Industry 4.0: The Future of Manufacturing | FD Engineering

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How Factories Changed the World: Future Factories | Industry 4.0: The Future of Manufacturing | Fourth Industrial Revolution | FD Engineering

Cutting-edge technology and new manufacturing science promises that the factories of tomorrow will be very different places, demanding a new approach to factory design and the workforce.

No technological innovation has changed our world more than the factory. From smartphones to cars, fashion to food, our modern world is defined by convenience. We can access what we want, when we want it, and it’s becoming cheaper, smaller and smarter than ever before. All made possible by the factory.

It’s in our nature to strive to achieve what we had once only dreamed of. The factory has made that a reality. Factories of today move ever forward in a continuous cycle of invention and reinvention.
Revolutionary ideas come to life on the assembly line, the ever-evolving interaction of humans and machines that has made the modern world.

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“Engineering: the branch of science and technology concerned with the design, building and use of engines, machines and structures.” So says the Webster definition. Our newest Free Documentary family member Free Documentary - Engineering is all about engineering - and bringing our community the best documentaries on engineering.
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in my opinion the real threat to a good economy is not so much robots that displace workers but the lowering share of profits workers get as pay and benefits to be able to buy/rent the goods and services offered. too much profit is being siphoned off by shareholders, management, buy backs and off shore profit transfers. also, the wealthy do not pay appropriate taxes and too many businesses get subsidies they do not deserve. low interest rates help but rates are rising. in the real world it is a consumer driven 'trickle up' world. the future looks great but it must be paid for to succeed.

mxr
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Black and Decker used to make good tools before 1985. I made chop saw gears. Ran 4 machines. Same pay as tool and die makers. We know what black and decker makes now

gqp
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Don't forget to include planned obsolescence so that we keep needing to buy replacements at regular intervals. Wouldn't want sustainability or circular product cycle that's for sure.

TheSkystrider
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Just started watching wondering if microfactories and mobile-factories will each have a mention, respectively

thomasstanford
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This is my first time watching this Industry 4.0: The Future of Manufacturing FD Engineering for years to come 2024-Present plus move. I'm glad I watched this Brand New Featuristic Technology Documentary. At least I was on point about the up and coming brand new technology that I and many many people will see in the feature years out here in America and Worldwide the Globe 🌎🌍 as well. I enjoyed it everyone. For real. Yes. Wow 😳😮.

MeezyTheKid
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In 1980 A book was published called "the Third Wave" by Alvin Toffler who totally predicted all of this 42 years ago.

supremepartydude
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27:05 Big cities don't really have space for cars. They're highly inefficient when it comes to space and the energy it takes to transport a human. They take away space from humans which forces them to use a car to even go short distances. This puts more people on the roads and increases congestion even more, which makes it very slow for everyone. It's also very expensive since space generally isn't cheap in cities. Public transport and walkable/bikeable cities are more efficient, less discriminatory, cheaper, and faster.

Long haul trucking is also often not a very efficient way to transport stuff. Rubber wheels cause a lot of friction, and the congestion makes it a lot slower. The weight of those trucks also cause a lot of wear on the infrastructure, so it will add additional costs to those who pay for the upkeep of roads. A lot of stuff needs to be transported between specific places, so it would be way more cost effective to go from rubber on a road to metal wheels on a track. With direct rail connections to industrial areas and warehouses there wouldn't even be much need for short haul trucking. There will always be applications where trucks would make more sense, but for most usecases it's not the best option.

So both of these places where autonomous vehicles would be fairly easily implementable are also places where vehicles in general are not really suited...

AnimilesYT
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20:04 the cement industry puts out by far the most co2 because of it's chemical processes, not the energy used to refine it, never explained out the automated machines will help that...

zackatwood
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Bro u guys never mention teslas full self driving, half of those ai driving programs you mentioned have been liquidated already. Tesla FSD is king

MikeBourdages
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The equation of manufacturing less cars doesn't quite work.
If we use a single car more often we also have to replace it sooner.
....so we will have more new cars on the road.

CHMichael
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Plot-twist: this entire documentary written by chatgpt

macgyverfever
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The future of manufacturing is automation. And they will only run on orders coming in too the factory but most of the time they will sit dormant on standby waiting for a order to come in.

barriewright
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I would love to see neighborhood automated clothing tailors that print out my size of clothing. No more going to a store that refuses to carry my size without charging an arm and a lag just to special order such clothing. I can just have my body profile scanned in a special 3D scanning booth and then a few days later my clothing is ready to wear. Sadly, fabric as a material is impossible for any robotics technology to deal with

php
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Technology is neutral and not inherently bad. It’s in how implemented and by who. Democratically rolled out for betterment of all life and environment or in other ways. Our choice?

jmc
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26:33
I like how when you guys were talking about "Self driving cars" you guys didn't even mention Tesla who's been working so hard on it.


That aside, interesting topic covered.

MRSketch
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Hey, automatic cars do not work in the midwest states.
Our towns and cities, the places that we have to go are too far apart, stores can be miles from each other.

warrenradcliff
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9:55 ورود افراد متفرقه ممنوع😂
Did you just used a Persian factory to film ?😮

alirezaheydari
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but my question is why is it that before with less tech and less of everything people had the world was a much nicer place that everyone today had to look back at the 90s and 80s and prior as a wonderful time but today with the more of everything and access to any and everything and everyone people are less nicer. shouldn't it be the less people worked the more relaxed they should be but that isn't the case.

kenswireart
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What exactly are new jobs for retrenched auto workers? Coffee making? Dogs grooming?

Sable
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You haven’t mentioned the Tesla FSD and dojo your way out on that section mate.

tasd