This is the second blog in an occasional series on robots and employment. Our first blog on this subject asked if industrial robots create more jobs for people or take them away, and looked at which ...
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When people ask “will robots will take my job,” they often picture automation replacing human workers. But the real question isn’t whether robots will take jobs—it’s how they will change the way work ...
Much has been (and will continue to be) written about automation’s impact on the jobs market. In the short-term, many employers have complained of an inability to fill roles and retain workers, ...
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Automation robotics jobs are transforming industries by automating repetitive tasks, allowing humans to focus on complex decision-making. Future of work technology predicts that by 2025, 85 million ...
We’re not heading into a world with no work. We’re heading into a world with too much work and not enough people to do it. That’s why I believe the answer to "Will robots take our jobs?" is "yes." But ...
Sushma Chandra (MSR '23), James Oubre (MSR '23) and Megan Sindelar (MSR '23) reflect on the role MSR played in preparing them for their new roles. Sushma Chandra (MSR '23), James Oubre (MSR '23), and ...
Amazon is reducing headcount in its strategically important robotics division, a move some view as signaling broader cost-cutting efforts at the e-commerce giant, which increasingly relies on ...
TL;DR: Amazon plans to automate 75% of its operations by 2033, potentially replacing 600,000 jobs with robots to save $12.6 billion and reduce shipping costs. Despite internal documents revealing this ...
As industrial robots and artificial intelligence spread through auto plants, you are watching a basic economic tension sharpen: if machines do more of the work, who still earns enough to buy the ...