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http://news.yahoo.com/biodegradable-bodies-more-eco-friendly-robots-165631499.html
fredymac said:A single or perhaps 2 humans would show up accompanied by a half dozen robots. The same might apply for highly ornate landscaping projects.
At that stage you'd probably have a policy of guaranteed minimum income once proposed by none other than Milton FriedmanOrionblamblam said:fredymac said:A single or perhaps 2 humans would show up accompanied by a half dozen robots. The same might apply for highly ornate landscaping projects.
An obvious use for an evolved version of this sort of robot is "farm laborer." Currently, many political activists will be happy to tell you that the millions of illegal aliens currently in the US are needed in order to do that work; if they are replaced with robots, then that argument goes away.
Granted, these bots are going to be expensive for a long, long time. I'd be shocked if you would be able to buy one for much less than a million bucks anytime soon. But they wouldn't need to drop much below that price point before they'd become competitive. Someone working a minimum wage job - call it $7.25/hour - works a max of 8 hours per day. There are other costs associated with the workers, such as Social Security and whatnot; let's say it costs an employer $10/hour per worker. But workers being human, that 8 hour day results in, oh, let's say 4 hours of actual work, what with breaks and chitchat and slacking off and whatnot. So in a week (168 hours), the employer might see each worker put in 20 hours of work, while costing $400. But if the worker was replaced with a robot, the robot should be able to put in a full 168 hours of work... no breaks needed for eating or sleep or smokes. So the robot would do 8.4 times as much labor per week as the human. 8.4 humans would cost $3,360 per week. If the robot cost $1,000,000 (and magically didn't need maintenance or tech support), it would take 297 weeks to pay for itself... 5.7 years. Which is really not that long.
If you could get a robot like this for $100,000, then minimum wage/no skill jobs would be pretty much a thing of the past. There would be a whole lot of social dislocation. There would *need* to be mass deportations from the richer nations; there will be many millions of unemployed citizens, no need to have millions of unemployed aliens in the system. After that... further social changes would be needed. Perhaps each citizen would be granted a 10% stake in a robot. The robot would work the drudge jobs, the citizens would get paid 10% of what the robot would get paid, if it was getting paid. Lots of people would take their money and slack off, buying beer and Xbox and smokes. Smarter ones would take the money and buy further robo-stakes.
bobbymike said:At that stage you'd probably have a policy of guaranteed minimum income once proposed by none other than Milton FriedmanOrionblamblam said:fredymac said:A single or perhaps 2 humans would show up accompanied by a half dozen robots. The same might apply for highly ornate landscaping projects.
An obvious use for an evolved version of this sort of robot is "farm laborer." Currently, many political activists will be happy to tell you that the millions of illegal aliens currently in the US are needed in order to do that work; if they are replaced with robots, then that argument goes away.
Granted, these bots are going to be expensive for a long, long time. I'd be shocked if you would be able to buy one for much less than a million bucks anytime soon. But they wouldn't need to drop much below that price point before they'd become competitive. Someone working a minimum wage job - call it $7.25/hour - works a max of 8 hours per day. There are other costs associated with the workers, such as Social Security and whatnot; let's say it costs an employer $10/hour per worker. But workers being human, that 8 hour day results in, oh, let's say 4 hours of actual work, what with breaks and chitchat and slacking off and whatnot. So in a week (168 hours), the employer might see each worker put in 20 hours of work, while costing $400. But if the worker was replaced with a robot, the robot should be able to put in a full 168 hours of work... no breaks needed for eating or sleep or smokes. So the robot would do 8.4 times as much labor per week as the human. 8.4 humans would cost $3,360 per week. If the robot cost $1,000,000 (and magically didn't need maintenance or tech support), it would take 297 weeks to pay for itself... 5.7 years. Which is really not that long.
If you could get a robot like this for $100,000, then minimum wage/no skill jobs would be pretty much a thing of the past. There would be a whole lot of social dislocation. There would *need* to be mass deportations from the richer nations; there will be many millions of unemployed citizens, no need to have millions of unemployed aliens in the system. After that... further social changes would be needed. Perhaps each citizen would be granted a 10% stake in a robot. The robot would work the drudge jobs, the citizens would get paid 10% of what the robot would get paid, if it was getting paid. Lots of people would take their money and slack off, buying beer and Xbox and smokes. Smarter ones would take the money and buy further robo-stakes.
sferrin said:bobbymike said:At that stage you'd probably have a policy of guaranteed minimum income once proposed by none other than Milton Friedman
And it would all be Monopoly money. That's the problem with idiocies like "living wages" rather than paying what a job's worth- eventually EVERYBODY has trainloads of money and it's not worth anything.
Grey Havoc said:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HifO-ebmE1s&feature=player_embedded
http://spectrum.ieee.org/automaton/robotics/aerial-robots/dutch-police-training-eagles-to-take-down-drones
sferrin said:Grey Havoc said:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HifO-ebmE1s&feature=player_embedded
http://spectrum.ieee.org/automaton/robotics/aerial-robots/dutch-police-training-eagles-to-take-down-drones
So how bad did the props slice up the bird? Not cool.
Michel Van said:
I wonder wen the robot one day, start to take the stick way, hit with it the guy...
bobbymike said:http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/google-puts-boston-dynamics-up-for-sale/?utm_content=buffer0d220&utm_medium=socialm&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=DT-FB