Posted on 02/05/2017 1:37:59 AM PST by TigerClaws
After a factory in Dongguan, China, replaced most of its workers with robots, it witnessed a spectacular rise in productivity.
While some of the worlds leaders are obsessed with keeping people out of their country, an unspoken entity is slowly but certainly taking our jobs: robots. Its been long discussed that robots and computers will start taking our jobs in the near future well that near future is upon us and were not really prepared to deal with it. Of course, some jobs are more at risk than others, are few are as threatened as factory jobs. Advertisement
According to Monetary Watch, the Changying Precision Technology Company focuses on the production of mobile phones and uses automated production lines. The factory used to be run by 650 employees, but now just 60 people get the entire job done, while robots take care of the rest. Luo Weiqiang, the general manager, says the number of required employees will drop to 20 at one point. Despite this reduction in staff, not only is the factory producing more equipment (a 250% increase), but its also ensuring better quality.
Without a doubt, this is something well be hearing more and more of in the future. Adidas is one of the companies which has already announced a shift towards robot-only factories, and its not just factories that will eliminate workers for robots. According to a report created by Dr Carl Benedikt Frey and Associate Professor Michael Osborne from the University of Oxford, theres an over 90% chance that robots will take over the jobs of (long list ahead): masons, budget analysts, tax examiners and collectors, butchers and meat cutters, retail salespersons, geological and petroleum technicians, hand sewers, abstract searchers, watch repairers, new account clerks, tax preparers, order clerks, loan officers, legal secretaries, radio operators, tellers, hotel and restaurant hostesses, cashiers, real estate brokers, polishing workers, dental technicians, pesticide sprayers, telephone operators, cooks (not chefs), rock splitters, gaming dealers, and many, many more. Yeah, thats a long list, and it goes on for much longer. Whether we admit it or not, were stepping well into the bounds of robots taking over our jobs and Im not sure any economy is able to handle this at the moment.
Ive got some very mixed feelings about this. Firstly, this is indeed exciting. Were entering a new age of automation, and technology is truly reaching impressive peaks. The process is better and its also more resource efficient, which is also good. Im also happy that humans dont have to work repetitive, unchallenging jobs and can instead focus on other things. The problem is
there might not be other things. In fact there most definitely arent. Those people are out of a job, and theres a good chance theyll have a very difficult time finding new jobs. Simply put, our society isnt prepared to integrate these people in different jobs and naturally this will cause huge problems.
Solving poverty by banning low-value jobs doesn’t work.
Expect China to solve its idle population problem via ancient means: go to war, using human-wave tactics.
Watch the video, ‘Obsolete’ on Amazon...it is free...very enlightening.
I remember when robots were first being talked about, and people worried about losing their jobs. The common comeback would be, “ but somebody has to build the robots.” They didn’t foresee that robots would be building robots, and AI could design even better, improved robots. We are having such trouble with islam, with one rich man marrying dozens of women, and so many young muslims have no marriage prospects and it makes them even crazier. Female infanticide makes the ratio even worse. Now imagine robots taking billions of people out of the workforce. It’s going to be a very angry world. Buy guns.
Losing the Pointy Haired Boss would help a lot too.
The best schools wouldn’t make a difference. The truth is most people are not intellectually capable of higher education.
The college loan debacle wasn’t caused by predatory lending; it was caused by predatory education. Forcing everyone into college is the equivalent of requiring Olympic training for everyone.
It may sound good, but you’ll still end up with 2% at the top and 20% making a living, while the rest are left with broken dreams.
And then we shall pre-emptively launch the Butlerian Jihad.
Open the pod door, Hal....
We're moving to a future where about 90% of the world's population; illiterate and unskilled, will be of no use.
Remember Robocop?
Scary part is if you consider what they’re paid in China and robots were still a profitable switch.
Much of this is just bunk. A “robot” cannot analyze a budget without extensive training that is company and department specific. Where robots are useful is where large quantities of identical items are being assembled. But what human wants to spend their work day fastening the same bolt? I sure don’t.
Notice that Finland is experimenting with a guaranteed wage, some form of this is the only answer unless they are prepared to lower the population the old fashioned way.
Somebody has to maintain and repair the robots.
Times, they do change. Skynet is on the horizon, and we are not ready for what happens next.
The robots will make the guns. Do you trust the guns they make?
Note to prospective college students: want a future? Study engineering, robotics, and automation.
It’s the wave of the future.
Granted, it will decrease the need for average line workers in some businesses, but many smaller manufacturers won't be able to afford robotics. Initial cost to transition over to a fully automated facility isn't cheap.
Every human likes to feel needed, then one day they are not.
Sounds like the beginning of Skynet
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