World conference on "The future of humanity": the robots are coming to take your jobs
Some of the richest, brightest and strongest people in the world had a message to convey to us as we met this week to discuss urgent global issues: Coming robots. At the World Congress of Milken Institute in Beverly Hills, California, at least four debates until now were on the technology that substitutes work in areas from markets to mining - and, most importantly, jobs.
"Most of the benefits we see from the automation associated with better quality and fewer errors, but in many cases actually reduces and jobs", he said yesterday at a discussion Michael Tsui, partner of McKinsey Global Institute. The four-day conference, which began Sunday, watching 3,500 people by invitation only. The topic is "The future of humanity."
The technology has not simply eliminate the low-paid jobs that require few qualifications, said some of the 700 speakers. They reported in robot leading trucks in some mines in Australia to law programs for companies which replace staff with postgraduate studies that examine thousands of documents before trial, and, in Wall Street, automate tasks that previously were carried out by bankers with MBA degrees or with doctorate.
Some of the richest, brightest and strongest people in the world had a message to convey to us as we met this week to discuss urgent global issues: Coming robots. At the World Congress of Milken Institute in Beverly Hills, California, at least four debates until now were on the technology that substitutes work in areas from markets to mining - and, most importantly, jobs.
"Most of the benefits we see from the automation associated with better quality and fewer errors, but in many cases actually reduces and jobs", he said yesterday at a discussion Michael Tsui, partner of McKinsey Global Institute. The four-day conference, which began Sunday, watching 3,500 people by invitation only. The topic is "The future of humanity."
The technology has not simply eliminate the low-paid jobs that require few qualifications, said some of the 700 speakers. They reported in robot leading trucks in some mines in Australia to law programs for companies which replace staff with postgraduate studies that examine thousands of documents before trial, and, in Wall Street, automate tasks that previously were carried out by bankers with MBA degrees or with doctorate.
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