Difference between revisions of "Industry"

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(some other clarification along with segue to the abstract phenomenon Industrialization)
(vastly trimmed, with text moved to Industrialization - - - mere Industry features data drawn from specific data)
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This label, and links to this page, come from a few angles. An invention, for instance, which focuses on the mass production of any one airplane component part. It is also pertinent in broad strokes to the characterization of any inventor identified as having the occupation [[Industrialist]]. These are materially applied aspects of the more abstract phenomenon [[Industrialization]].
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This label, and links to this page, come from a few angles. An invention, for instance, which focuses on the mass production of any one airplane component part. It is also pertinent in broad strokes to the characterization of any inventor identified as having the occupation [[industrialist]]. These are materially applied aspects of the more abstract phenomenon [[industrialization]].
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This is treated here as a techtype, being that its pertinence has followed from data specific to particular patents.
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Relative to individual inventors, '''industry''' may be relevant either to their professional backgrounds or to the later bringing to scale of their more experimental ventures. [[Patent FR-1910-415214]], of [[Louis Blériot]], for instance, makes specific reference to the industrial products comporting with the application of the [[design]] elements inherent to the invention. This all has to do with mass-production.
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Again, in the interest of broader phenomena, see [[industrialization]].
  
 
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|Subcategories=atelier; workshop; communities of practice; apprenticeships
 
|Subcategories=atelier; workshop; communities of practice; apprenticeships
 
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Note: This word, as a semi-abstract concept, is of note to us partially in terms of its implications of "scale" and so forth, in connection with the solid implementation of per se [[innovation]]. It may stand in contrast to any "academic" or otherwise "cut-off" characteristics of the inventors we are studying. We are predominantly concerned with the aviation industry, that of airplanes, with a healthy interest in that pertaining to [[LTA]] as well. Other industrial fields become relevant by way of shared technologies, by way of the diversification of powerful finance, and by the roles played by the [[military]] and the state.
 
 
This concept is of general pertinence in terms of the per se [[industrialization]] of [[airplane]] development and construction. From time to time, usually explicated in the phraseology of the patent's title, the invention in question may have explicit applicability to industry or industrial process which are also pertinent beyond aviation and-or aeronautics.
 
 
Relative to individual inventors, '''industry''' may be relevant either to their professional backgrounds or to the later bringing to scale of their more experimental ventures. [[Patent FR-1910-415214]], of [[Louis Blériot]], for instance, makes specific reference to the industrial products comporting with the application of the [[design]] elements inherent to the invention. This all has to do with mass-production.
 
 
For reflections on any of this, as it pertains to France, see [[Emmanuel Chadeau]] and-or [[Chadeau, Emmanuel, 1985, État, Entreprise & Développement Économique : L’Industrie Aéronautique en France (1900-1940) Thése pour le Doctorat, unpublished version]]. For a specialized analysis on the transition between small industry, characterized by connection to technical "pioneers", into '''industry''' per se, as these phenomena pertain to [[Great Britain]], the publication [[Bamfourth, Catherine Jill, Abbott, Malcolm, Entrepreneurs of the sky: Case studies on entrepreneurial learning from the early British aviation industry, 2019]] is likely of great interest.
 

Revision as of 11:11, 18 May 2022

This label, and links to this page, come from a few angles. An invention, for instance, which focuses on the mass production of any one airplane component part. It is also pertinent in broad strokes to the characterization of any inventor identified as having the occupation industrialist. These are materially applied aspects of the more abstract phenomenon industrialization.

This is treated here as a techtype, being that its pertinence has followed from data specific to particular patents.

Relative to individual inventors, industry may be relevant either to their professional backgrounds or to the later bringing to scale of their more experimental ventures. Patent FR-1910-415214, of Louis Blériot, for instance, makes specific reference to the industrial products comporting with the application of the design elements inherent to the invention. This all has to do with mass-production.

Again, in the interest of broader phenomena, see industrialization.

This wiki has 32 patents in category "Industry". Other techtypes related to Industry: Atelier

Patents in category Industry

Publications referring to Industry

Enclosing categories Simple tech terms
Subcategories Atelier, workshop, communities of practice, apprenticeships
Keywords
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