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Thread: Miscellaneous

  1. #11


    Are machines really taking our jobs?

    Aug 16, 2013

    This episode of Economics in Plain English tackles the pervasive fear that technology is making humans (or at least human work) obsolete. How long before the robots take over the jobs we do today -- and is it time to panic? Not just yet, senior business editor Derek Thompson explains in the video above. Decades of film footage from the Prelinger Archive illustrate the steady march of progress in America, from farms to factories and beyond, all thanks to technological innovation. Machines have been doing more and more of our work for us since the industrial revolution, and that's not a bad thing.

    Derek Thompson

    Story: "Are Machines Really Taking Our Jobs?"
    A brief history of technological progress and why it's not necessarily a bad thing

    by Kasia Cieplak-Mayr von Baldegg
    August 16, 2013
    Last edited by Airicist2; 20th May 2022 at 13:37.

  2. #12

  3. #13
    Article "Disruptive technologies: Advances that will transform life, business, and the global economy"

    by James Manyika, Michael Chui, Jacques Bughin, Richard Dobbs, Peter Bisson, and Alex Marrs
    May 2013

  4. #14

  5. #15

  6. #16

  7. #17


    AP Analysis: Technology Kills Middle Class Jobs

    Published on Jan 22, 2013

    Five years since the great recession engulfed the world, the impact is clear. Millions of middle-class jobs have vanished. Experts now fear those jobs are lost for good - killed by sophisticated technology and smarter software

  8. #18


    Are robots hurting job growth?

    Published on Jan 14, 2013

  9. #19

  10. #20


    IIT SEMINAR - Robotics and Social Innovation: Opportunities and Challenges

    Published on Jan 25, 2016

    On. Prof. Maria Chiara Carrozza
    Italian Scientist and Member of the National Parliament, Chamber of deputies and foreign and European Affairs Commitee

    Abstract:

    Research, science and social innovation are strictly interdependent, and in this framework, my vision for the future is that progress of humanity is the ultimate mission of science.
    Today, it is universally accepted in science that challenges of the society will require a strong interdisciplinary effort for scientists: it is not possible to address global problems as clean energy production, urbanization, migration, antibiotics resistance or climate change without an holistic approach: social challenges requires comprehensive methods and knowledge, which must include human sciences, ethical issues and sustainability.
    The integration of robotics with artificial intelligence, deep learning and high speed connection will revolutionize the society because devices will be connected to internet, and will become physically powerful, intelligent and adaptive. Large amount of data will be available with small latency and cloud robotics will share information, data, intelligence activities and brains. Robots were originally designed for manufacturing plants, and nowadays mass production is not possible without robots but now they are indispensable in special environments as space for exploration, oceans for underwater activities or hospitals in surgical rooms. In particular, as it was predicted in science fiction, now deep space exploration is based on robotics, and robots will be essential for space science progress.
    The next step will be for Robots to enter in our everyday life: in the streets with self-driving cars, or ‘at our place’ in doing cleaning, entertainment or service activities. Therefore robotics is becoming ‘social’.
    In order to achieve these goals, engineers must address several issues, related to human-robot interaction, to safety, to sentience and adaptability. The problem of safe, secure and effective interaction between human being and robot, cannot be faced without addressing legal and ethical issues.
    The road map is already in place, with time and application those issues will be studied and investigated, and robots will share life and environments with humans, supporting their physical and cognitive activities.
    Moreover, one of the most fascinating questions to answer in Robotics will be originated by the integration of robotics with bionics and prosthetics, when Robotics will enter into the human body with different levels of invasivity, to support human movements and physical interaction with the environment. Wearable robotics is expected to revolutionize the society in the next decade. What are the implications of this transformation of Robotics? Which areas of science will be involved in the evolution of robotics? What are the main milestones to be accomplished in the journey of robots from manufacturing plants, to Space, Health Care and ultimately into the Human Body?

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