• hungryphrog@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    18 hours ago

    I don’t want a humanoid robot servant, I just want a phone that is actually built to last and a dishwasher that actually washes the dishes.

  • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    The NYT article talks about how a technician in a call center is operating it now, and whilst operating, their systems are gathering information to guide the robot in future un-manned tasks. Much like an LLM analyzes thousands of essays in order to “write” it’s own, so to will these robots analyze thousands of hours of technician-guided activities in order to do it autonomously in the future.

    Very interesting, and very much the same as how they “taught” self-driving cars to operate. One can imagine that if efforts continue in these fields, it’s only a matter of time before we actually do have fully automated robot butlers, that only need the occasional reboot, or technician support. This would be a massive boon to literally every service industry, from transporting patients in the hospital, working in a warehouse, assembly techs, to waiters and waitresses. Shit, how soon until they deploy them on the battlefield?

    Considering they have robot cafes operating in Japan already, we could see this happen sooner than we think, if the companies choose to share all their training data, that is.

    The only question that remains, is would this lead to a new era of prosperity and free time, or would this just be another tool to further enrich the entrenched capital?

      • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I mean, yeah, you’re right. However, the amount of jobs that robots like this would displace is astronomical. Like, the U.S. trucking industry is one of the biggest employers in the United States, so if ever we were to get truly automated trucking, the job losses would be catastrophic to millions of Americans. One can assume that something would have to be done to help ease the transition, likely in the form of stimulus checks and subsidized education. But that’s just for one industry.

        These autonomous robots could be deployed in seemingly every industry, resulting in the potential loss of hundreds of millions of jobs (assuming widespread adoption and construction, that is). One would think that in order for society to continue, vast socialist reforms would have to be undertaken. The alternative would be something akin to having a couple people with the wealth and power of todays superpower nations, while the rest of humanity lives in abject squalor. I’d like to think that humans wouldn’t let things get that bad…

        but even as I type that out I know it’s a lie 😥 ugh. Fucking humans, man.

          • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            I mean, the more money you have, the less compassionate you are. Having an abundance literally shrinks the part of your brain responsible for empathy. Essentially, excess money causes brain damage. These people at the top of the corporate ladder are, all of them, literally brain damaged. It’s foolish to think that they will ever choose to reverse course, they know only one thing: they want the number in their account to go up. And they’d do literally anything to stop it from going down.

            “Eat the rich” isn’t some anarchist punk slogan, it’s instruction for a healthy species.