Thursday, December 27, 2012

Paul Krugman on Automation and Third Industrial Revolution

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/26/is-growth-over/

"Better Than Human" article in Wired

http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2012/12/ff-robots-will-take-our-jobs/

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

The End of Work

The End of Work: The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era by Jeremy Rifkin is an intellectually stimulating piece of non-fiction that is right up this blog's alley. Written in 1995 is talks about many issues we are facing today in early 2000th: rising "technological" unemployment, governments trying to fix the situation, trickle down non-effect and many others.

Cannot agree more on the "the robots are replacing the working class" thesis, the question is of course not how to save all the worker from loosing their often dehumanizingly repetitive jobs. Could it be: how to retrain the workers to make them a productive force of the emerging knowledge economy?

I am sure, we will see this book referred to more and more in the coming years, so read up!

Robots Start Replacing Human Workers at Foxconn

First robots have arrived to replace Chinese workers at FoxConn. Full article at singularityhub.com

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Fujitsu Building Robot To Pass Math Exams

The title says it all. Read more here http://www.itworld.com/software/294250/fujitsu-build-software-robot-pass-college-entrance-exams
Brings up an eternal Turing test question: how will you tell a robot passing the exam from a human?

Target: students

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Four-fingered robot hand as dexterous as a human's.

Researchers at Sandia don't stop to impress. A robot hand recently unveiled in Nature publication shows some impressive skills. What is even more impressive is the price tag: an estimated $10K instead of the usual $250K for this type of a robot.

Target profession: bomb squad

Monday, August 20, 2012

NY Times writes about a new wave of smarter camera-equipped robots that are already replacing the manufacturing workers for Philips electronics. The article provides an easy to understand example "... a robotic manufacturing system initially cost $250,000 and replaced two machine operators, each earning $50,000 a year. Over the 15-year life of the system, the machines yielded $3.5 million in labor and productivity savings.". As I reported earlier, FoxConn and the likes are next in line to replace their human workers with robots.

There is a nice chart over at econfuture that illustrates an ongoing drop in manufacturing jobs in US and highlights automation (aka robots) as one of the main reasons. One of takeaways from the article could be: expect serious problems with unemployment in China and other manufacturing-heavy economies.

It makes me glad that more and more people will finally be able to occupy themselves with more creative tasks other than operating a machine assembly line.

Target profession: assembly line workers

Monday, July 23, 2012

Assembly lines to feature more robots

Taiwan's Foxconn Technology Group, known for assembling Apple's iPhones and iPads, plans to use more robots, with one report saying the company will use one million of them in the next three years, to cope with rising labor costs. 

This and similar developments might actually be good for US, since more and more manufacturing jobs can compete not on the labor price but on robot price.


Target profession: assembly line workers

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

7 Jobs Robots Will Do

Dvice has a nice rundown or 7 jobs to be replaced by robots. Most have been covered here a new and ... I'm surprise I forgot about it (Roxxxy!) ... prostitutes.

Target profession: Sex workers, drivers, teachers, farmers, construction workers, soldiers, doctors and nurses

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Photographers are being replaced by software

Photo blogger Mark Meyer ponders the inevitable delegation of the basic photography functions from humans to software in his post Photographers: you’re being replaced by software

More and more simple and complex scenes can be arrange by and average Joe with a set of CG techniques often available for free in software like Blender.

By the way, do you remember this robot with a Kinect that takes wedding pictures?

Target profession: photographers

Monday, April 16, 2012

DARPA Robotic Challenge: $2M Prize

DARPA is giving out 2 million dollar prize to the contestants who can create robots "... to develop ground robotic capabilities to execute complex tasks in dangerous, degraded, human-engineered environments" 

Target profession: nuclear waste cleanup crews, disaster response professionals

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Humans vs. Robots: Who Should Dominate Space Exploration?

Wired Science poses a question in its Humans vs. Robots: Who Should Dominate Space Exploration? Don't we know the answer to this one already? Robots are cheaper (or will be soon), don't get sick and can do pretty much anything a human can - even better.

 Target profession: spacemen

Friday, March 30, 2012

Robo-Graders For Student Essays

"American high school students are terrible writers, and one education reform group thinks it has an answer: robots. Or, more accurately, robo-readers — computers programmed to scan student essays and spit out a grade

Target profession: teaching assistants (TA's)

A Day in the Life of a Kiva Robot

Here is a little video of Kiva robots working in a warehouse.

Target profession: warehouse workers

Thursday, March 29, 2012

A Blind Man Rides in a Self-Driving Car

Google posted a video of a blind man using one of their self driving cars. While there are still many unanswered technological and legal questions it certainly brings us closer the ultimate realization that robots will drive better than humans do.

Target profession: cabbies

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Robotic Jelly Fish: Target Profession - Military

Virginia Tech scientists have demonstrated a self-powered robotic jelly fish. The Navy wants to employ this type of a drone in the near future.

Target profession: Navy

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Non-human Internet Use

Incapsula, posted their stats that 51 per cent of website traffic is performed by non-human software. A fare share of this is done my malware. Not directly related to you job situation, but nevertheless very revealing of the robo-turbulent times we find ourselves in.

Target profession: librarians

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Telepresence Robots May Soon Go to Meetings Instead of You!

In his NY Times article John Markoff provides a few scenarios how "telepresence robots" can replace you at work from remote surgery or going to meetings to supervising your employees or paying social visits. Reminds me of this Surrogates movie with Bruce Willis. And forget robotic arms or legs: in most cases a rumba-like contraption with a monitor on top Skype-ing your face over the wifi will suffice :-)

Target profession: surgeons, mid-level managers

Friday, February 17, 2012

Robo-pharmacies

Smarttechnology writes "Smart medical implants can now dispense drugs into the bloodstream as a result of wireless signals sent to it from the doctor's office.dispense drugs into the bloodstream as a result of wireless signals sent to it from the doctor's office." In a few year we might say bye-bye to CVS ... or in a more likely scenario they will go back to their original name "liquor and tobacco store".

Target profession: pharmacists

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

2 Billion Jobs to Disappear by 2030

In his TED talk Thomas Frey talks about how billions of jobs will be outsourced... to robots! Driverless cars and 3D printers are among the culprits, but also, surprisingly there are jobs fading away in education.

Target profession: too many to list

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Irony Alert: Robots Firing The Hiring People

In The Future of Hiring: Human Resources, Without the Humans The Atlantic writes about companies using online simulators/games to test how future employee handle real job situations. I see hours of silly HR questions saved and thousands of HR people seeking a more productive career soon.

Target profession: HR specialists