51. To put it crudely, the global capitalist system has very little need of the subordinate classes in this sphere. 52. The Hearsay-II system also has both left-to-right and island-driving capabilities. 53. The system thus has the ability to access words from variably fine-grained descriptions of their phonological characteristics. 54. The system will not have to contend with errors in either labelling or scoring. 55. The tramping system had to be organised. 56. In terms of users, the system would have to be uncommon in some respect. 57. Liability will not be avoided simply because the system has a fault and the same principles apply here as in the case of conventional computer software. 58. Record-keeping systems will therefore have to allow for this. 59. The judicial system now had to protect creditors instead of debtors. 60. There is no reason why computer systems should not have these features but only if they are designed into them. |