Searching...
Searching...
15 results for “human work”
“When agriculture got automated, it went from most of the workforce to 3% over thirty years. People would look at what you and I do for a living - having a conversation in Davos - and be like 'that's not a real job. Real job is manual labor in the fields.' But we think of it as a job.”
...workforce work. Yeah. That would happened over thirty years. Yeah. Yeah. And so I think they would look at what you and I do for a living. Like, we're just having a cool conversation in Davos talking.
...worked on the assembly line. So, again, this concept is not new. Like, you could always take capital,
The worldwide SaaS market is about $300,000,000,000 per year. The labor market in The US alone is 13,000,000,000,000. What software is now going after, the prize that it's going after is the labor market. Almost every software company has basically t
...it worked, I'd leave in under fifteen minutes. They were like, no, no, no, no, no. Take the whole thing apart, put all the pieces back, do a little show, lay out your, napkin, put all the parts there, pull out the schematic guide, open it up, and pre
...warehouse workers in in Massachusetts make about $16 an hour. So when I consider ROI for a humanoid robot that might go in and take on a task where you can't find a human, should I be considering, like, the value output of that humanoid has to be at
...that humans do very well, like the care economy. Mhmm. There's tremendous need there for aging populations. There are jobs that become more appealing when you take the physical labor out of it. Being a mason is an artisan job. Putting a brick down is
I I was able to tap into that. As far as, you know, the building the product, we did that in Pontiac, Michigan for a while, and I was actually the sole assembler for probably the first three or four months. Doing it where in Pontiac, Michigan? At a l
selling at $50,000. And we said, like, oh, this is interesting. We can probably build this business with, like, a 20 ish percent margin. And since then, that product has gone up to about $85,000 in four years. Our cost structure has gone up a little
...week to week to have food on my table and watch my parents do it. So no judgment on the people, but as a human, as you're pointing out, to do this kind of labor is soul crushing. You can do it in a fun way, you can make the best of it, but it's soul
...pay your workers very, very well. And you can afford to do that because you have plenty of jobs for them in the more complex part of the value chain. You don't need to hire them in the in the less complex part of the value chain. So so there is a a a
...when I was working in carbon fiber, we did a lot of textile production where you had to essentially thread very thin fibers into eyelet holes to feed into the machine. That will be done by humans for a very long time because it's a very it seems simp
...needed work tomorrow. When I was first entering the labor market, hey, you just get a job at a store, get a job at a restaurant, get a job at Best Buys Place. That though that was it. There was no other category of, like, well, do you wanna get a dri
...working at electronics division. I had contacts that knew how to make circuit boards. I I was able to tap into that. As far as, you know, the building the product, we did that in Pontiac, Michigan for a while, and I was actually the sole assembler fo
So, like, if I was suggesting some of the administration, it would be, like, we should figure out a way where you can basically get all of the input tariffs refunded and then maybe figure out, like, how to move the levels of abstraction down over tim
...a surplus of humans available. The white collar ones should start companies. The blue collar ones should also start companies. If you're a blue collar worker and you can get 20 people together, you know what's not gonna go away? Like, home repair, ha
Have a podcast?
Get ranked clips, hooks, and ready-to-post copy from your own episodes. Free to try.