Hyundai begins using Boston Dynamics humanoid robots at US factory (mezha.media)
from Khuda@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 07 May 10:45
https://lemmy.world/post/29263938

#technology

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Franklin@lemmy.ca on 07 May 12:09 next collapse

Hyundai owns Boston Dynamics, so it makes sense, not that it’s not an interesting story but it was the obvious end goal.

WhiteRice@lemmy.ml on 08 May 03:46 collapse

I thought they were funded by DARPA. How is this not a national security concern…

DrunkenPirate@feddit.org on 08 May 06:01 collapse

The battery! It lasts for just 1-3 hours. That’s why there aren‘t robots on the battlefield nowadays. Once the energy issue is solved this will change

JoMiran@lemmy.ml on 07 May 12:20 next collapse

The key takeaway from the article;

Hyundai: *Buys Boston Dynamics in 2021

Trump: “We’re going to bring manufacturing back to America!”
*Imposes tariffs on car imports

Hyundai: OK
*Deploys robots in Alabama plant to do tasks usually done by humans.

venusaur@lemmy.world on 07 May 13:38 collapse

People still have to feed the dogs and clean their poop and stuff. They just have new jobs.

JoMiran@lemmy.ml on 07 May 13:49 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/6daf05a3-167d-4fb2-8707-3f61215def62.jpeg">

venusaur@lemmy.world on 09 May 04:51 collapse

Depends on the job. If you can shift to robotic maintenance as opposed to working on the line, maybe you could make more. Of course that’s not easy to do. In an ideal world we eventually get UBI, but, you know.

EstonianGuy@lemm.ee on 07 May 14:22 collapse

I mean, at some point robots will be able to do those jobs too.

DrunkenPirate@feddit.org on 08 May 05:59 next collapse

Sure. But at what costs? One can do many things by technology. Are people willing to pay for it? And how much?

EstonianGuy@lemm.ee on 08 May 06:17 collapse

Cars are a good example, there was a point where you couldnt get a car that was cheaper than a horse. Eventually there were enough old cars on the market that reduced the price so having a horse just wasnt financially reasonable.

There will be a point where there are enough old robots on the market that having a human do a simple labor job isnt financially reasonable.

DrunkenPirate@feddit.org on 08 May 10:04 collapse

Good point.

However, there‘s a crucial difference to cars. Robots are hardware AND software. And I don’t know anybody who uses Windows 95, CorelDraw, and Netscape today. Software and connected hardware outdate mich faster than simple hardware.

Litebit@lemmy.world on 08 May 06:12 collapse

At some point only robots and robots CEOs, Robot business owners will have jobs. Most humans will have no job and so no money to buy stuff made by the robots.

Human Resource will be made redundant and replaced RR-Robot resource

HowAbt2morrow@futurology.today on 07 May 13:11 next collapse

Do the workers get some of those cute BD dogs for emotional support considering they’re working 24 hour shifts?

JoMiran@lemmy.ml on 07 May 19:43 collapse
Mars2k21@sh.itjust.works on 09 May 05:16 next collapse

The fact that we can just look at this and just act like it’s normal is wild, guess I shouldn’t be surprised since it’s 2025 but like…Boston Dynamics only had the dogs 10 years ago.

Maverick604@lemmy.ca on 09 May 05:53 collapse

Great. So, even if manufacturing does return to the USA – the jobs will not. As everyone predicted. What is the difference if robots have all the manufacturing jobs on US soil instead of foreigners in China? Correct. There is none. Except the company has avoided paying the tariff — whose only purpose was to “bring the jobs back”.

Quite simply we must boycott any company using robotics. The Trump tariffs are an insane policy, lowering America’s standing in the world, destroying the world economy (and there will be unexpected blow back for that too) and they should be immediately reversed.

MaggiWuerze@feddit.org on 09 May 06:50 next collapse

Quite simply we must boycott any company using robotics

What? Robots aren’t the problem. The problem is the stubborn refusal to accept that we are moving to a point where not everyone will have to work and that we will have to think about how we can move on from that

AA5B@lemmy.world on 09 May 11:23 collapse

We’ve been on a trend of increasing automation for a long time, and that’s not going to change. Nor should it.