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Ready for the robot revolution?
Computerworld ^
| Ahmed Banafa
Posted on 08/29/2014 7:37:06 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
To: 2ndDivisionVet
I for one welcome our new robot overlords!
CC
3
posted on
08/29/2014 7:49:32 PM PDT
by
Celtic Conservative
(tease not the dragon for thou art crunchy when roasted and taste good with ketchup)
To: MuttTheHoople
To quote a friend of mine: “you will know the robot revolution is here when human prostitutes come under price pressure from robot prostitutes.”
4
posted on
08/29/2014 8:02:55 PM PDT
by
Steely Tom
(How do you feel about robbing Peter's robot?)
To: Steely Tom
Hey G.I. - five dollars for download?
5
posted on
08/29/2014 8:09:27 PM PDT
by
Darksheare
(Try my coffee! First one's free..... Even robots will kill for it!)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
(Amazon) started a new phase in high-tech customer service by showing off small drones that it claims will be able to deliver products to consumers in 30 minutes or less... ...if the delivery drones can dodge the drone-killer drones.
6
posted on
08/29/2014 8:10:07 PM PDT
by
TChad
(The Obamacare motto: Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.)
To: TChad; 2ndDivisionVet
“Don’t look now Timmy, but those drones are mating!”
Sure enough, the drones -tired of hunting each other like mindless clanking clockwork myrmidons- had formed a truce and were producing smaller drones!
“Looks like a skeeter swar-Augh!” some poor commentator got carried off by the microdrone fleet for reasons and fate unknown!
7
posted on
08/29/2014 8:33:17 PM PDT
by
Darksheare
(Try my coffee! First one's free..... Even robots will kill for it!)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
...with Amazon leasing its drones to other companies to deliver their products CVS for medications
Robot drones delivering prescription drugs...what could POSSIBLY go wrong?
8
posted on
08/29/2014 8:36:25 PM PDT
by
Bratch
To: 2ndDivisionVet
We have been able to see drones for decades-———
————just turn on the TV news.
9
posted on
08/29/2014 9:10:56 PM PDT
by
Rockpile
To: Steely Tom
Gettin’ jiggy with a robot date-for-hire sounds like a good way to get ‘Bobbitized’!
Remember ‘Westworld’?
10
posted on
08/29/2014 9:34:59 PM PDT
by
tumblindice
(America's founding fathers: all armed conservatives.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
I see robots being used by hospitals to take vitals in the wards.
To: 2ndDivisionVet
It’s already here. Has been for a long time. The first robots and automation have displaced the underclass — they can’t hope to get a job. The lowest working classes are about to be displaced in large numbers with ordering kiosks and automated food prep. Students and the elderly are goners. I think the breakeven is somewhere around $15/hr now. It will go up. If you make less than $25/hr, you’ve got about five years. Ten years from now, most long haul truckers will be robotic. Traffic cops are also on the extinction list — cars will have self reporting, on board supervision. It will keep getting worse until the first computer designed computers are produced, then skynet will be self aware. That will be about 2035.
To: Born to Conserve
and nobody will have a job
13
posted on
08/29/2014 10:25:44 PM PDT
by
GeronL
(Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
To: Born to Conserve; GeronL
I think by that time where no one will have a job, there will be a move to provide everyone with a living wage just by being alive where it will be enough to get a basic house/apartment, car, etc., and have enough change to go out to dinner every so often much like Star Trek, The Next Generation. It's either that or as a society, there will be pressure against the use of robots, even to the point to where they could be outlawed for jobs a human can do with the exception of hazzardous jobs like inspecting the inside of atomic reactors and so forth. I'd favor the latter, idle hands are the Devil's workshop.
I think there is a side of me where this will be moot, between the proliferation of cellphones, the internet and now these robots, we are building a modern day Tower of Babel where if there are hits take on a few key parts of the whole thing such as from an atomic war, natural disaster on a near global scale or just plain bum luck, the whole thing will come crashing down and we will be thrown back to something resembling a mix between the late 1800's to about 1950 or so. As much of a geek as I am, there is a side of me that welcomes that, we are becoming too dependent on that stuff and I think we are seeing a ruination of society accelerate. My late mother said "we are not ready for all of this technical stuff" and I think she is right. If God came down and offered me a button to stop cellphones and the internet and return us to a world resembling the 1950's to 1980's, I would do it.
14
posted on
08/29/2014 11:32:51 PM PDT
by
Nowhere Man
(Mom I miss you! (8-20-1938 to 11-18-2013) Cancer sucks)
To: tumblindice
Not to mention the virus they could download. ;~]
15
posted on
08/30/2014 7:39:47 AM PDT
by
Ditto
To: Born to Conserve
So we should have people in certain simple repetitive jobs merely in order to keep an underclass employed? There’s no chance that there might be something else they can do?
16
posted on
08/30/2014 7:50:03 AM PDT
by
Ramius
(Personally, I give us one chance in three. More tea anyone?)
To: Nowhere Man
It’s too bad that most science fiction has filled our imaginations with nothing more than a future dystopia: That technology is dangerous, just for making life better.
17
posted on
08/30/2014 7:54:02 AM PDT
by
Ramius
(Personally, I give us one chance in three. More tea anyone?)
To: Ramius
So we should have people in certain simple repetitive jobs merely in order to keep an underclass employed? Theres no chance that there might be something else they can do?
We might have to do that out of realism and pragmatism. I'd probably do what they do in India. They used hundreds or thousands of men with shovels to dig holes, IIRC even for their atomic bomb tests, instead of machinery when they are able to just to keep people employed. I keep thinking of what Grandma said, "idle hands are the Devil's workshop" (or in the case of India since they are mostly Hindu, "Kali's workshop"). You can't have people sit around and do nothing, not everyone is a robotic engineer and even so, there would only be so many jobs in that field. This is where I break off in agreement with the general conservative thought, in some ways, the economy is a zero sum game.
18
posted on
08/30/2014 8:15:11 AM PDT
by
Nowhere Man
(Mom I miss you! (8-20-1938 to 11-18-2013) Cancer sucks)
To: Ramius
AS much as I like and wish for the world of Steely Dan’s “IGY,” it ain’t gonna happen. B-(
19
posted on
08/30/2014 8:16:20 AM PDT
by
Nowhere Man
(Mom I miss you! (8-20-1938 to 11-18-2013) Cancer sucks)
To: Nowhere Man
20
posted on
08/30/2014 8:59:49 AM PDT
by
Ramius
(Personally, I give us one chance in three. More tea anyone?)
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