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| -rw-r--r-- | books/psicologia/psychology-of-intelligence.md | 6 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | books/sociedade/age-of-the-smart-machine.md | 322 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | research/radio.md | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | research/readers.md | 4 | 
4 files changed, 332 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/books/psicologia/psychology-of-intelligence.md b/books/psicologia/psychology-of-intelligence.md index 6831b08..be516af 100644 --- a/books/psicologia/psychology-of-intelligence.md +++ b/books/psicologia/psychology-of-intelligence.md @@ -44,6 +44,12 @@ is a state of constant looping in a given theme.  * Habit: beyond short and rapidly automatised connections between per-    ceptions and responses (habit) (127). +* How the whole body is seem according to his theory? There's a movement (sic) +  where intelligence raises from the sensori-motor to the mind, but can we +  consider the other way as well, about what's conceived by abstract thought +  be then used as a source of sensori-motor intelligence? I guess so, but wonder +  how that could be articulated in Piaget's theory. +  ## Intelligence and equilibrium      Then, if intelligence is thus conceived as the form of equilibrium towards diff --git a/books/sociedade/age-of-the-smart-machine.md b/books/sociedade/age-of-the-smart-machine.md index 8e25ce0..953d22d 100644 --- a/books/sociedade/age-of-the-smart-machine.md +++ b/books/sociedade/age-of-the-smart-machine.md @@ -13,6 +13,13 @@    As a result, they relied on skilled fitters to assemble each product.", 39.  * Continous Process as a possible way to break the effort-skill body paradox and the U-curve    of social integration, 50-56 +* Transition from oral communication to written communication (pages 77, 100); +  it's followed by a transition where calculations were transferred from mental +  operations to calculating machines. +* Characteristics of action-centered skills, 106. +* Typewriters, 115. +* Feminization of clerical work, 116-117. +* Secretaries: _dedicated_  (acting as buffers, sorters and organizers) versus _pool_ modes (treated as input-output devices), 122-123.  ## Impressions @@ -494,3 +501,318 @@ intellectual work, it still does not free workers from fatigue. It just put it  in a different framework: mental exhaustion and  [burn-out](/books/sociedade/burnout-society). Only dead, abstracted "work"  won't lead tiredness. But then it won't be work anymore. + +### Evolution of white-collar work + +    The evolution of white-collar work has followed a historical path +    that is in many ways the precise opposite of that taken by blue-collar +    work. Manufacturing has its roots in the work of skilled craft. In most +    cases, that work was successively gutted of the elements that made it +    skillful-leaving behind jobs that were simplified and routinized. An +    examination of work at the various levels of the management hierarchy +    reveals a different process. Elements of managerial work most easily +    subjected to rationalization were "carved out" of the manager's activit- +    ies. The foundational example of this process is the rationalization of +    executive work, which was accomplished by ejecting those elements +    that could be explicated and systematized, preserving intact the skills +    that comprise executive craft. It was the carving out of such elements +    that created the array of functions we now associate with middle man- +    agement. A similar process accounts for the origins of clerical work. In +    each case, the most easily rationalized features of the activities at one +    level were carved out, pushed downward, and used to create wholly +    new lower-level jobs. In this process, higher-level positions were not +    eliminated; on the contrary, they came to be seen more than ever as +    the depository of the organization's skills. + +    [...] + +    White-collar employees used their bodies, too, but +    in the service of actino-with, for interpersonal communication and coor- +    dination. It was not until the intensive introduction of office machinery, +    and with it scientific management, that this distinct orientation was +    challenged. During this period, an effort was made to invent a new kind +    of clerical work-work that more closely resembled the laboring body +    continually actino-on the inanimate objects, paper and equipment, that +    were coming to define modern office work. Automation in the factory +    had diverse effects, frequently limiting human effort and physical +    suffering, though sometimes exacerbating it. But the discontinuity in +    the nature of clerical work introduced with office machinery, together +    with the application of Tayloristic forms of work organization, did +    much to increase the physical suffering of the clerk. While it remained +    possible to keep a white collar clean, the clerk's position was severed +    from its earlier responsibilities of social coordination and was con- +    verted instead to an emphasis on regularity of physical effort and mental +    concentration. + +    -- 98 + +    Many successful merchants and entre- +    preneurs were well known for the speed of their mental calculations, +    and Eaton's how-to book provides a chapter on tricks and shortcuts to +    aid in rapid mental arithmetic. 6 Owner-managers frequently sur- +    rounded themselves with sons, nephews, and cousins-a move that fa- +    cilitated oral communication through shared meaning and context and +    eased the pressure for written documentation. 7 + +    [...] + +    Detailed empirical studies of modern executives' work, several of +    which have been published over the last thirty years, are greeted with +    the curiosity and fascination usually reserved for anthropological ac- +    counts of obscure primitive societies. It is as if these researchers had +    brought back accounts from an organizational region that is concealed +    from observation and protected from rational analysis. Perhaps this +    sense of mystery surrounds top management activities because they +    derive from a set of skills that are embedded in individual action, in +    much the same way as those of the craftsperson. In both cases, skilled +    performance is characterized by sentient participation, contextuality, +    action-dependence, and personalism. + +    What is different is that the craftsperson used action-centered skills +    in the service of actino-on materials and equipment, while the top man- +    ager's action-centered skills are applied in the service of actino-with. +    Like the seventeenth-century courtier, the top manager uses his or her +    bodily presence as an instrument of interpersonal power, influence, +    learning, and communication. The know-how that is developed in the +    course of managerial experience in actino-with remains largely implicit: +    managers themselves have difficulty describing what they do. Only the +    cleverest research can translate such embedded practice into expli- +    cated material suitable for analysis and discussion. + +    [...] + +    "The process is the sensing of the organization as a whole and the total +    situation relevant to it. It transcends the capacity of merely intellectual +    methods, and the techniques of discriminating the factors of the situa- +    tion. The terms pertinent to it are 'feeling,' 'judgment,' 'sense,' 'pro- +    portion,' 'balance,' 'appropriateness.' It is a matter of art rather than +    science, and is aesthetic rather than logical. For this reason it is recog- +    nized rather than described and is known by its effects rather than by +    analysis. ,,8 + +    -- 100-101 + +    Kotter stresses the implicit quality of the general managers' knowledge, +    noting that their agendas tended to be informal, nonquantitative, mental road +    maps highly related to "people" issues, rather than systematic, formal planning +    documents. + +    -- 102 + +    Daniel Isenberg's research on "how senior managers think" has pen- +    etrated another layer of this, usually inarticulate, domain of executive +    management. 12 Isenberg found that top managers think in ways that are +    highly "intuitive" and integrated with action. 13 He concluded that the +    intuitive nature of executive behavior results from the inseparability of +    their thinking from their actions: "Since managers often 'know' what +    is right before they can analyze and explain it, they frequently act first +    and think later. Thinking is inextricably tied to action. . . . Managers +    develop thought about their companies and organizations not by ana- +    lyzing a problematic situation and then acting, but by thinking and +    acting in close concert.,,14 One manager described his own immersion +    in the action cycle: "It's as if your arms, your feet, and your body just +    move instinctively. You have a preoccupation with working capital, a +    preoccupation with capital expenditure, a preoccupation with people +    . . . and all this goes so fast that you don't even know whether it's +    completely rational, or it's part rational, part intuitive. 15 + +    [...] + +    Kanter con- +    cluded that the manager's ability to "win acceptance" and to communi- +    cate was often more important than any substantive knowledge of the +    business. The feelings of comfort, efficiency, and trust that come with +    such shared meaning are triggered in a variety of ways by the manager's +    comportment. The nuances of nonverbal behavior and the signals em- +    bedded in physical appearance are an important aspect of such group +    participation. Because the tasks at the highest levels of the corporation +    are the most ambiguous, senior executives come to rely most heavily +    on the communicative ease that results from this shared intuitive world. + +    -- 103 + +    Top managers' days and nights are filled to the breaking point with a myriad of +    activities, contacts, events, discussions, and meetings, which tend to be +    brief, rapid, and fragmented. Many students of managerial activity have +    proposed ways + +    -- 105 + +    "Today the manager is the real data bank. . . . Unfortunately he is a +    walking and a talking data bank, but not a writing one. When he is busy, +    information ceases to flow. When he departs, so does the data bank.,,28 Lodged +    in the body and dependent upon presence and active display, the implicit heart +    of the executive's special genius appears to evade rationalization. + +    -- 106-107 + +That's brilliant: + +    In the case of executive activity, those elements most accessible +    to explication, and therefore rationalization, were carved out of the +    executive's immediate domain of concern. These more analytical or +    routine activities were projected into the functions of middle manage- +    ment, just as those functions were also absorbing new responsibilities +    for planning and coordination that had resulted from systematic analy- +    sis of the production process. Thus, the activities that made the execu- +    tive most special, based on action-centered skill, were left intact, while +    the more explicit and even routine aspects of executive responsibilities +    were pushed downward and materialized in a variety of middle- +    management functions. This contrasts with the case of craft workers, +    in which the action-centered skills that had made them so special were +    resealched, systematized, and expropriated upward. To put it bluntly, +    workers lost what was best in their jobs, the body as skill in the service +    of actin8-on, while executives lost what was worst in their jobs, retaining +    full enjoyment of the skilled body as an instrument of actin8-with. + +    -- 107-108 + +In other words, automation and the robotization of the body that follows flows +downward in that particular kink of enterprise -- capitalist business and other +hierachical type of organizations with information-based management. From +_action with_ to _acting on_ (page 119). + +Intelligence is extracted from the worked, deskilled, automated and robotized. +From oral to written communication, from her memory to a memory bank of some +sort. From her artisan skills of interpersonal relationships to standardized +procedures. In a movement downward the hierarchy. + +How that phenomemon predates or is contemporanean to cybernetic-inspired +corporate management? + +Also, today we see a discourse on replacing even top management with A/I +working according to "smartcontracts", which might be an assymptotic +ideological consequence of automating things downward, but that might be proved +wrong if we consider that there's no way these organizations could work without +any craftsmanship at it's top. + +Sounds like if there's no way to fully automated a capitalist bussiness or +government body, even replacing it's management but at the same time there's +an urge to do just that. The net effect is an overconcentration of power +to an ever-diminishing managerial elite. + +If more value is given to non-automated work, then this overconcentration +is directly related to wealth concentration. + +I guess this whole mainstream discourse on automation is entirelly flawed. +It separates mind and body, hates the body, want it automated, a slave of the mind +enslaved in a dellusion to free itself even more as the mind is considered a slave +of the brain, it's material support. + +The next step after the creation of middle-management was it's removal from +the organization by downsizing/delayering/outsourcing which happened after +this book was published. + +    In 1925, the same year that Mary Parker Follett made her speech +    exhorting managers to become more scientific, William Henry +    Leffingwell published his well-known text, Office Mana8ement: Principles +    and Practice, which he dedicated to the Taylor Society in appreciation +    of its "inspirational and educational influence." Leffingwell presented +    a copy of his book to Carl Barth, one of Taylor's best-known disciples. +    That copy bore the following inscription: "It is with deep appreciation +    of the honor of knowing one of management's greatest minds that I sit +    at your feet and sign my name." Leffingwell was obsessed with the +    notion of bringing rational discipline to the office in much the same +    way that Taylor and his men were attempting to transform the shop +    floor. Though his was not the only treatise on the subject, it quickly +    became one of the most influential. 56 In an earlier work, published in +    1 91 7, Leffingwell had discussed "mechanical applications of the princi- +    ples of scientific management to the office." His new text was written +    to address the need for "original thought" concerning the fundamental +    principles of his discipline and their relationship to office management. +    Leffingwell summed up the message of his book with one sentence: +    "In a word, the aim of this new conception of office management is +    simplification. " + +    [...] + +    The overwhelming purpose of Leffingwell's approach to simplifica- +    tion was to fill the clerical workday with activities that were linked +    to a concrete task and to eliminate time spent on coordination and +    communication. This concern runs through almost every chapter of his +    850-page text; it is revealed most prominently in his minutely detailed +    discussions of the physical arrangement of the office and in his views +    on the organization, flow, planning, measurement, and control of office +    work. + +    Leffingwell advocated what he called "the straight-line flow of +    work" as the chief method by which to eliminate any requirement for +    communication or coordination. The ideal condition, he said, was that +    desks should be so arranged that work could be passed from one to the +    other "without the necessity of the clerk even rising from his seat. . . + +    [...] + +    . . . Routine. . . tends to reduce communication. ,,58 Layout, +    standardization of methods, a well-organized messenger service, desk +    correspondence distributors, reliance on written instructions, delivery +    bags, pneumatic tubes, elevators, automatic conveyors, belt conveyors, +    cables, telautographs, telephones, phonographs, buzzers, bells, and +    horns-these were just some of the means Leffingwell advocated in +    order to insulate the clerk from extensive communicative demands. + +    -- 117-119 + +Mind how such changes of reducing interpersonal communication, despite +raising production efficiency, also reduces worker self-organizing capacity +and class awareness. + +    The requirements of actino-on associated with these new clerical jobs +    demanded more from the body as a source of effort than from skilled +    action or intellective competence. It is only at this stage, and in the +    context of this discontinuity, that the fate of the clerical job can be +    fruitfully compared to that of skilled work in industry. + +    [...] + +    Frequently, the jobs that were created had the +    effect of driving office workers into the role of laboring bodies, en- +    gulfing them in the private sentience of physical effort. Complaints +    about these jobs became complaints about bodies in pain. In 1 960 the +    International Labour Organization published a lengthy study of mecha- +    nization and automation in the office. + +    [...] + +    Clerks complained of being "treated like trained animals" because of the +    "uniformity and excessive simplification of the work of many machine +    operators." + +    -- 119-120 + +Another form of [labor camp](/books/historia/ibm-holocaust), it's mirror image: + +    "Tabulat- ing machine operators, for instance, even when the controls are set +    for them and an automatic device stops the machine when something goes wrong, +    cannot let their attention flag. . . . The strain of this kind of close +    attentiveness to a repetitive operation has resulted in a rIsIng number of +    cases of mental and nervous disorders among clerical work- ers . . . physical +    and intellectual debility; disturbances of an emotional nature such as +    irritability, nervousness, hypersensitivity; insomnia; vari- ous functional +    disturbances-headaches, digestive and heart troubles; state of depression, etc. +    ,,61 + +    -- 120-121 + +    The Office, featured an article in 1 969 by the director +    of a New Jersey industrial engineering firm who said: "We know from +    our company's studies that manpower utilization in most offices-even +    those that are subject to work measurement controls-rarely exceeds +    60%. In some operations the percentage of utilization may fall below +    40%. At least 17% of the time, employees are literally doing nothing +    except walking around or talking. . . . While many companies have +    squeezed out much of the excess labor costs in their production opera- +    tions, only a few have given serious attention to the so called indirect +    labor or service operations. ,,62 + +    [...] + +    "Clerical jobs are mea- sured just like factory jobs. + +    Clerical costs can be controlled on +    any routine, Le., repetitive or semi-repetitive work. Non-repetitive +    tasks, such as research and development, cannot be economically mea- +    sured. Similarly, jobs such as receptionists, confidential secretaries, +    etc., do not lend themselves to control. ,,65 + +    -- 121-122 diff --git a/research/radio.md b/research/radio.md index d76f34e..bd4d985 100644 --- a/research/radio.md +++ b/research/radio.md @@ -4,3 +4,5 @@  * [Transmitting FM, AM, SSB, SSTV and FSQ with just a Raspberry Pi](http://www.rtl-sdr.com/transmitting-fm-am-ssb-sstv-and-fsq-with-just-a-raspberry-pi/).  * [Raspberry PiRate Radio FM Transmitter](http://www.rtl-sdr.com/raspberry-pirate-radio-fm-transmitter/).  * [Transmitting Data with a Raspberry Pi and RTL-SDR](http://www.rtl-sdr.com/transmitting-data-raspberry-pi-rtl-sdr/). +* [RTL-SDR Tutorial: Analyzing GSM with Airprobe/GR-GSM and Wireshark](https://www.rtl-sdr.com/rtl-sdr-tutorial-analyzing-gsm-with-airprobe-and-wireshark/). +* [Open Security Research: Getting Started with GNU Radio and RTL-SDR (on Backtrack)](http://blog.opensecurityresearch.com/2012/06/getting-started-with-gnu-radio-and-rtl.html). diff --git a/research/readers.md b/research/readers.md index 15375a2..fd2f725 100644 --- a/research/readers.md +++ b/research/readers.md @@ -35,8 +35,8 @@ Kobo  A partir de uma cópia completa do acervo:      storage="/path/to/complete/doc/repos" -    sudo rsync --size-only -avL --no-p --no-g --no-owner --delete-after --ignore-errors             \ -               --include='*/' --include='*.pdf' --include='*.epub' --include='*.mobi' --exclude='*' \ +    sudo rsync --size-only -avL --no-p --no-g --no-owner --delete-after --ignore-errors                               \ +               --include='*/' --include='*.pdf' --include='*.epub' --include='*.mobi' --include='*djvu' --exclude='*' \                 $storage/books/ /media/tablet/books/  Notar que usamos:  | 
