Rise of the Machines, AI, Skynet, Etc

Post Reply
User avatar
SOL
Power VS Force
Power VS Force
Posts: 3267
Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am

Rise of the Machines, AI, Skynet, Etc

Post by SOL »


Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend


The great takeover is now fully underway. it is an unstoppable trend which means that the days of carbon-based workers that fall in the mediocre category are limited. There are also millions of unnecessary jobs that robots will easily replace.


Citing data from the Association for Advancing Automation, Reuters pointed out that industrial firms rang up nearly $1.5 billion worth of robots (29,000 to be exact) — a whopping 37% more than the comparable period in 2020. Separately, Google Cloud research in June showed that two-thirds of manufacturers using artificial intelligence (AI) are relying more heavily on it.

The Morning Brief has ruminated about the impact of the labor shortage and its close blood relative, the Great Resignation. Connecting the seemingly disparate threads, it poses a burning question: Are workers reluctant to fill open jobs — or stay put in them, for that matter — sowing the seeds of humanity’s eventual demise in the labor force?

However irrational, the theme that human workers should fear the dawn of our robot overlords is hardly a novel one. Yet like everything else in the pandemic-era, the fallout from COVID-19 has poured accelerant on an already raging fire. With conditions worsening, we cannot help but wonder if workers are hastening the rise of automation in a way that displaces human labor — but in a more permanent way?
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-labo ... 24355.html

As the coronavirus pandemic enveloped the world last year, businesses increasingly turned to automation in order to address rapidly changing conditions. Floor-cleaning and microbe-zapping disinfecting robots were introduced in hospitals, supermarkets and other environments. Some enterprises found that, given the new emphasis on hygiene and social distancing, robotic operations offered a marketing advantage. The American fast food chain White Castle began using hamburger-cooking robots in an effort to create “an avenue for reduced human contact with food during the cooking process”.

All of this has created a powerful incentive for businesses to invest in automation as a way to adapt to the worker shortage. As British farms confront the absence of seasonal workers who once flooded in from eastern Europe, interest in agricultural robots is growing. The UK-based startup Small Robot Company, for example, has developed two robots capable of killing weeds in wheat fields while cutting down dramatically on the use of chemical pesticides. The first robot autonomously prowls a wheat field, and with precision and patience that no human could match analyses each individual wheat plant using several cameras, mapping the exact locations where weeds are beginning to encroach. Once this data has been collected, a second, somewhat frightening, five-armed robot follows, killing the weeds by administering a powerful electric shock.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ ... ence-covid


Restaurants prep for long-term labor crunch by turning to robots to work the fryer, shuttle food to tables
At Inspire Brands’ Innovation Center in Atlanta, the Flippy robot is taking on a new challenge. The automated worker, made by Miso Robotics, first came onto the scene as a burger solution. Now, it’s frying wings for the first time.

The bots, known as Flippy 1 and 2, have been in development for nearly five years, taking on pilots at brands such as CaliBurger and White Castle. The wings iteration is being tested at Inspire’s Buffalo Wild Wings brand as a way to ramp up production and speed. The hope is to scale up its usage in 2022 and beyond.

“Our strategy and our vision for automation at Inspire is really not about the labor shortage, it is all about how we increase our capacity,” said Stephanie Sentell, SVP of restaurant operations and innovation at Inspire. “The automation that we are looking at will allow us to unlock that and provide faster food to our guests.”

But the labor shortage is unavoidable. The National Restaurant Association recently reported that 4 in 5 operators are understaffed. This includes 81% of full-service operators and 75% of limited-service operators. Robotics can help ease the staffing challenges and speed up operations.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/22/restaur ... bots-.html

Pandemic Wave of Automation May Be Bad News for Workers
When Kroger customers in Cincinnati shop online these days, their groceries may be picked out not by a worker in their local supermarket but by a robot in a nearby warehouse.

Gamers at Dave & Buster’s in Dallas who want pretzel dogs can order and pay from their phones — no need to flag down a waiter.

And in the drive-through lane at Checkers near Atlanta, requests for Big Buford burgers and Mother Cruncher chicken sandwiches may be fielded not by a cashier in a headset, but by a voice-recognition algorithm.

An increase in automation, especially in service industries, may prove to be an economic legacy of the pandemic. Businesses from factories to fast-food outlets to hotels turned to technology last year to keep operations running amid social distancing requirements and contagion fears. Now the outbreak is ebbing in the United States, but the difficulty in hiring workers — at least at the wages that employers are used to paying — is providing new momentum for automation.

Technological investments that were made in response to the crisis may contribute to a post-pandemic productivity boom, allowing for higher wages and faster growth. But some economists say the latest wave of automation could eliminate jobs and erode bargaining power, particularly for the lowest-paid workers, in a lasting way.

“Once a job is automated, it’s pretty hard to turn back,” said Casey Warman, an economist at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia who has studied automation in the pandemic.

The trend toward automation predates the pandemic, but it has accelerated at what is proving to be a critical moment. The rapid reopening of the economy has led to a surge in demand for waiters, hotel maids, retail sales clerks and other workers in service industries that had cut their staffs. At the same time, government benefits have allowed many people to be selective in the jobs they take. Together, those forces have given low-wage workers a rare moment of leverage, leading to higher pay, more generous benefits and other perks.

Automation threatens to tip the advantage back toward employers, potentially eroding those gains. A working paper published by the International Monetary Fund this year predicted that pandemic-induced automation would increase inequality in coming years, not just in the United States but around the world.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/03/busi ... demic.html
When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply

The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
User avatar
Triplethought
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 891
Joined: Fri Oct 09, 2020 4:45 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by Triplethought »

All this is true and has been true. But I think automation via robotics is still struggling with the physical interaction in the real world. Everyone to Tesla to burger flipping robots are running into the realities and limitations of the bots so I don't know how fast it will all happen. I keep wondering why people aren't creating more hybrid models. What I mean is why the hell do hotels still have physical people at their front desk? Hyatt for example could just have high bandwidth video screen kiosks connecting to hotel check in boiler rooms full of people. Let's say you walk up, the screen connects you with a live person who takes your info, checks you in and spits out a card key out of a slot. they could probably cover lots more hotels with a team of "virtual" people. Same for McDonalds - they could centralize their drive thru order takers for multiple restaurants. Same of mini-storage locations - virtual managers with automated money taking and unlock services. They still have to dispatch live people for maintenance issues but seems like they could really cut down on dead time of employees and improve productivity. Lots of examples.

1 other trend I've noticed is "we give less of a shit" - meaning that Americans are no longer stressed about quality of service. A telephony guy commented to me the other day "in my day if the phone lines went down there was hell to pay. But now VOIP goes down all the time and people in business shrug and whip out their cell phones".
Current atmospheric levels of CO2 (400ppm) are much lower than 500 million years ago (3000-9000ppm).
User avatar
AstuteShift
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 1083
Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2020 11:24 pm

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by AstuteShift »

They have to replace humans slowly so it seems like a natural progression

We just happen to know the trend compared to the masses who don’t care to know but rather be in their own bubble
User avatar
SOL
Power VS Force
Power VS Force
Posts: 3267
Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by SOL »

AstuteShift wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 10:29 am They have to replace humans slowly so it seems like a natural progression

We just happen to know the trend compared to the masses who don’t care to know but rather be in their own bubble
The most powerful super trend out of all the trends is the AI trend and those that ignore it do so at their own demise. This is an unstoppable trend. Nothing can stop it and anyone or anything that stands in its way is going to get Brutally bulldozed.
When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply

The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
User avatar
Budge
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 1099
Joined: Sun Oct 11, 2020 7:13 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by Budge »

SOL wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 2:05 pm
AstuteShift wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 10:29 am They have to replace humans slowly so it seems like a natural progression

We just happen to know the trend compared to the masses who don’t care to know but rather be in their own bubble
The most powerful super trend out of all the trends is the AI trend and those that ignore it do so at their own demise. This is an unstoppable trend. Nothing can stop it and anyone or anything that stands in its way is going to get Brutally bulldozed.
The damned Luddites will never learn.
..whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government..
User avatar
Triplethought
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 891
Joined: Fri Oct 09, 2020 4:45 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by Triplethought »

AstuteShift wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 10:29 am They have to replace humans slowly so it seems like a natural progression

We just happen to know the trend compared to the masses who don’t care to know but rather be in their own bubble
You guys always assume a shadowy "they" that we're playing against. It isn't as if some grand chess player is slowing the roll of AI and robotics to make it seem like natural progression. Rather that it IS a slow natural progression. Believe me, if a robot becomes available that can actually replace my employees I'm buying that mofo asap.

The average person vaguely knows self driving cars and robots are coming. They may just not see the threat to their job just yet.
Current atmospheric levels of CO2 (400ppm) are much lower than 500 million years ago (3000-9000ppm).
User avatar
AstuteShift
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 1083
Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2020 11:24 pm

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by AstuteShift »

Triplethought wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 5:40 pm
AstuteShift wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 10:29 am They have to replace humans slowly so it seems like a natural progression

We just happen to know the trend compared to the masses who don’t care to know but rather be in their own bubble
You guys always assume a shadowy "they" that we're playing against. It isn't as if some grand chess player is slowing the roll of AI and robotics to make it seem like natural progression. Rather that it IS a slow natural progression. Believe me, if a robot becomes available that can actually replace my employees I'm buying that mofo asap.

The average person vaguely knows self driving cars and robots are coming. They may just not see the threat to their job just yet.
We are not playing against them but rather ride on their coat tails which is fine by me lolol

The average person is like a squirrel in the park unfortunately in terms of awareness. Actually less since it’s too insulting to squirrels
User avatar
SOL
Power VS Force
Power VS Force
Posts: 3267
Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by SOL »

When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply

The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
User avatar
SOL
Power VS Force
Power VS Force
Posts: 3267
Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am

Is this the start of a new trend and end of unions

Post by SOL »

Kellogg to permanently replace 1,400 striking factory workers

Kellogg Co. K, -1.68% says it is permanently replacing about 1,400 of its striking factory workers, ending a labor feud between employees and the cereal brand.

“The prolonged work stoppage has left us no choice but to hire permanent replacement employees in positions vacated by striking workers,” the company said in a statement Tuesday night.

From the archives (November 2021): Kellogg raises sales guidance despite labor strike

Workers had been striking for a variety of reasons including issues surrounding compensation, benefits and cost of living, according to its union’s website.

Earlier on Tuesday, striking Kellogg workers “overwhelmingly voted to reject” a five-year offer from Kellogg that would have given employees a 3% raise.

The strike began on Oct. 5 and took place for employees at factories in Battle Creek, Mich.; Omaha, Neb.; Lancaster, Pa.; and Memphis, Tenn.

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/kello ... eid=yhoof2

We suspect it is the beginning of a new trend. First, big corporations will start to fire workers demanding more and more. The next step will be to automate any function that a human can do. In the end unions are in a massive downtrend
When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply

The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
User avatar
Budge
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 1099
Joined: Sun Oct 11, 2020 7:13 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by Budge »

"The holiday season is helping shipping company DHL usher in automation quicker than it ever has.

The shipping and supply chain giant has been "rushing" to add automation heading into this holiday season, according to a new report from Bloomberg.

The company "doubled its use of robots in the U.S. this year", the report says, and now has a total of about 1,500 picking robots at its warehouses across the country.

The additional automation comes on top of hiring an additional 15,000 seasonal workers, the report said." ....

"In order to hire so aggressively, wages have risen as much as 15% in some parts of the U.S., the report notes. DHL has also created eight centers across the U.S. to recruit and train workers, the report noted.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/dhl-k ... new-robots

Any bets on the number of regular hires, seasonal hires, versus robots next year?
..whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government..
User avatar
SOL
Power VS Force
Power VS Force
Posts: 3267
Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by SOL »

Fortune Business Insights™ in a new report, titled, “Service Robotics Market Size, Share &COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Type (Professional, Personal), By Application (Domestic, Industrial/Commercial), and Regional Forecast, 2020-2027.” The report further states that the market size was USD 12.88 billion in 2019 and is projected to reach USD 41.49 billion by 2027, exhibiting a CAGR of 15.9% during the forecast period.

Request To Sample PDF Brochure : https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com ... ket-101805

One of the largest sectors benefiting from automated solutions such as AMR is the delivery industry. For example, the ELI robot developed by the mobile robots company Robotnik performs exactly like a shopping cart; it follows customers around the shop, guides to specific products, and offers automatic payment solutions. The robot has voice recognition, meaning it can take instructions verbally, but it can still navigate autonomously if it needs to. The customer simply uses the screen to select products, and the ELI robot will pick them for customer whilst scanning the barcode on the way
Automated mobile robots (AMRs) are reaching a lot of different industries. One example of a recent increase in AMR usage is within agriculture, in which AMRs can be used to fulfill labour shortages and optimize harvesting. AMRs can scan the entire field, assessing its health, waste, and even spray pesticides on the plants that need them – thus reducing wastage and increasing efficiency.

There are even instances where the sensors, cameras, and AI involved are better at decision-making than humans. Not only more accurate but can make instant decisions and react accordingly. Harvesting has a lot of scope for data and analysis, something that is achievable through using automated robotics that can gather, store, and analyze data. Plus, collaborative arms can even handle fruit, meaning there’s a lot of scope for cutting labour costs.
https://aboutmanchester.co.uk/service-r ... 21-report/
McKinsey has stated that the market for industrial robots has been growing at a blistering pace of 19% (compounded, to say the least) since 2013. The growth is expected to accelerate in 2021 and we suspect it will sizzle in 2022.

Technological trends are exponential and that is why the big hyperinflation farts can't see beyond their ripped trousers and underwear. Processing efficiency has improved vastly since 1990. Since 1990 it has improved by a factor of 100,000.
When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply

The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
User avatar
harryg
Advanced
Advanced
Posts: 654
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2021 8:54 am
Contact:

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by harryg »

"Chinese scientists develop AI ‘prosecutor’ that can press its own charges"

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science ... ss-its-own

The evidence before the court is incontrovertible
there's no need for the jury to retire...
---------------------------------------
https://www.harryginsights.com
User avatar
harryg
Advanced
Advanced
Posts: 654
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2021 8:54 am
Contact:

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by harryg »

It's not all about productivity:

"Australian man plans to marry robot after he couldn't find a loving woman"

https://www.geo.tv/latest/391772-austra ... ving-woman

"She couldn’t stand on her own, so most of the time I left her sitting on the chair," he said.

(Sounds like a large part of the population of the UK on a Friday night).
---------------------------------------
https://www.harryginsights.com
User avatar
Budge
Black Belt
Black Belt
Posts: 1099
Joined: Sun Oct 11, 2020 7:13 am

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by Budge »

harryg wrote: Mon Dec 27, 2021 9:33 am "Chinese scientists develop AI ‘prosecutor’ that can press its own charges"

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science ... ss-its-own

The evidence before the court is incontrovertible
there's no need for the jury to retire...
Precog
..whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government..
symbios
The Journey begins
The Journey begins
Posts: 64
Joined: Sun Oct 04, 2020 2:29 pm

Re: Labour Shortage is going to speed up the Robot and AI trend

Post by symbios »

Budge wrote: Sun Jan 23, 2022 12:41 pm
harryg wrote: Mon Dec 27, 2021 9:33 am "Chinese scientists develop AI ‘prosecutor’ that can press its own charges"

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science ... ss-its-own

The evidence before the court is incontrovertible
there's no need for the jury to retire...
Precog
Time to rewatch minority report.
Post Reply