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March 23, 2015 at 8:56 PM #21452March 23, 2015 at 9:53 PM #784118AnonymousGuest
It’s even worse than that – I’ve heard that they are making mechanical looms!
March 24, 2015 at 5:09 AM #784120flyerParticipantAlthough the threat of the mechanical loom is, of course, the most ominous threat to future job security (sorry for such a critical omission) and although these observations were taken from an ancient text in the year 2014, imho, it will still be extremely interesting to watch if and how all of this plays out over time.
March 24, 2015 at 5:57 AM #784121The-ShovelerParticipantIMO this is mostly hype and most of these Jobs will take decades to fully automate, (in the mean time it’s a good time to be a software engineer IMO).
Eventually I think it will be more like Wall-E than anything else but that is 25-30 years down the road at least (before we reach the singularity).
Then I think it will be good to have a degree in “party planning”.
March 24, 2015 at 7:10 AM #784122scaredyclassicParticipantIn the future all underwear will be virtual.
March 24, 2015 at 7:12 AM #784123scaredyclassicParticipantIt does feel like humans are increasingly unnecessary.
March 24, 2015 at 7:37 AM #784124jeff303ParticipantI think we’re a loooong way from post-scarcity economics. Hell, we can’t even get reliable fresh water for all of CA at this point. A minimum prerequisite would be infinite, virtually free energy, which is still a ways off.
March 24, 2015 at 3:45 PM #784132flyerParticipantThe reason I posted this article is because it just seems there is more concern about career and retirement security today–far more than in “my day”–(I’m in my 50’s)–since my peers and I have always pretty much considered these things a “slam dunk.”
I agree that most of this may just be hype at this point in time–as has been mentioned–but if I had younger kids (mine are grown)–I’d definitely give the predictions some consideration. Can’t imagine spending years and thousands of dollars getting a degree that doesn’t pay off.
March 24, 2015 at 8:50 PM #784143AnonymousGuestLife has always had its challenges.
The reason we worry about retirement today is because we don’t have to worry so much about dying.
Perspective changes with age. Not many think about retirement in their 20s, many do in their 50s.
For most, the world was better for our parents. Not because it was genuinely better, but because we were children when our parents faced the struggles of adulthood.
March 24, 2015 at 8:51 PM #784144no_such_realityParticipantWhat happens when IBM’s Watson can be held in a single server rack and bought for $100,000?
March 25, 2015 at 5:50 AM #784148The-ShovelerParticipantWatson’s OK for crunching statistics and making a statistical conclusion but it is not true IA yet.
It not capable of writing complex programs or building a better AI than we could.
And it’s not going to build your next home or pull the weeds on your hill(now when it can do that then I will be impressed).
March 25, 2015 at 10:22 AM #784156fun4vnay2ParticipantHow much people building homes or pulling weeds from lawns get ?
Doe sit mean that only these kind of low paying jobs would be left.This topic is close to my heart as I am witnessing almost firsthand how the high paying jobs ( 150K+ ) are being eaten away by low cost sources and AI/automation.
People saying that these would create another set of jobs at a higher level is simply hog wash..
Don’t have time to write a long post, may be some other time..
March 25, 2015 at 3:16 PM #784166flyerParticipantThanks for chiming in on this rt. When I first started reading articles like this, I didn’t give the predictions much thought, and passed them off as others have.
Then, as I started seeing more and more predictions like this, I became even more curious about what is really going on, which led me to post this article.
It’s very interesting, and unfortunate that you are already seeing evidence of these predictions firsthand, and I think it should be a wakeup call to a certain degree–especially to those who have younger kids who will be planning careers in the future.
March 25, 2015 at 4:15 PM #784168anParticipant[quote=flyer]It’s very interesting, and unfortunate that you are already seeing evidence of these predictions firsthand, and I think it should be a wakeup call to a certain degree–especially to those who have younger kids who will be planning careers in the future.[/quote]20 years ago isn’t too different from 20 years from now. Private schools were $30k+ a couple of decades ago. So a BS would cost you $100k+. If that doesn’t get you think think twice about majoring in underwater basket weaving, I don’t think a $400k price tag would do it.
March 25, 2015 at 4:19 PM #784169FlyerInHiGuestEducation is not necessarily about ROI. Like anything in life, there’s perceived value. A prestigious education can just be the Prada. The Walmart brand is just as functional.
Would you veto your wife’s purchase of a Prada? You might even go out and buy it as a gift, haha…
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