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Robotic Revolution

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SP
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Re:
SP   12/14/2012 8:06:43 PM
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Mr. Roques, Good point. Robots will do the work as they are programmed. Their would be a microcontroller chip inside each robot preprogrammed to do the functions. Ofcourse they wont get tired and many not need to take a break for natural reasons. And if they get into a situation that is not in their program, depending on what is written in the program they will behave. May be raise an alarm.

Mr. Roques
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Re:
Mr. Roques   12/14/2012 1:38:39 PM
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I would like to see those FoxBots (reminded me of Austin Power's femme bots) working. 

Is FOXCOM on 24 hr shifts? If robots work 24/7/365, the breakeven point is even closer. 

Can those FoxBots do any job?

Adeniji Kayode
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Re:
Adeniji Kayode   12/14/2012 1:20:40 PM
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You mean to say that Man and machine will have to coexist to solve our daily problem

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: Robotic Revolution
Adeniji Kayode   12/14/2012 1:15:58 PM
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SP

well, humans will have to do the supervision which means that humans will still be needed but in small numbers and probably with a more special discipline.

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: good move
Adeniji Kayode   12/14/2012 1:08:21 PM
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FLYINGSCOT.

I agree with you on that but do you foresee us having robocops one day?

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: Solving a problem to create another
Adeniji Kayode   12/14/2012 1:04:03 PM
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The introduction of robots might lead to joblessness but things would normalise with time.

This might cause people to start taking courses in robot maintenance and programming.

This also means that some career discipline will no longer be neccessary or available in universities.

prabhakar_deosthali
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Re:
prabhakar_deosthali   12/14/2012 10:40:22 AM
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About 25 years back I had a chance to visit a car manufacturing plant near Paris. On the assembly line of that plant there were about 35 robots operating on the whole of the assembly line of that car plant which rolled out a new car every 2 minutes. I could see the human workers only towards the end of the assembly line doing the final electrical fittings and doing the test rides of the finished vehicles.

So there is no wonder if such scenario now appears on electronic manufacturing lines and if the economics works out well then why not.

But  I am just wondering  that the basic incentives for moving such assembly lines to countries like China was that their manual labor was very cheap and the workers were very fast at doing the repeated assembly jobs.

A robotic factory could as well in any other country as the robot will cost the same.

So may be the western world has a chance here to bring back all that manufacturing on shore again

But not necessarily the jobs!

 

 

SP
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Robotic Revolution
SP   12/14/2012 10:19:10 AM
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With Foxconn always in the news associated with employee suicide cases, I guess its wise for them to deploy few robots who will not complain about living conditions. The robots just have to be charged and programmed. May be the they will also need supervisory robotos. Wonder how much ewaste would be generated by Foxconn alone.

FLYINGSCOT
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good move
FLYINGSCOT   12/14/2012 7:32:56 AM
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I am all for increased automation as it means humans will move further up the knowledge chain as we are still needed to design and maintain the robots.  Since overall productivity should still go up it will make for an easier life for all us humans ;-)

nimantha.d
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Production Synthesizer
Re: Solving a problem to create another
nimantha.d   12/14/2012 5:53:47 AM
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Robotic activities are becoming very common these days with the technology moving fast. I think humans will have less work in the future since programatic memory will work fast and adapt faster than the human memory.

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