ABSTRACT

Human sharing can also be driven by self-interest, such that its meanness reflects poorly, even in comparison with the harshest and most maligned of predators. Sharing between humans and machines occurs in many forms, and these can be stratified into levels of automation. Management by delegation requires human involvement at the time of delegation, but only monitoring from that point on. Management by delegation requires human involvement at the time of delegation, but only monitoring from that point on. Automation which manages by exception is able to carry out a complete, complex task, unless the human intervenes. The approach of all manufacturers to feeding back information about these sub-systems follows the 'need-to-know' principle, most sub-systems functioning unseen until a problem occurs. Creating a particular capability in a product usually requires some 'trade off, the whole ensemble suiting the needs of particular market segments.