A friend of mine is a high school teacher, and I have suggested that he assign his students to read and report on the excellent recent book, "Rise of the Robots" by Martin Ford, c. 2015, a survey of all of the latest human-substitute technologies as they are appearing in a great many professions and trades. Ford refers to the common assertion that technical revolutions end up producing more jobs than they eliminate, but makes a detailed case why this time its different.
Having read "Rise," then (as I also advised my teacher friend) read the June 4, 2015 review in Forbes magazine by a contributor, Steve Demming, who disagrees completely with Ford's conclusions. I found Demming's arguments cogent but not fully persuasive. I'm an old man so none of this is critical for me, but you young guys maybe should think hard about this stuff, because the changes are coming faster than even experts in the field were predicting only a few years ago. Don't find yourself training your non-human replacement and complaining that nobody told you it was coming. I feel bad for you guys; I grew up in a simpler world.
Having read "Rise," then (as I also advised my teacher friend) read the June 4, 2015 review in Forbes magazine by a contributor, Steve Demming, who disagrees completely with Ford's conclusions. I found Demming's arguments cogent but not fully persuasive. I'm an old man so none of this is critical for me, but you young guys maybe should think hard about this stuff, because the changes are coming faster than even experts in the field were predicting only a few years ago. Don't find yourself training your non-human replacement and complaining that nobody told you it was coming. I feel bad for you guys; I grew up in a simpler world.
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