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Thread 513319095

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Anonymous (ID: 8BcGXnA0) United States No.513319095 >>513319519 >>513319893 >>513320891 >>513329029 >>513329152 >>513330944
Kek
Anonymous (ID: aB3FLy5l) United States No.513319166 >>513319650 >>513319796 >>513329152 >>513330788
Thanks Drumpf
Anonymous (ID: yVxlvD9M) Russian Federation No.513319449
>a cotton picker bot of color
Anonymous (ID: ihn2tV8s) United States No.513319519 >>513324019
>>513319095 (OP)
Boomer humorrrrrrrr
>*malfunctioning noises*
Anonymous (ID: NapkoXR3) United States No.513319650
>>513319166
blame monsanto and other kike seed sellers
Anonymous (ID: mh4KssUd) Brazil No.513319694 >>513320547
Olive trees require significant strength to shake them so the little olives fall on the ground

They are slow too
Anonymous (ID: /xRFTLjr) No.513319796 >>513330836
>>513319166
slavery would be even cheaper
Anonymous (ID: +le21uMc) United States No.513319893 >>513320056 >>513322399 >>513322606 >>513323917 >>513330287 >>513331304
>>513319095 (OP)
No seriously, why didn't this fucking country invest into building a proper future like this or similar to it? Why haven't we gotten grid based farming systems linked up to computers? Why do we not have automatic systems than can pick the crops? Why did we have to import a gorillion spics for any reason other than pure greed?
Anonymous (ID: zOREV+YR) United States No.513320056 >>513322395
>>513319893
Illegals are customers. Robots are not.
Anonymous (ID: F1YZdY4g) Germany No.513320547 >>513320777
>>513319694
Anonymous (ID: mh4KssUd) Brazil No.513320777 >>513321792 >>513322448 >>513322703 >>513329393
>>513320547
Fair, but the humanoid is going to come in a bundle with that big machine? Ok fine, the Chinese models are 4000 each and is less than 2000usd a month to pay Juan

What about crops you can get easily grabbing with your hand?
You might need 10x the number of Juan Deeres to be the same speed
Anonymous (ID: loVMz+vm) Japan No.513320844
test
Anonymous (ID: yT7ehA6H) United States No.513320891 >>513321007 >>513322762 >>513323839 >>513325840
>>513319095 (OP)
how is a humanoid form efficient for robotics? the balancing and all that. only two hands, etc. this is not a thing. it will be an autonomous vehicle on tracks with multiple appendages. like they already have.
Anonymous (ID: mh4KssUd) Brazil No.513321007 >>513322762
>>513320891
I heard someone answer this question saying the objective is "general" like general inteligence
So it's a humanoid because it is supposed to be general purpose
Anonymous (ID: F1YZdY4g) Germany No.513321792 >>513322238
>>513320777
unsure, but I'm certain you could automate the whole thing one way or the other. if it's financially feasible is a different matter.
Anonymous (ID: mh4KssUd) Brazil No.513322238 >>513322441
>>513321792
Currently they are slow...
Anonymous (ID: +le21uMc) United States No.513322395
>>513320056
>the eternal boomer demands its pension
Anonymous (ID: XykvRNr6) United States No.513322399 >>513322559 >>513322606 >>513322762
>>513319893
The US economy has never wanted to invest in things like infrastructure or automation. Why? Because it costs money today and you won't results instantly. Better to impress the shareholders with something that will generate an extra $50 today even if it will lose you $200 next week.
Keep in mind our companies single-handedly created modern China by moving all their factories there where they could gain the skills AND steal the blueprints.
Anonymous (ID: F1YZdY4g) Germany No.513322441
>>513322238
mind you tho that machines don't sleep or take brakes. in theory at least
Anonymous (ID: 8ehXXfCp) United States No.513322448 >>513329491
>>513320777
>Ok fine, the Chinese models are 4000 each and is less than 2000usd a month to pay Juan
Juan is 2k a month every time he works, from now into eternity (except it increases with inflation). Xi JinRobot is $4000 the first time and the solar array for recharging his battery is $30k, then he's free until he needs maintenance or replacement. Xi JinRobot also doesn't need transit to or from the farm, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat, can work 24 hours in the dark...

There's a reason we quit using slaves. A machine's pretty much always better in the long run, it's just a matter of when the machine becomes reliable enough to fully replace the human.
Anonymous (ID: +le21uMc) United States No.513322559 >>513323999 >>513324253 >>513329707
>>513322399
I have honestly considered going back to college for something like engineering while taking out massive loans, learning Mandarin along the way, and then fleeing to China. Like, what would the USA even be able to do? They can barely capture regular criminals let alone financial ones.
Anonymous (ID: 8ehXXfCp) United States No.513322606
>>513319893
>>513322399
Blessed post. America mortgaged the future to pay for the present, but you live in the future now and not the present that got pampered. Whoops.
Anonymous (ID: I2O1Vyll) Paraguay No.513322703
>>513320777
Juan steals from you. End of story
Anonymous (ID: 8ehXXfCp) United States No.513322762
>>513320891
>>513321007
An economy of scale where you can sell the same robot to 100 different industries doing radically different things would be good for profits, and the human shape is already the shape that does a lot of jobs the robots would replace.

For a specialty robot you sometimes have to change the shape of the environment to fit the robot (like a robotic car factory) which increases startup costs which runs into this problem
>>513322399
REALLY hard.
Anonymous (ID: yNdrPs08) United States No.513323839
>>513320891
We should have giant spider like robots that comb low to the ground to pick things and then bigger versions for say anything that grows in trees
Anonymous (ID: ibgqXuCI) Mexico No.513323917 >>513324102
>>513319893
because it's expensive
you know what isn't expensive? hiring illegals
Anonymous (ID: KmHBA+0o) United States No.513323999 >>513325464
>>513322559
i would tell you to do this because only an idiot would

and im pro-getting rid of idiots. you really should
Anonymous (ID: s45yoNQA) United States No.513324019
>>513319519
thats when a college educated, unionized white robot repair man comes out to the farm to repair your robot for 120k a year
Anonymous (ID: 8ehXXfCp) United States No.513324102 >>513324173
>>513323917
Shut up bio-Juan, robo-Juan is better, faster and has a bigger dick
Anonymous (ID: ibgqXuCI) Mexico No.513324173 >>513324496
>>513324102
it's hilarious you think if that automation saved producers money it wouldn't already be implemented
Anonymous (ID: XykvRNr6) United States No.513324253 >>513329829
>>513322559
That seems like a bad idea to me. The Chinese part at least. Getting an in demand job like high level engineering would open doors in many countries, though.
Anonymous (ID: 8ehXXfCp) United States No.513324496 >>513332072
>>513324173
We had cotton gins here in the 1700s and still had enough slaves in the 1860s to fight a war about them. People change slowly unless someone holds a gun to their head.
Anonymous (ID: +le21uMc) United States No.513325464 >>513325912
>>513323999
>going to a country that is implementing the future is dumb
>taking a half baked idea seriously
Nice trips, though.
Anonymous (ID: hSG7wOlP) United States No.513325840 >>513332391
>>513320891

In the movie A.I. the future robots are still humanoid because its the optimal design for everything a higher being could do.
Anonymous (ID: KmHBA+0o) United States No.513325912 >>513327312
>>513325464
consider how many bug men are running away from that shitry bug hive. how many millions, TENs of millions, of them are in not only america but Anglo lands

now how many anglos are in china? miniscule. there's a reason for that; a very good one
Anonymous (ID: +le21uMc) United States No.513327312 >>513328195 >>513329597
>>513325912
>chinese engies make like 55k-66k per year
Jesus
Anonymous (ID: KmHBA+0o) United States No.513328195
>>513327312
brother, I'm the dude that gets the prints from the engineer, and i get more than 4 times that annually
Anonymous (ID: q7o/rTsC) United States No.513329029
>>513319095 (OP)
as a Controls Engineer with 10 years experience I can tell you somethings:
- there will be never self-driving cars
- there will be never farming robots
- there will be never cooking robots
the complexity required for these robots is unattainable and if there if it is attainable in some percent, it will be not cost-effective.

the only way to achieve that is with a different type of technology that probably can't even exist, a new type of transistor or a new form of energy, that avoids small electrical motors and runs almost energy-free. Like a self healing organic octopus arm that curls and grabs in any direction excited by an energy field generated via induction from the environment itself.
Anonymous (ID: Juyz9U9p) United States No.513329152 >>513329624 >>513331490
>>513319166
>>513319095 (OP)
After the tractor scandal and right to repair, only a complete shit eating retard would buy a robot from John Deere

Get a Kubota or something
Anonymous (ID: wlbG31yJ) United States No.513329393
>>513320777
the japanese farmers have automated so many things, the japs just import service sector, warehouse and meatpacking slaves now.
Anonymous (ID: q7o/rTsC) United States No.513329491
>>513322448
>There's a reason we quit using slaves. A machine's pretty much always better in the long run
incorrect. we use machines because we don't want to work. work is physical demanding. people like to cheat and avoid physical demanding.
don't use your scythe, instead use a lawn mower.
don't wash your dishes, use a dish washer.
don't plow the field with oxen, use a tractor.
if you look at these humanoid robots, they are design to do things that human would like to avoid, like cooking (chopping vegetables), taking the trash out etc.
but all of these things produce over-production. you see, for a family of 4, you don't actually need a tractor. you can plow with 2 oxen just the food you need. tractors are used by farms and corporations to over-produce food, to sell it away and make profits.
we use machinery for PROFIT, not for living.
over-production and profit, 2 hearts of the capitalism, is what led to the demographic explosion of Africans, for example. they don't necesarily yield positive effects in the long term. most developed countries are sedentary, obese, retarded, diabetic and don't want to have children (children were made to help them on the farms).

remember that all pagan societies were living in harmony with the nature, they didn't over-bred, they were producing just the food they wanted and even threw away the over-production (either by fire or by water), to prevent this. they never hunted more than they needed.
Anonymous (ID: wlbG31yJ) United States No.513329597 >>513330046
>>513327312
arent their expenses like 10k per year though.
Honestly just depends on what you want to do.
You wont find higher pay outside the US for this kinda white collar stuff, the US sucks dick for the uneducated but once you got an education that is worth anything you are pretty much good as long as you don't fuck yourself.
Anonymous (ID: wdpNXFZE) Argentina No.513329624
>>513329152
I can assure you farmers will keep buying the green deer. I don’t think you understand how good those machines are. People will literally pay twice as much for a second hand green tractor than buy a brand new one from China for half the price. The right to repair stuff was a bit of a mess but their engineers and manufacturers are still coming up with top tier stuff. There’s people here still running JDs from the mid 90s, only getting regular maintenance but no large repairs, working them like hell for hours and hours over rough and uneven terrain. JD is still the king, as an American you should be proud of that company
Anonymous (ID: q7o/rTsC) United States No.513329707
>>513322559
this ain't a bad idea, except the destination.
try changing it to Europe, Latin America or South East Asia, in this order.
get a couple loans for other reasons as well, maybe with fake identities? is that possible?
but then again, you can easily play honest in US, there are cheap colleges and the best paying jobs out there and also live among your kin. You can make your own company and avoid paying taxes. If you can't get successful in US that means you cannot get successful anywhere, anon...
Anonymous (ID: 17X7EaUj) United States No.513329829 >>513330539
>>513324253
>Engineering
>In demand
LOL! LMAO!
t. Mechanical engineer
Anonymous (ID: KmHBA+0o) United States No.513330046
>>513329597
i dont know how it is in other states but in California they got it right. you can skip more than half the bullshit college costs by going to a CC and doing a transfer program. 8 years ago they introduced an AS-T program also. this is where any UC or Cal State Uni accepts the credits you took from CC. all negotiated, no games, no bs "we cant accept this class, you have to do it again" crap, its all black and white

you do all your general ed and elective nonsense where it costs you basically nothing, and do your major classes at your college you want to grad from. they all accept it, and admission is guranteed. all states should have thjs program

the expansion to it is the AST gives you an associates degree AND you get a guaranteed transfer. cutting way more than half the cost off your college bill

there's a handful of things California does right that nobody else does
Anonymous (ID: UDwPh07h) Australia No.513330287 >>513333030
>>513319893
>why don't we just make robots that do all the work and have flying cars and UBI and write poetry all day
you are a mental child
Anonymous (ID: q7o/rTsC) United States No.513330539
>>513329829
>linkedin:
>mechanical engineer in Columbus, Ohio, United States
>510 results
>indeed:
>mechanical engineer in Atlanta, GA
>300+
hundreds of jobs in mid-sized cities
almost no competition
chud (ID: KUY3mwgh) Uruguay No.513330788
>>513319166
Looks like we're still not out of the woods of Bidenomics
Anonymous (ID: /bsjqJD/) United States No.513330836
>>513319796
We should bring it back.
Anonymous (ID: uweJf4q4) No.513330944
>>513319095 (OP)
they seriously went the route of botting everything, they literally and figuratively hate you miggers
Anonymous (ID: 3NvxcMp/) United States No.513331304
>>513319893
Most plants aren't that uniform to harvest. Some are also very delicate, particularly fruits. Melons of almost any kind are somewhat delicate as well. Beyond that, fruit orchards have to be carefully trimmed every year and the trees themselves are all a bit different. It's all time consuming, and occasionally heavy work. There are plenty of people who would do it if the jobs were actually posted somewhere. Instead busloads of migrants are shipped around to do it.
Anonymous (ID: nkBWEXrw) Canada No.513331490 >>513332310
>>513329152
kek, farmer here. no one buys this junk unless they got extra flex money, which farmers don't.
Anonymous (ID: EtdrEl9S) United States No.513332072
>>513324496
the cotton jin literally expanded the demand for cotton pickers by multiple magnitudes you retarded double nigger. If it weren't for that single invention blacks would be fewer than 5% of the pop by now.
Anonymous (ID: Juyz9U9p) United States No.513332310
>>513331490
Because they spent all of their money(gibs) transporting a bricked Deere 3 states to a dealership to have a module flashed?
sage (ID: WnkgBkyv) No.513332391
>>513325840
>In the movie A.I. the future robots are still humanoid because its the optimal design for everything a higher being could do.
so is far cheaper to hook up humans to an AI digital interface and use them as robots
Anonymous (ID: Tb5wcTw/) United States No.513332691 >>513332917
We have had the tech for a decade.
Anonymous (ID: Tb5wcTw/) United States No.513332917
>>513332691
Anonymous (ID: +le21uMc) United States No.513333030
>>513330287
>straw man
>red herring
>chasing spooks
Take your pick.