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What exactly do we see?

Posted: Thu Jan 23, 2025 6:55 am
by jarinislamfatema
That is, he sees more. He is taller. So, from his point of view, he sees more. But, in this regard, for him, the things that are important for a warehouse worker, and that a warehouse worker sees, are no longer so important. You could say that he sees more, but he sees it in a greater perspective and less detail. Second rule: choice of environment The second question follows from here. Let's say I'm a warehouse worker, and I see what surrounds me: a workplace, let's say, some computer, access to some accounting system and something else of that sort.

And if I describe from the point of view of a warehouse list of spain whatsapp phone numbers worker, a receiving worker, let's call it that, then all these things will be important to me. But are they all important to me if I decide to automate this workplace? Is cleanliness, for example, important to me from the point of view of automation? Or is it important to me what kind of desk I have, whether I have a chair, and things like that? No, they are not important! Also, various instructions are not important to me, because I omit this point when automating.

Accordingly, we come to the second rule - this is the choice of environment. That is, we must understand what surrounds us and choose from this environment what we will take into account in our model. This is the second rule. The third rule: priority. The third rule follows from the second - it is priority. That is, even if I look from the point of view of automation, I have documentation, incoming and outgoing documents, I have some kind of computer, I have a scanner - do I need to reflect this from the point of view of automation or not? That is, it is in the environment, it is at my point of hierarchy, but I, for example, do not need a scanner when working, if I automate using software.