Chinese company’s ‘dark factory’ will no human workers soon be the norm
Chinese company’s ‘dark factory’ will no human workers soon be the norm
Chinese company’s ‘dark factory’ will no human workers soon be the norm
Seems like a good time to press the communism button
Seems like that would have to be the inevitable result of all this. When machines can do most jobs better than humans, then the whole idea of working for a living stops making sense.
Meanwhile here in Iowa our automated materials towing robots keep dumping shit on the floor, running into sensitive equipment, and injuring people.
The benefits of cost cutting measures without appropriate investment is because theyre shooting for the buck, not true success. Also you can now be sold v2.
Right, it doesn't matter if automation is less productive if it's cheaper. Sure, the robots keep causing damage, but they don't ask for wages.
Adapt or die. Societies that do not adapt to these changes will not have a good time. It's easy to ignore workers and just say "well, you're replaced, now fuck off". If the government doesn't take care of them and keep them happy, it could easily have negative consequences for the government.
Imagine if 30% of the workforce were fired within 5 years and couldn't get a job because AI did everything. Would 30% of the population just be happy going from something to homeless? How would the country absorb such a change? Governments can keep looking at the shiny money companies pay them to look the other way, but just because they ignore to see things doesn't mean they aren't happening. Either they are forward thinking and prepare or they will find themselves up a creek.
"Lights out" factories have been an industry goal for a while. It does seem like it's finally within reach. Honestly what I don't understand is why western nations with relatively high labour costs and an increasing desire for autonomy and skilled job creation haven't been pursuing this.
a good explanation of why that is https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2021/08/the-value-of-nothing-capital-versus-growth/
That escalated quickly. Uh... "Bring manufacturing back to America!" Or something.
The same company (Xiaomi) that makes the car Ford's CEO drives