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388 points pseudolus | 4 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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ferguess_k ◴[] No.43493912[source]
What I worry a lot more instead is how knowledge of manufacturing and engineering could be lost due to our greed.

Typical scenario: Industry I is not doing fine in country C (i.e. the fund managers are not happy about lack of growth of the public companies in this sector) due to reasons R1, R2, ..., Rn. Then management decided to outsource and eventually dismantle the factories to "globalize" it. Knowledge retained by the older generation of engineers, technicians and workers were completely lost when they passed away.

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ge96 ◴[] No.43494035[source]
Didn't that already happen with US to China from the 70s
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tempodox ◴[] No.43494108[source]
Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
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makeitdouble ◴[] No.43494292[source]
Shareholders in the 70s made a lot of money. They'll be OK to rinse and repeat that history.
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__MatrixMan__ ◴[] No.43494847[source]
That'll only work if somebody is willing to do the job for a lower price. The US may be in a different position the next time around.
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1. trashtester ◴[] No.43495113[source]
Somebody, or SOMETHING.

There will not be much work that cannot be done by Figure, Optimus, Atlas, Claude, Grok or GPT by 2035.

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2. ozfive ◴[] No.43495355[source]
We've heard this for many decades. I'm sure we will be hearing it for decades more...
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3. __MatrixMan__ ◴[] No.43495436[source]
I think we'll reach "most work done by unattended robots" around 2070. But we'd be better off if started working on post-labor-scarcity economics ASAP--might as well start learning to swim before the ship sinks. It might even be fun.
4. gaze ◴[] No.43495469[source]
It doesn't really matter if they can or can't do the work. If enough execs are convinced AI can replace the workers, they will replace the workers, and management will have moved onto other things before they suffer consequences.