English, asked by amarjeetsingh24210, 11 months ago

How is the life becoming due to machines ?​

Answers

Answered by shomekeyaroy79
2

We no longer need to teach computers how to perform complex tasks like image recognition or text translation: instead, we build systems that let them learn how to do it themselves. “It's not magic,” says Greg Corrado, a senior research scientist at Google.

Answered by littleverma7408
0

Answer:

most commonly used machines we have become so attached to, the cell phone. Everywhere we look, we can see people wandering around with their eyes glued to their screen or holding their device next to their ear and having a conversation with whoever is on the other side of the line. Another evident observation of how frequently we use machines are the masses of motorized vehicles that zip through roads and highways. Simply put, machines have integrated themselves into our daily lives and now play a prominent role in our society.

We have almost completely substituted all previous forms of communication, transportation, and other aspects of our society with the creation of newer, more industrial methods and apparatuses. Before the invention of motorized vehicles, people rode horse-drawn carriages to get from one place to another. Before the creation of mobile cellular devices, people sent handwritten letters and postcards in the mail. Before the establishment of the internet, most leisure activities and social interactions were conducted outdoors and in person. There is no doubt that machines have shaped our way of life, but how much will they continue to do so? To what extent will we mechanize our way of life?

By industrializing our way of life, humans have been able to make profound and astonishing advancements. Based off of how we have been progressing in recent years, it can be inferred that we will continue to extend our reach of mechanizing components of our society even further as the years pass by. It is with this mindset that one can assert that machines and technology have and will continue to play a dominant role in our way of life.

But why use machines? Why have they become so essential to us? The answer lies within the general concept of humans having the uncontrollable urge to always strive for something better, something faster, something stronger, something that will outshine everything that has come before it. The past has shown us that people never stopped pushing forward to create a new device, a new method, a new concept, a new something in which humans could prosper from. Over the course of history, machines have proven to hold the key to further advancements we humans so desperately desire. It is because of this that we humans have so tightly woven machines into our daily lives.

Let’s take a look at past inventions. Prior to the 1800s, the production of agricultural products, such as wheat and corn, was severely limited by the farming apparatuses available to farmers, which were mainly comprised of animal-drawn devices. However, the agricultural business saw a huge shift in production with the invention of the combine around the 1830s.

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Photograph of a combine harvester in the 1800s

These nifty machines were able to “cut the stalks of grain while also separated the grain from the chaff” (Encyclopedia 2), which drastically reduced the amount of time and equipment needed for harvesting produce. The rate at which grain was harvested and shipped nationwide increased exponentially and the agricultural industry was forever revolutionized with its creation. Soon, the commercial agriculture industry was dominated by the combine and farms nationwide were littered with them.

Another landmark invention that demonstrated the mass use of machines in our society is the steam engine. First created in 1698 by British inventor Thomas Savery, the steam engine would be further developed by Thomas Newcomen, another British inventor, and James Watt, a Scottish engineer (Encyclopedia).

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Illustration of a Corlis 1400hp Centennial Steam Engine from the 1870s

By the time it was “fully” developed, as stated by Steve Blumenkranz, a mechanical engineer, the steam engine played an essential role in our industries due to the fact that it “dominated the production of mechanical power in both stationary and vehicle applications” (Blumenkranz 1). With the steam engine, factories during the Industrial Revolution era were able to locate wherever they pleased due to no longer relying on rivers as their source of power. Another major change brought by the invention of the steam engine during the Industrial revolution era was its impact on transportation. The steam engine allowed for the development of railroads and facilitated river travel, practically making all forms of transportation easier and faster. Rapidly after its invention, the steam engine could be found in all sorts of apparatuses and became an essential component of our

I hope this may be helpful for u.

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