Managing Automation - October 2008 - (Page 58) robert malone NEXT The Start of Automation robomalone@aol.com We can pinpoint the origin of automation in 1893 in Saint Louis, with wireless communications and a remotely controlled model boat in a tank of water. Most people would trace the beginning of automation to 1947, when Ford Motor Co. and Del Harder, vice president of production, applied the concept to machine processes in automobile manufacture. Del Harder coined the term, but it was used only internally at Ford to describe automatic processes. The term came into broader use in 1953 in John Diebold’s seminal book, Automation, which used it in reference to information as well as mechanics processing. But automation actually started with Nikola Tesla, who coined the word “teleautomaton,” or remotely controlled automatic figure or object. In 1893, he demonstrated that he could transmit electrical energy without wires by remotely controlling a model boat’s passage in a shallow water tank in Saint Louis and again a few years later in New York’s Madison Square Garden. Tesla was more than 60 years ahead of his time. After all, George Devol didn’t patent his industrial robot until 1957, and the first fully successful fax machine using radio technology was not operational until 1955. Tesla managed a remote radio device that let him send messages that moved the rudder and thus the boat in ways no one had ever seen before. Some audience members thought Tesla used mind control; others thought it was a trick; still others thought the boat had a mind under its own control. It was not a trick; the boat model still exists in the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade, Serbia, Tesla’s original homeland. This incredible invention went almost unnoticed in an age of amazing inventions. Tesla’s alternating current (AC) motor and generator and a transmission from Niagara Falls eclipsed his remote-controlled robot. Thomas Edison overshadowed Tesla 2008 maonline managingautomation.com For more of Robert Malone’s views, visit: u The Avalanche Point www.managingautomation .com/next53 u Think of the Head, Ramón www.managingautomation .com/next52 u Watch and Learn www.managingautomation .com/next51 Robert Malone, based in New York, is principal of Robert Malone Associates and former editor-in-chief of Managing Automation. ma 58 October Photo: Dirk Kikstra and tried to undermine Tesla’s AC system, showing, through a skewed experiment, that AC was dangerous. Yet, in his last days, Edison saw the value of AC for transmission. Only in the last decade or so have Tesla’s amazing accomplishments been acknowledged fully. They are in X-ray, radio, the origins of MRI technology, the AC transmission system, motors and generators, robotics, wireless communication, and energy transmission. Ironically, Tesla, who did so much to advance communications, died alone and nearly penniless in his room on the thirty-third floor of the New Yorker Hotel in 1943 at age 86. The FBI seized his papers and other possessions because J. Edgar Hoover thought Tesla had stored in one of his trunks a weapon of mass destruction, then referred to as a powerful “death ray.” Hoover may have had some basis for suspicion, as Tesla had designed on paper a wireless “ray” of powerful and possibly destructive force. In addition, he once nearly demolished his New York laboratory and neighboring buildings with a machine that vibrated too strongly by means of mechanical resonance. Tesla’s real resonance is in automation, communications, and energy distribution. He didn’t need to bring the neighborhood down as he raised the world up into light. Tesla is one of the few people who truly changed the world, and he has been granted posthumously the title of father of radio, supplanting Marconi. Hail to you, Tesla, father of automation. s http://www.managingautomation.com http://www.managingautomation.com/next53 http://www.managingautomation.com/next52 http://www.managingautomation.com/next51
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Managing Automation - October 2008 Managing Automation - October 2008 Contents Take 1 Systems Integration Market Braces for a Wave of Consolidation Kinaxis Launches Program to Lure i2 Customers Patent May Give Mobility a Needed Shot in the Arm New Group Aims at More Efficient Smart Devices Solar, Life Sciences Will Be the Next Frontier For Robots Notes Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? Transformation:Driving Energy Efficiency Integration: How Clean is Your Data Industries:Fed Raises Red Flag on Chemicals Product Scan Advertiser Index Next Managing Automation - October 2008 Managing Automation - October 2008 - Managing Automation - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Managing Automation - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Take 1 (Page 6) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Take 1 (Page 7) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Systems Integration Market Braces for a Wave of Consolidation (Page 8) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Kinaxis Launches Program to Lure i2 Customers (Page 9) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Patent May Give Mobility a Needed Shot in the Arm (Page 10) Managing Automation - October 2008 - New Group Aims at More Efficient Smart Devices (Page 11) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Solar, Life Sciences Will Be the Next Frontier For Robots (Page 12) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Solar, Life Sciences Will Be the Next Frontier For Robots (Page 13) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Notes (Page 14) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Notes (Page 15) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 16) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 17) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 18) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 19) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 20) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 21) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 22) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Cover Story:2009 Companies to Watch (Page 23) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 24) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 25) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 26) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 27) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 28) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 29) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 30) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Special Report:�Siemens plus UGS: Is the Merger Working? (Page 31) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Transformation:Driving Energy Efficiency (Page 32) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Transformation:Driving Energy Efficiency (Page 33) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Transformation:Driving Energy Efficiency (Page 34) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Transformation:Driving Energy Efficiency (Page 35) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Integration: How Clean is Your Data (Page 36) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Integration: How Clean is Your Data (Page 37) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Integration: How Clean is Your Data (Page 38) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Integration: How Clean is Your Data (Page 39) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Industries:Fed Raises Red Flag on Chemicals (Page 40) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Industries:Fed Raises Red Flag on Chemicals (Page 41) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Industries:Fed Raises Red Flag on Chemicals (Page 42) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Industries:Fed Raises Red Flag on Chemicals (Page 43) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 44) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 45) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 46) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 47) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 48) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 49) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 50) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 51) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 52) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 53) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 54) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Product Scan (Page 55) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 56) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 57) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Next (Page 58) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Next (Page Cover3) Managing Automation - October 2008 - Next (Page Cover4)
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