Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The difference between factory and factory

The difference between factory and factory

First of all, the definition is different:

1, the workshop refers to the place where workers work.

2. A factory, also known as a factory, is a large industrial building used to produce goods.

Second, the place is different:

1, the workshop refers to the big place where the master takes his disciples.

2. The factory has a production line made of large machines or equipment.

Third, the mode of production is different;

1, workshop refers to the large-scale manual workshop in the embryonic stage of capitalist development, and factory refers to the modern production mode of mechanized production.

2. In the modern history of the world, factories generally refer to the large-scale production of capitalist machines, that is, capitalist industrial places where mechanized labor replaces manual labor.

Extended data:

The original factory (such as 177 1 the factory built in the British colony) did not have large automation machines. At that time, the factory was purely for a large group of workers engaged in handicrafts (such as textiles) to gather together for production. This practice makes the process easier to manage and raw materials can be distributed more effectively.

Henry Ford, the founder of American Ford Company, established a large number of production models (production lines) in the early 20th century. The development of the factory has taken a step forward. The characteristic of this model is that each group of workers is only responsible for one process of production of one product. It greatly reduced the production cost and laid the foundation for the later consumption era.

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