Is the future a human world or a robot world?

Of course humans and robots will exist, this is bound to happen.

Robots’ statement: I am here to help humans create the future

Automation will replace many jobs in the next few decades. What jobs will humans do?

In the past year, robots have been regarded as the protagonist of the future. Economists predict that automation will be achieved by 2030, and robots may replace most jobs. Machine learning has improved, and robots are Thrive.

According to statistics, employment in artificial intelligence (AI) has increased by nearly 500% in the past three years. Currently, there are more than double the number of people employed than applicants, with companies vying to grab the best talent.

Artificial intelligence requires a large number of components - waveform analysis to interpret audio, machine learning to teach machines how to recognize objects, encryption to protect information. People who create this technology must be able to work as a team and integrate solutions created by other teams.

There is also a technical aspect. Whether you want to be a robotics scientist, developer, or algorithm expert, you'll likely need work experience or a computer science-related degree.

Our future life will be leisure, robots are replacing our hard work, and we can spend more time on more important things, instead of just providing a house and supporting ourselves.

According to data from World Bank President Jim Yong Kim in 2016, World Bank data predicts that the proportion of employment in automation is 69% in India, 77% in China, and as high as 85% in Ethiopia. It sounds like we may be facing the end of the job as we know it.

Many of these fears can be traced back to a 2013 study from the University of Oxford. This has given rise to numerous predictions that 47% of jobs in the United States are threatened by automation over the next two decades. Other recent and detailed studies have similar predictions.

The Industrial Revolution was like that. Before the Industrial Revolution, many people worked 60 hours a week. After the Industrial Revolution, the work week decreased to approximately 40 hours. This will be the case as the human revolution unfolds.

All technologies create new jobs and destroy them. This has been the case in the past, and there is no reason to assume that it will not be the case in the future. However, more new jobs will not necessarily be created in the future than will be destroyed.

During the Industrial Revolution, machines took over many of the tasks we had previously done. There will be many new jobs with the arrival of robots. The new jobs will be those that humans are good at or those that robots cannot do. It is predicted that within fifty to one hundred years, machines will be superhuman. This means that the only jobs left are those that robots cannot do.

Technically, machines will become amazing artists. Their music can compete with many musicians, and their paintings can match many painters. But we still prefer work produced by human artists.

These works will speak of human experience. We would appreciate a human artist who speaks of love because we have this in common. No machine will truly experience love the way we do.

In fact, the age of robots is already underway in fashion culture, and machine-made mass-produced goods will become cheaper. But handmade products will become increasingly valuable.