revolutionize manufacturing and wholesaling and retailing and every other industry or business you can think of, including knowledge itself.

So if you want to prosper in this 21st-century, if you want to find a place in the scheme of things, if you want to “get ahead”. . .
Get with the program.
Literally, the programming.

And this is what, in my opinion, John Mason is hitting on when he elucidates the workings of intellectual capital, which is a high-falootin' way of saying:
Education is, and will be, worth more than ever before. Get one. Learn how to think outside the old box.

Smarts

If not, hey, we’ll always need somebody to clean up the place, flip the burgers, run the cash registers  while everybody else is booting up the world.
Back in the day we used to say money makes the world go around.
Not so any more. Now electrons make our developed world go around. Learn how to direct them, how to make them do whatever has to be done for profit, or for improving the world we inhabit.

Don’t just vegetate as a consumer. . . eating, drinking, watching shows, fake news and social media.

Be a producer. Make things happen for you and for those you love. Get out there and do it, make things happen. Life will be better.

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Baby Boomers' Labor Lament


Here’s a little ditty of a rhyme to be sung to the tune of . . .
a song from back in the days of Davy Crockett, Howdy Doody, Roy Rogers and Dale Evans . . .

Oh give me a loan
so I can buy a home
where our kids and their friends can play,
where seldom is heard
a contentious word
and the mortgage is paid before my dying day.

Oh give me a job
so I won’t have to rob
from  Pete to pay Paul,
and so I’ll pay no interest on the cards;
and never shall we fall
on  bad times at all,
And I won’t have to work too damn hard.
BuildingUp
Oh give me job security
by the time I reach maturity
so our competence is not made obsolete,
and the skills we were taught
don’t get replaced by a bot;
and my dignity doesn’t just lapse in defeat.

Oh give me a timely upgrade
so my life’s work doesn't fade
on the trash heap of obsolescence.
Oh please let me try
to outsmart the AI,
so my time's not spent out in the dread convalescence.