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18 votes
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Farmworker vs Robot: Agricultural workers of the future may soon be made of tech and steel. Can a robot pick a strawberry better, faster, and cheaper than a seasonal farmworker?
5 votes -
Tutorial on Automatic Machine Learning (NeurIPS2018)
5 votes -
Automated background checks are deciding who's fit for a home
10 votes -
How we lost our ambitions for the tech-enabled home
16 votes -
There’s no plan B for port security
9 votes -
Exoskeletons in the workplace
4 votes -
Walmart-owned Sam’s Club is opening a cashier-less store in Texas
15 votes -
The Coders Programming Themselves Out of a Job
21 votes -
Baker, a simple tool for provisioning virtual machines and containers
4 votes -
Minor Voting System Suggestion
A problem I've noticed on Reddit (and here sometimes) is that a thread will have a good subject and a good amount of replies, but less than half the upvotes/votes than there are replies, even...
A problem I've noticed on Reddit (and here sometimes) is that a thread will have a good subject and a good amount of replies, but less than half the upvotes/votes than there are replies, even though people are clearly enjoying the discussion. So, I was wondering if we'd be able to implement a feature that automatically votes for a post if you comment on it. Or, instead of forcing it, have a checkbox near the post form specifying whether or not you'd like to vote the post up upon completion of the comment. That might give good discussion posts some visibility instead of just posts that are a shitshow in the comments section
EDIT: I don't know what I'm talking about move along please
3 votes -
Will creativity become valued more highly than STEM skills in the near-term future?
I'm doubling down here folks :) My prior post was called-out for being click-baity and rightfully so. The title was especially poor. I'll try to do better moving forward. I'm starting a discussion...
I'm doubling down here folks :) My prior post was called-out for being click-baity and rightfully so. The title was especially poor. I'll try to do better moving forward.
I'm starting a discussion here because my hope is that we can talk about the ideas within the article, rather than the article itself.
Here was the original post for those interested: https://tildes.net/~humanities/3y1/mark_cuban_says_the_ability_to_think_creatively_will_be_critical_in_10_years_and_elon_musk_agrees
I posted the article because at it's core are several interesting observations/propositions from two billionaires, Mark Cuban and Elon Musk, that presumably know a lot about business, and in Musk's case, a lot about STEM, and have a history of making winning bets on the future.
The article supposes that:
- Many (most?) STEM jobs will become automated
- This will happen very quickly; more quickly than we anticipate
- Creative skills will soon become more highly valued than STEM skills
There was a time when parents told their kids to "become a lawyer or a doctor" but after enough time we end up with too many people going into the same profession and there is more competition for those jobs as the market becomes flooded. I know anecdotally that's happened for lawyers (not sure about doctors).
I can see this happening with STEM as well.
Should parents encourage kids to pursue STEM but pair this with equal study in the humanities? Is STEM the next target of automation? Will creative skills be more highly valued? Will engineers find themselves in the bread line?
18 votes -
Mark Cuban says the ability to think creatively will be critical in ten years, and Elon Musk agrees
2 votes -
The machine fired me
30 votes -
Economists worry we aren’t prepared for the fallout from automation
11 votes -
A digital capitalism Karl Marx might enjoy
3 votes -
Ways to think about machine learning
6 votes -
Burger robot startup opens first restaurant
5 votes -
A tough week for tech workers, and it won’t be the last
7 votes -
Will automation affect society positively or negatively?
Many occupations are set to be automated in the near future: truck(lorry) driving, cashiers, and various other service sector jobs. See the full paper here[PDF]. Will such a reallocation of labour...
Many occupations are set to be automated in the near future: truck(lorry) driving, cashiers, and various other service sector jobs. See the full paper here[PDF].
Will such a reallocation of labour be a net positive or net negative?
Will societies around the world adapt by offering ways to retrain those that lost their jobs, or by providing temporary assistance in some manner?
Or, perhaps, will those people who lose when the next automation wave comes just be ignored, as they would negatively affect the capitalists bottom line.
26 votes -
Firefighting robot snake flies on jets of water
3 votes -
Farm to table automation
I think automation is coming quick and fast and think that a landmark event will be when food can be farmed, packaged, shipped and sold without requiring any humans to be involved. I see the...
I think automation is coming quick and fast and think that a landmark event will be when food can be farmed, packaged, shipped and sold without requiring any humans to be involved. I see the foundations in place already with Amazon Go and autonomous vehicles and it doesn't seem like too much longer before this kind of automation could be possible in my mind.
Anybody want to weigh in with thoughts/discussion? What effects might it bring? Will it lead to a sort of monopoly as the food could be sold so much cheaper? When might this scale of automation be plausible? Anything really, just looking to spark some discussion :)
5 votes -
Parabola.io - Graphical Automation
8 votes -
Parabola raises $2.2 million to bring the power of coding to non-technical people
3 votes -
Fully automated luxury communism newsletter
5 votes -
Private equity’s plan to beat the low-cost investing robots
4 votes