"Robots Replace Waiters in China"

newworldafro

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"Robots Replace Waiters in China "


http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/f6f19228-6bbc-11e2-a17d-00144feab49a.html#axzz2Jxto7qXa

Obama must face the rise of the robots By Edward Luce
Technology will leave a large chunk of the US labour force in the lurch

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Early in his first term Barack Obama joked that he would “keep an eye on the robots in case they try anything”. He should have known resistance is futile. During Mr Obama’s presidency, IBM’s Watson has proved computers can outfox the most agile minds, drones have become America’s weapon of choice, the driverless car is now a reality and the word “app” has been detached from its origin. No longer the realm of science fiction, the rise of robots now poses the central economic dilemma of the Obama era.

With each month, the US economy becomes steadily more automated. In January the US economy added just 4,000 manufacturing jobs, and the net increase since July is zero. Yet last month, manufacturing activity rose by its fastest rate since April, according to the Institute for Supply Management. The difference boils down to robots, which pose an increasingly nagging paradox: the more there are, the better for overall growth (since they boost productivity); yet the worse things become for the middle class. US median income has fallen in each of the last five years.

f6f19228-6bbc-11e2-a17d-00144feab49a.html


Things cannot continue as they are. Yet change is speeding up. Manufacturing employment is shrinking around the world. Among other countries, China is moving even faster towards industrial robotics, an area in which German and Japanese manufacturers dominate. Last year Foxconn, the Shenzhen-based assembler for Apple, Nokia and others, said it was buying 1m robots in the next three years to substitute for workers performing repetitive manual tasks. At the other end of the spectrum, a restaurant in Harbin, northern China, last year became the first to be entirely waited on by robots. Last month, China opened the world’s first museum of 3D printing.

The potential is huge. But in the developed world, the distribution of the benefits is unsustainable. The bulk of US jobs growth since mid-2009 has been in low-skilled areas, such as food preparation and domestic aides. In the second place is jobs growth in high-end services. Middle income jobs have cratered. According to the National Employment Law Project, low wage jobs (that pay between $7.69 and $13.83 an hour) formed 22 per cent of job losses in the recession but 58 per cent of recovery jobs since then – a mirror image of the picture for middle income jobs ($13.84 to $21.18).

Unsurprisingly, people are reverting to borrowing to stay in the game. Last week, Hero Wallet, a financial advisory firm, showed that one in four US workers were dipping into their retirement funds to meet current spending needs – in spite of the penalties that accrue. This usually involves taking out loans against their retirement accounts. The median income is almost 9 per cent lower today than when Mr Obama took office. It is unclear what he can do to prevent it from falling further, even if the US returns to a higher rate of economic growth.

The effects of technology are only just beginning to be felt in education and healthcare – the two most labour-intensive areas of the US economy that both suffer from productivity stagnation. Online education is beginning to spread. It is also meeting resistance. “The reactionaries in the faculties will eventually be grandfathered out,” says Tyler Cowen, co-founder of the Marginal Revolution University, which has pioneered free online learning in economics and other subjects. “We’ll still need Harvard as a dating service,” he jokes. “But the mid-level private universities do not know what is about to hit them.”

Even in healthcare, which reliably added jobs when every other sector was shedding them, technology is starting to look labour-saving. Last week, the Food and Drug Administration issued a patent to RP-Vita, the first “human interacting autonomous robot” for hospitals. Forget downloading diagnostic apps. At some point we will be boring Watson with our symptoms. For many of us there will be big gains. The most innovative teachers will be able to outsource lessons to the internet and focus on each child’s specific problems. The best doctors will be freed from basic diagnostics to do the same.

But the spread of the robots will leave a large and growing chunk of the US labour force in the lurch. In their excellent primer, Race Against The Machine , Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee point out that in the contest between changing technology and education, the former is winning. Too few Americans are prepared. Some, such as Mr Cowen, fear many never will be. He believes the federal government should pay a basic guaranteed income to all Americans – a despairing view that accepts there will be permanent losers.

Mr Obama is more optimistic. In his first term, he set a target that the US should graduate every American by 2020. Even if that were possible, it may not be a panacea. Incomes for those with only a college degree have also stagnated since 2000 (and fallen for men). Yet a healthy economy cannot for long be upheld by a minority of its workforce.

At some point, policy makers will be forced to grapple with what is intuitively obvious – that sustained growth is inconsistent with declining middle class incomes. In their book, Brynjolfsson and McAfee cite a meeting between Henry Ford and Walter Reuther, the union leader. Pointing at his new robots, Mr Ford says, “How will you get union dues from them?” Mr Reuther replied: “How will you get them to buy your cars?”
 
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acri1

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Damn.

Technology marches on, but it's definitely a double-edged sword. :wow:


Reminds me of how I used to feel about those self-serve lanes at big grocery stores. Sucks that they take away jobs, but I guess it is what it is.
 

newworldafro

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A question I've asked myself and in classrooms if the subject was relevant.........




What does anybody do, when robotics/computers take over basic occupations.....???


Is the goal to get to the point where every human can just do this all day,

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....b/se all our needs have been contracted out to robotics/computers that can perform any function we program them to do??
 

PortCityProphet

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but seriously tho this an awful idea. i hate people as much as the next person but a robot cooking and bringing me my food :what:
there are somethings i want people doing. i hate this "automated robot" culture parts of the world are trying to change to
 

PortCityProphet

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A question I've asked myself and in classrooms if the subject was relevant.........




What does anybody do, when robotics/computers take over basic occupations.....???


Is the goal to get to the point where every human can just do this all day,

wall-e-axiom-passengers.jpeg



....b/se all our needs have been contracted out to robotics/computers that can perform any function we program them to do??

i aint gon let it get that far
large_I_robot_blu-ray_6.jpg
 

newworldafro

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Don't tell any black female hair braiders out there :ninja2:

..... I was thinking awhile back, since black women have to sit for literally a whole day (6 - 7 hours) to get their hair braided in many instances.........if there was ever a machine with a helmet you could just sit under and let the Afro-Robotic software get to work............ and "walla!"........ full hair of head braided in about hour or two...... shiit would be crazy.....


.................................................................................................. *few minutes later* ......................................................................


:wow:

http://www.geekologie.com/2012/03/i-didnt-order-a-bleeding-robotic-barber.php

I Didn't Order A Bleeding!: Robotic Barber Shaves Head

March 23, 2012 / blood-letting, brave, charity, for a good cause, great now they're taking our beauty jobs!, haircut, i like my neck cut just the way it is thank you (get it? because it's not is the thing), no thank you, no way jose, oh great they're giving them cutting tools now, pass, the roomba vacuuming up the hair at the end was a nice touch, video

robot-barber.jpg


No really, it's doing great *eyeroll*

This is a video of a man with nerves of steel and brains of porridge letting a robotic barber shave his head. I can't give him too hard of a time though, because it was performed to raise money for the St. Baldrick's Foundation, a children's cancer research charity. So yeah, that's a pretty noble cause to put your life on the line. Me? I'd match donations dollar for dollar just so I could smash the thing. And speaking of matches -- did you know you're not supposed to play with them? "Your cubicle is on fire, isn't it?" No, but the men's bathroom might be!

Hit the jump for the NOT WITH MY HEAD.
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMREA_XLQ1A&feature=player_embedded"]Robot Barber - YouTube[/ame]
 
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but seriously tho this an awful idea. i hate people as much as the next person but a robot cooking and bringing me my food :what:
there are somethings i want people doing. i hate this "automated robot" culture parts of the world are trying to change to

you sound like an idiot

I bet if you were around in the 1900 you'd be against electricity cause you like candles. Progress doesn't wait for no man and technology has been without a doubt the greatest force for good in mankinds history. If it wasn't for technology we would be toiling away in caves and trees, fearing the night because we had no lights.


The problem people see with the rise of the machines is because we are deluded into thinking that having a job is somehow a good. I personally rejoice whenever I hear machines have taken over activities that humans once HAD to do. No one is stopping you from doing WHAT YOU WANT. Technology simply frees us from the chains of capitalism. :blessed:

If our species is to make a smooth transition through this period of rapid technological change, it will require that we give up our moronic notion that a man has to do a job he doesn't want to live a comfortable life. We are more productive as a species than we have ever been in history. There is no reason that the government can't spread that wealth so that all people in this country can benefit rather than the few capitalists on top.


Capitalism will die one way or another. Its just a question of whether we will give it up kicking and screaming or peacefully.
 
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not a relevant large scale solution. the conclusion offered at the end of that article was to put everyone on a huge welfare system.

the only other relevant solution is to let most of the world slip into poverty/chaos

and whats wrong with that?

with the increase in wealth and productivity, the world will be richer than its ever been, robots will be doing the work that man once had to do

why should the capitalists be the only ones to benefit?

If we are smart, we'll welcome this because it'll free us from having to work to earn a living. Instead we can spend our time doing what we want to do rather than what we have to do.
 
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