> That's what they've been saying for the last 10 years or so, but the last decade really saw a huge leap in terms of computing.
Yes. I acknowledge the nay-sayers and the history of them on this topic
But to your point of ML being a solution. Honestly, I have a difficult time seeing how ML will give the manufacturing engineers enough tangible/actionable steps to take to make this happen. We need a new physical framework to be able implement an engineered solution. But maybe it's like eating an elephant (one bite at a time).
I will concede this though. IF it were to happen, ML will most likely bring it about. I appreciate you optimism grounded in the technology.
Yes. I acknowledge the nay-sayers and the history of them on this topic
But to your point of ML being a solution. Honestly, I have a difficult time seeing how ML will give the manufacturing engineers enough tangible/actionable steps to take to make this happen. We need a new physical framework to be able implement an engineered solution. But maybe it's like eating an elephant (one bite at a time).
I will concede this though. IF it were to happen, ML will most likely bring it about. I appreciate you optimism grounded in the technology.