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posted by janrinok on Monday December 22 2014, @10:04AM   Printer-friendly
from the and-no-patents! dept.

Jacob Hodes writes in Cabinet Magazine that there are approximately two billion wooden shipping pallets in the holds of tractor-trailers in the United States transporting Honey Nut Cheerios and oysters and penicillin and just about any other product you can think of. According to Hodes the magic of pallets is the magic of abstraction. "Take any object you like, pile it onto a pallet, and it becomes, simply, a “unit load”—standardized, cubical, and ideally suited to being scooped up by the tines of a forklift. This allows your Cheerios and your oysters to be whisked through the supply chain with great efficiency; the gains are so impressive, in fact, that many experts consider the pallet to be the most important materials-handling innovation of the twentieth century." Although the technology was in place by the mid-1920s, pallets didn’t see widespread adoption until World War II, when the challenge of keeping eight million G.I.s supplied—“the most enormous single task of distribution ever accomplished anywhere,” according to one historian—gave new urgency to the science of materials handling. "The pallet really made it possible for us to fight a war on two fronts the way that we did." It would have been impossible to supply military forces in both the European and Pacific theaters if logistics operations had been limited to manual labor and hand-loading cargo.

To get a sense of the productivity gains that were achieved, consider the time it took to unload a boxcar before the advent of pallets. “According to an article in a 1931 railway trade magazine, three days were required to unload a boxcar containing 13,000 cases of unpalletized canned goods. When the same amount of goods was loaded into the boxcar on pallets or skids, the identical task took only four hours.” Pallets, of course, are merely one cog in the global machine for moving things and while shipping containers have had their due, the humble pallet is arguably "the single most important object in the global economy."

 
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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by The Mighty Buzzard on Monday December 22 2014, @12:50PM

    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Monday December 22 2014, @12:50PM (#128301) Homepage Journal

    Palates are taking our jobs!

    I mean, come on, it's exactly the same argument made about automation not a day or so ago.

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  • (Score: 2) by darkfeline on Monday December 22 2014, @10:04PM

    by darkfeline (1030) on Monday December 22 2014, @10:04PM (#128501) Homepage

    That wouldn't be a problem if automation meant we all could work LESS, instead of MORE, thanks to an outdated socioeconomic model that requires we work for the rich if we want to eat and not freeze to death.

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    • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Monday December 22 2014, @10:58PM

      by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Monday December 22 2014, @10:58PM (#128516) Homepage Journal

      Who would you prefer to work for, the poor? Oh, you'd probably rather work for The State. Skip off to Cuba or Venezuela and enjoy living in third world conditions then. Never going to happen here in the US.

      --
      My rights don't end where your fear begins.
      • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @03:13AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @03:13AM (#128584)

        With a worker-owned co-op, you're your own boss.
        Cooperatives rock [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [commondreams.org]
        Mondragon (since 1956) [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [wikipedia.org]
        Seize the day [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [libcom.org]

        ...but, with the schools^W authoritarian, Capitalism-oriented indoctrination centers not teaching that, few Working Class people think of that as an option.
        Workers and their children should be angry about that.

        -- gewg_

        • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Tuesday December 23 2014, @03:56AM

          by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Tuesday December 23 2014, @03:56AM (#128591) Homepage Journal

          Wait, they should be angry that someone didn't do their thinking for them? Dude, you sure about that?

          --
          My rights don't end where your fear begins.
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @10:45AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @10:45AM (#128631)

            No, they should be angry about NOT being taught to think for themselves in school, and NOT being presented with the options to consider. The problem is that their thinking HAS been done for them, but it isn't in their best interest.

      • (Score: 2) by Justin Case on Tuesday December 23 2014, @03:30AM

        by Justin Case (4239) on Tuesday December 23 2014, @03:30AM (#128586) Journal

        > Who would you prefer to work for, the poor?

        Me not want work nobody. Me jus want free stuffs. Why U so mean no gimme free stuffs?

      • (Score: 2) by darkfeline on Tuesday December 23 2014, @10:40PM

        by darkfeline (1030) on Tuesday December 23 2014, @10:40PM (#128788) Homepage

        I would prefer that when automation makes workers less needed, that prices go down as wages stay the same, or prices stay the same as wages go up, but not prices and wages both going down as jobs disappear.

        Based on your other posts that I have seem, you seem like a intelligent, but extremely cynical and either heartless or naive person. The fact is, there are many poor, stupid, unlucky, or otherwise miserable people who are worse off than you (or me), that may or may not "deserve" to be in their position, but I would like to think that as a society we try NOT to keep a large proportion of our population living miserable lives, yes?

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        • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Wednesday December 24 2014, @03:51PM

          by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Wednesday December 24 2014, @03:51PM (#128927) Homepage Journal

          Surprisingly, I have no problem with that attitude. I only have a problem with taking money from people at gunpoint to do so. If you think that's hyperbole, try not paying your taxes and see if men with guns don't show up.

          --
          My rights don't end where your fear begins.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:05PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:05PM (#128660)

      If you have the skills start your own business and go independent. Then you can charge more. When prices go up you simply charge more for your services to compensate. If your customers want the best and you are the best at what you do they will be willing to pay you more. Or else they can go somewhere else, pay less, and get sub-quality work.

      Heck, I know someone that's successful that cut's hair (doesn't make a fortune but makes a decent living). She is successful because she is very good at what she does. I know someone that charges quite a bit that fixes cars. I can take my car to this person, get it fixed the first time and pay more up front, or I can take my car elsewhere and get it fixed wrong, have more problems with it months down the line and end up paying more in the long run.

      I know someone that is a millionaire that's a DJ (though that's not his day job but his day job only makes him, I'm guessing, 40K a year or so). He charges $800 to $1000 a night. He's been doing it all his life, has very expensive equipment, and he's really really good at it. If someone (with money) wants the best for their wedding or whatever event they want they can go to this person. Or they can risk getting some joe blow off the street, paying them less, and having them screw up the entire wedding with everyone questioning "what the heck is up with this DJ?". Is it worth the risk? To someone with money (the people you seem to be so against, the 'rich') the answer is probably no. They would be more than willing to pay more for someone with a good reputation and a good history of being very good at what he does. The key is you must be good at what you do and if you are you can make money.

      If you are good at what you do and it's something people need, be it cutting hair, fixing cars, a good DJ, etc... you can make good money as an independent and you can charge what the market will bear. Or else your customers can take a hike and find someone else that charges more and does a poor job. You complain that everything is too expensive and you don't make enough. Become good at something that someone else charges too much for and become the one charging a fortune for it. and if you can't be good enough to do that then that's no one else's fault.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:50PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:50PM (#128662)

        And the person that I know that cuts hair, has her own place (it's actually a beauty salon, most of her customers are women, she has those hair dryers and does all that stuff that women do to their hair), amazingly only charges average prices but she is almost always booked a week in advance (sometimes two). She used to have other people work for her years back cutting hair but no one ever wanted her employees to cut their hair, only her, and so she no longer has anyone working for her. She says she would love to find a professional that's really good at cutting hair, she would give them sixty percent of what they make, but everyone she hired didn't do that good a job and resulted in customer complaints. Good help is hard to find I guess.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:57PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:57PM (#128665)

          Correction, she has people working for her just not cutting hair *

  • (Score: 2) by aristarchus on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:44AM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Tuesday December 23 2014, @02:44AM (#128582) Journal

    Palates are taking our jobs!

    We can only hope, hopefully, that they are doing so in good taste! (And with spellcheck engaged? Darn Homophones!)