by Suff » 22 May 2022, 10:32
Some things are becoming more automated but as the world population grows, farming becomes more intensive.
Australia and the US are two of the leading users of this kind of software where they replace large crews of drivers who do little more than keep the vehicle straight.
This is all part and parcel with the whole social justice and minimum wage. Most people think social justice and minimum wage is a great thing, they just don't want to pay for food produced by it.
So automation takes over. This boat has long sailed. I recall some idiot in the press in the early 90's wittering on about how pc processors were so fast that Windows would do what you wanted before you pressed the key. Today a £35 raspberry Pi has 1,000 times the memory, 100 times the general processing power and 1,000,000 time the graphics performance.
With this kind of compute power automation was always going to be the next horizon.
As for self driving cars? Only the incompetent solutions will have monitoring. Truly competent self driving needs no monitoring. Something to keep in mind.
Something else to watch for. Tesla will have an AI day 2 some time this year. They will give some details about their optimus robot at that session. Another move down the path of automation and one which may ultimately prove easier than driving a vehicle.
In France they sell MicroCars. Driven by people who don't have a driving license, usually because they can't pass a test. These humans can still do useful work in society.
Something to think about.
As for banking and finance, they have become security obsessed and constantly run specialised penetration tests using companies who think outside the box. They also run hackathons where they get a team of young people and pay them for 48 hours of intense group work to try and break the systems. One of my sons goes to these.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.