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AI will never come in cast iron packaging. And that's what it will need to face the public after taking the public's jobs and functions.
That poor hitchbot(God rest his ROM) didn't stand a chance, what chance would a copbot have patrolling?
AI is gonna come in shatter proof break proof packaging that is about as reliable at being unbreakable as a smartphone screen with Gorilla glass. (Not very unbreakable at all).
Also when MI(Manual Intelligence) systems crash they tell you to remove your items from the belt and start over.
Those systems don't make decisions only calculations. What decision will an AI copbot make after coming on line after a crash?
Oh and here I thought you were referring to artificial insemination.-Lol!
AI will never come in cast iron packaging. And that's what it will need to face the public after taking the public's jobs and functions.
That poor hitchbot(God rest his ROM) didn't stand a chance, what chance would a copbot have patrolling?
AI is gonna come in shatter proof break proof packaging that is about as reliable at being unbreakable as a smartphone screen with Gorilla glass. (Not very unbreakable at all).
Also when MI(Manual Intelligence) systems crash they tell you to remove your items from the belt and start over.
Those systems don't make decisions only calculations. What decision will an AI copbot make after coming on line after a crash?
Agreed. AI will not replace a significant amount of jobs in a long long time. It is actually useful, but usually in collaboration with humans. They cannot even secure intelligence built into cars.
http://www.zdnet.com/article/no-ai-wont-eat-your-job-say-tech-chiefs-and-heres-why/
- It sounds like a lot of them still don't believe it can be done:
[Rob Neil, head of business change and technology Ashford Borough Council, said the market will adapt and throw up new opportunities, as ever. "I did an AI MSc in 1990, and although some of the stuff has manifested itself in Siri, Google Translate, Image Search and the like, the much-anticipated wholesale removal of the workforce thanks to intelligent computers has yet to materialise. I won't hold my breath."]
Good luck with that.
- Others think it will happen but the impact on jobs won't be negative:
[Meanwhile, David Wilson, IT manager at VectorCSP, said: "Any new technology creates a whole new workforce to support it," while Dirk De Busser, IT manager at Fashion Club 70, made a similar point: "It will have consequences for employment, but I don't think it will be negative. It's just a normal evolution of automatization. And that's already [been] happening a few decades." ]
Uhh not very clear on the concept are we?
- Others are more negative but still emphasize human skills:
[John Gracyalny, VP of IT at SafeAmerica Credit Union, said: "I believe that AI will reduce the overall employment level. I see it as automating far more jobs than it creates. It has the possibility of creating more, but I don't think our social and educational systems are up to the task of training people for the 'AI economy' fast enough to make up the difference."]
I'm afraid jobs, education system, and your obsession for human performance will largely become obsolete. Most humans will.
Your fat salary will be cut to the standard common.
Get over it.