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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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On 12/28/2014 10:32 PM, pyotr filipivich wrote:
"Michael A. Terrell" on Sun, 28 Dec 2014 03:56:18 -0500 typed in rec.crafts.metalworking the following: " wrote: On Saturday, December 27, 2014 6:47:20 AM UTC-5, John B. Slocomb wrote: If robots can sell coffee machines I think that they can probably say, "With Fries?" and it is very likely that if the Nestle experiment works, and there at present at least one Japanese company that is currently using robots in their outlets, that companies like Macdonald's will be looking at the same solution. I do not believe that we will ever see robots selling hamburgers. Instead you will see smart phones being used to place orders for hamburgers. Much less cost for the hamburger seller. So you can't buy a burger, if you don't want to have a so called smart phone? decaster missed this bit of news from 2012: http://www.gizmag.com/hamburger-machine/25159/ "According to Momentum Machines, making burgers costs US$9 billion a year in wages in the United States alone. The company points out that a machine that could make burgers with minimum human intervention would not only provide huge savings in labor costs, but would also reduce preparation space with a burger kitchen replaced by a much smaller and cheaper stainless-steel box." [...] "This self-contained, automatic device sees raw ingredients go in one end and the completed custom-made burgers come out the other at the rate of up to 400 per hour. " So, yes, there is no humanoid looking robot flipping burgers and asking "Do you want fries with that?". Nope - just a machine which makes hamburgers to order. Oh yes, and while we are at it - the "Barista In A Box": http://qz.com/134661/briggo-coffee-army-of-robot-baristas-could-mean-the-end-of-starbucks-as-we-know-it/ which features a kiosk at the University of Texas Austin, which in fifty square feet of floor space (five by ten, or 4.6 sq meters), does everything - and repeats the process, so that your order today is the same as yesterday, as the day before, as it will be tomorrow. "High-end restaurants automated coffee production and no one noticed." The robots are here, and they don't take breaks, come in late or hung over, require medical benefits or overtime. And the price of these robots is coming down, as their abilities increase. And the substances coming out of them are little different from the substances coming out of me after I've eaten them. David |
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