The Dyson blog: Adjusting our ambition

Together, they discuss the.

You also have to be open to the very real possibility that its use may fundamentally alter that process for the better.As an industry, we have to get better at creating and sharing data, information and learning.At the moment, we just don’t do that well enough.

The Dyson blog: Adjusting our ambition

We have the computing and processing infrastructure to do amazing things with data in the built environment sector, but we have to create it, share it – and use it.. We’re big believers in open source.We use open source tools and technology in our work and we have built and shared some of our design automation work in the same way, so that other architects and designers can explore, understand, benefit – and hopefully build on – the work that we do.. Whilst technology can bring huge benefits to the construction industry, we also have to be aware of ethical questions around how data is collected and used.We all know that when some of the big tech companies created big data and laid the foundations for many technical advances, they gathered that data in some questionable ways.

The Dyson blog: Adjusting our ambition

We now hear people talking about putting tracking devices onto construction workers to record and measure their movements to increase efficiency, or to assess their wellbeing for health and safety purposes – but might these devices also be used to assess work rates and monitor time spent taking a toilet break?.As an industry, we should also be conscious of how technology moves through society, and the consequences of that.

The Dyson blog: Adjusting our ambition

We’ve seen the recent studies showing how Twitter’s face-crop algorithm prioritises white faces and women;.

1. or the issues in 2020 with the UK government’s algorithm for predicting exam results during COVID, which marked down students from disadvantaged areas and backgrounds.. 2.Listen to the full conversation.I am hopeful as we come to the end of 2024, and there are a number of reasons why I am.

I recently delivered one of my university modules on project management or strategy delivery.The students, who are in their final year as undergraduates or doing postgraduate studies in engineering, to a person, held a passion for positive change.

When asked to compare their personal values with that of a business, they expressed how they wished to use their knowledge and skills to make a difference in the world.I am sure this is magnified millions of times across the world.

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