We put you on this underside Industry 1.0 , Industry 2.0 and Industry 3.0
Since the first industrial revolution at the end of the 18th century, many economists and philosophers have tried in vain to predict the end of the work for humans.
According to the scientist Marvin Minsky, we had to get to know machines with a human intelligence in the 1970s.
"within three to eight years we will know machines whose intelligence will be comparable to that of an average person".
Something has never happened so far.
But are we really far away from all these false predictions?
Why is the fourth industrial revolution different from the others?
Industry 1.0
Century, when the first industrial revolution with the advent of the steam engine and the construction of factories in England took place and the productivity on
an even unequal level rose.
The transition from the craftsmanship for industrial production has been completed.
To achieve this, the dequalification was used to simplify tasks that were previously done by a craftsman so that they could be carried out by several unskilled workers.
So many craftsmen lost their work and their workplace was laid by the workshop in the factory.
One speaks of a long-term benefit because the high productivity leads to lower production costs, which became more affordable.
Not all were at that time, some craftsmanship demonstrated and even went so far to destroy the machines that represented the problem.
The problem was solved by a law that occupied the acts with the death penalty.
Despite the loss of some workplaces, the first industrial revolution also created new jobs such as mechanics, supervisors and engineers.

Industry 2.0
The second industrial revolution occurred at the end of the 19th century.
The requirement of OL and gas and the invention of the electricity and the internal combustion engine allow the adaptation of materials such as steel and aluminum to the high-tech industries such as the automotive sector and later the aviation.
In this development phase, the Buro workplaces also learned a further development in communication.
Telephone calls and telegrams simplified communication, thereby accelerating work processes.
New organizational models are developing in the company in search of productivity known under the name Taylorism.

Industry 3.0
The third industrial revolution began in the 1970s of the 20th century with partial automation through programmable controllers and computers.
Since the introduction of these technologies, we have now been able to automate an entire production process - without human help.
Well-known examples of this are robots that export programmed drains without human access.
