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AI Robotics Hardware

Robot Workforce Threatens Education-Intensive Jobs 496

An anonymous reader writes "For years, robots have been replacing workers in factories as technology has come to grips with high-volume, unskilled labor. An article in Slate makes the case that the robot workforce is poised to move into fields that require significantly more training and education. From the article: 'In the next decade, we'll see machines barge into areas of the economy that we'd never suspected possible — they'll be diagnosing your diseases, dispensing your medicine, handling your lawsuits, making fundamental scientific discoveries, and even writing stories just like this one. Economic theory holds that as these industries are revolutionized by technology, prices for their services will decline, and society as a whole will benefit. As I conducted my research, I found this argument convincing — robotic lawyers, for instance, will bring cheap legal services to the masses who can't afford lawyers today. But there's a dark side, too: Imagine you've spent three years in law school, two more years clerking, and the last decade trying to make partner — and now here comes a machine that can do much of your $400-per-hour job faster, and for a fraction of the cost. What do you do now?'"
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Robot Workforce Threatens Education-Intensive Jobs

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  • Re:sue (Score:4, Informative)

    by jhoegl ( 638955 ) on Monday September 26, 2011 @06:21PM (#37520922)
    Nah, they will move the lawyer jobs to India, then to China, then to some island country....

    Whoops, it is already happening. Doctors on India are viewing your x-rays and diagnosing your issues. (I know this to be true because I helped set it up.)
    But anyways, just look at low paying unskilled jobs now.... robots did not take over like the article seems to indicate, nope... instead they went to China, where you work in a building and rent a refrigerator box in another from the same company you work for. It is still cheaper than robots.
  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Monday September 26, 2011 @06:38PM (#37521082)

    red light cameras are about income and not safety if they where about safety then why was yellow time cut at some palaces with red light cameras?

    Self-checkout still needs some to watch over them so you save like what the costs of 1-2 works per shift? likely less as over night you may of only had like 1 cashier any ways. So with self-checkout you don't need to pull as many people off of other jobs at rush times.

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