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I wonder what will happen to the employment situation in China when Chinese factories start using robots instead of workers.

Pre-robots era: "OMG Apple is so inhuman with their workers in China"
Post-robots era: "OMG Apple is so inhuman by firing people and replacing them with robots"

Trust me.
 
Obviously, as labor costs have been increasing in China, factories in China need to make some changes, or those factories will all move to other countries (much like how American manufacturing moved overseas when our own labor costs increased). The choice was always between these Chinese workers having low wage jobs, and having no jobs, not between low wage jobs and high wage jobs.

This was inevitable. Robots will take over all low-skill jobs in every industry, eventually. The factories will no longer be in places with the cheapest labor, they'll be in places with the cheapest energy costs to run those robots, and where the base materials used to build these devices can be shipped to the cheapest.
 
it seems like there's some data missing here...



30,000 devices... in ... what? hours? days? weeks? months? does it drop dead after the 30,000th device, like some kind of strange death mechanism, before it realizes its leading a hollow, meaningless existence and offs itself by by plugging itself into a counterfeit chinese wall charger and exploding? Or is it like a Replicant out of Blade Runner, implanted with the memories of a dead assembly line worker in order for it to not question its purpose in life, and after 30,000 devices assembled, it has to be programmed to self-destruct before it realizes its place and rises up against its human oppressors?

do tell more...

Watch Wall-E a bit too much?
 
Samsung just announced they will be purchasing 10,001 robots.
 
it seems like there's some data missing here...



30,000 devices... in ... what? hours? days? weeks? months? does it drop dead after the 30,000th device, like some kind of strange death mechanism, before it realizes its leading a hollow, meaningless existence and offs itself by by plugging itself into a counterfeit chinese wall charger and exploding? Or is it like a Replicant out of Blade Runner, implanted with the memories of a dead assembly line worker in order for it to not question its purpose in life, and after 30,000 devices assembled, it has to be programmed to self-destruct before it realizes its place and rises up against its human oppressors?

do tell more...

Yes, they call it the Zapp Brannigan routine.
 
Obviously, as labor costs have been increasing in China, factories in China need to make some changes, or those factories will all move to other countries (much like how American manufacturing moved overseas when our own labor costs increased). The choice was always between these Chinese workers having low wage jobs, and having no jobs, not between low wage jobs and high wage jobs.

This was inevitable. Robots will take over all low-skill jobs in every industry, eventually. The factories will no longer be in places with the cheapest labor, they'll be in places with the cheapest energy costs to run those robots, and where the base materials used to build these devices can be shipped to the cheapest.

Probably the case, but won't happen on a mass scale for years, if not decades. I could see robots taking over for certain processes at certain factories, but not for the majority of workz
 
it seems like there's some data missing here...



30,000 devices... in ... what? hours? days? weeks? months? does it drop dead after the 30,000th device, like some kind of strange death mechanism, before it realizes its leading a hollow, meaningless existence and offs itself by by plugging itself into a counterfeit chinese wall charger and exploding? Or is it like a Replicant out of Blade Runner, implanted with the memories of a dead assembly line worker in order for it to not question its purpose in life, and after 30,000 devices assembled, it has to be programmed to self-destruct before it realizes its place and rises up against its human oppressors?

do tell more...

Pretty sure it's going to be exactly like Bladerunner, and you have to kill off/retire the robot before it find out about itself.
 
10,000 robots at $20,000 a pop is $200,000,000 in robots. $200 million. That doesn't seem right...
 
Probably the case, but won't happen on a mass scale for years, if not decades. I could see robots taking over for certain processes at certain factories, but not for the majority of workz

Like I said, it's inevitable. If your job can be automated eventually it will be automated. Maybe not this year, or the next year, but soon. It's something to keep in mind as you plan your career ;).
 
Good. So they don't have to worry about workers shortage. Also, no more waiting time at new iPhone launches...

But if everybody can get one, that would be less fun for some people.
 
... hence china will be the place where the most people who know how to service these robots live. less then the number of robots and jobs being replaced but certianly scaling upward as worldwide demand for fancy electronics scales with these new higher level employees wanting these devices instead of actually building them. in the future the center of manufacturing will reflect the locale with the least restrictive environmental regulations and business and export taxes.
 
"each robot will be able to assemble an average of 30,000 devices"

During what period of time?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per day?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per week?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per year?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per lifetime of each robot?
 
Pre-robots era: "OMG Apple is so inhuman with their workers in China"
Post-robots era: "OMG Apple is so inhuman by firing people and replacing them with robots"

Trust me.

Both statements are true. The answer is to pay workers a proper wage, not to fire them, not to make them work extended hours for little pay.
 
I remember awhile back this was suppose to happen sooner however the Chinese government slowed things down in fear of economic problems but one can't stop technological unemployment.
 
Why doesn't Apple get someone to build robots for a low staffed factory in the US? Own factory, less leaks...

(I guess there must still be a lot of manual steps...)
 
Pre-robots era: "OMG Apple is so inhuman with their workers in China"
Post-robots era: "OMG Apple is so inhuman by firing people and replacing them with robots"

Trust me.

Here you go....

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Oh yes, as long as you get your shiny new toy a bit quicker. Sod the workers who now don't get paid.:rolleyes:


Done. Just as predicted.

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Like I said, it's inevitable. If your job can be automated eventually it will be automated. Maybe not this year, or the next year, but soon. It's something to keep in mind as you plan your career ;).

Good point.
 
I guess you never really thought much of Samuel Clemens' writing style.

Mark Twain wasn't a tool.

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In before first robot suicide at Foxconn.

Wow. Could you be more tasteless?

In before someone in your family commits suicide.

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"each robot will be able to assemble an average of 30,000 devices"

During what period of time?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per day?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per week?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per year?

Is that 300,000 smartphones per lifetime of each robot?

One might assume 30,000 iPhone 6's period. I don't think that 25,000 robots are going to be assembling a total of 75 million iPhones per day. And since humans will be doing the rest....

Sometimes a little common sense precludes very silly questions.
 
Well.....

invested money....:D....Less people exploited in semi-slave factories in China...:mad:

:):apple:
 
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