Thank you Chandan. A very interesting piece. It appears that our future is destined to be one in which, in order to survive, the human worker will face increasing pressure to provide something that cannot easily by automated. Will this force us all to be more creative, or be destined to compete (and lose) against robots? Or, perhaps we will move towards a society in which there is a greater social safety net, to allow its members the space in order to continually re-invent themselves and provide value?
Personally, I don't know. - Jeff On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 2:58 PM Pascal Weinberger <[email protected]> wrote: > The decreasing workforce really can be a destruction for many.... Not only > in these hands-on jobs, but also in office jobs etc. -every repetitive task > [1]. This seems hard to some, but provokes end 'enforces' more creative and > vibrant, project-based work as this is still more 'efficient and cheaper' > with human employees... > > [1]: > http://www.blueprism.com/?gclid=CjwKEAjw0-epBRDOp7f7lOG0zl4SJABxJg9qSVYfOqxJhMBh3SAkqxU3DzPj9hucRBXv9dkyTAdOQRoCGfTw_wcB > > 2015-04-24 23:22 GMT+02:00 Chandan Maruthi <[email protected]>: > >> I found this video on the front page of NyTimes on Robotics\AI\Etc . >> NyTimes will make a series of videos in this area. >> >> http://nyti.ms/1GfzqoA >> >> >> >> -- >> Regards >> Chandan Maruthi >> >> >
