DAVOS, Switzerland -- Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, is clearly tired of modern-day Luddites complaining about the job-destroying forces of technology.
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CyberInterNetics
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CyberInterNetics 2052CE
Once the .0001% replace all human labor with CyberInterNetics there will be no need for those of us in the 99% which is why the .0001% are now destroying social safety net services. They don't need us for our labor anymore so they are done providing us with jobs, health care, entertainment, essentials and non-essentials in life. As the agent in their Hollywood Movie "The Matrix" the .0001% are sick and tired of taking care of us. They hated our needy ass when they needed our labor and once CyberInterNetics makes it where robots and other sentient machines replace our human labor they can do what they've always wanted to do, get rid of us.
They'll claim a terrorist group has released a poison in the air (it will actually be in our food and water). they'll claim a terrorist bombed our school, our work, our stores, they've already attacked the world trade center several times, the last time knocking them down entirely. Don't forget Oklahoma City Murray Building and train stations in Europe.
There's all kinds of ways they'll kill us off and we'll never know who was behind it. At the end of course, we'll all be gone with only those who killed us left. The sentient machines will work 24/7/365 serving the .0001% wants and needs. No more providing the slaves with entertainment, food, water, transportation, tv sets for propaganda. No more paying sports stars, TV anchors, actors, doctors, lawyers. CyberInterNetic Digital Technology will serve the .0001% in what they call "Peace on Earth". No more people in the general population to control. Just the .001% themselves enjoying planet earth with no worry of Revolution or riots.
Goodbye humanity, hello .0001% singularity!
Thanks for your time.
PS
Only if we act before the completion of the CyberInterNetic Project is fully in place and operational can we save humanity. Will we do it or will we keep being distracted by their offering of TV shows, sports games and movies ever lowing wages and benefits? Keep us struggling day to day and keep us from looking at what is happening long term. The .0001% have been controlling us for thousands of years. People getting ahead? Give 'em another Depression. Works every time ;)
Are you an employer experiencing labor unrest because of low wages or poor working conditions? The easiest way to eliminate that problem is to replace the workers with machines, according to this article:
Electronics giant Foxconn plans to use a million robots in next three years following spate of employee suicides...
Robotic vehicles, from Google to Mercedes, have arrived. So what form and purpose will these cars have when we finally let go of the wheel?
In this talk, Social Media strategists and developers Rome Viharo and Maf Lewis reveal the likelihood that Google’s search algorithm may already be sentient, what it means, and what it represents as a metaphor for collective problem solving.
Image Metrics Emily O'Brian photo-realistic animation crosses the uncanny valley.
Editorial:
As an Electronic Engineer I've warned that sooner rather than later the authorities will be able to use digital technology to place your image in a bank robbery and claim your a bank robber and/or place you at the scene of a terrorist strike and claim your a terrorist. ;)
The Future of decieve just went high tech..
I am not sure how many of you knew about the “robot apps” but this is definitely something new for me. Apparently, there is a huge market where robot owners are looking to buy robot apps to extend the capabilities of their robots.
ETH Zurich roboticist Raffaello D'Andrea is collaborating with architects on a new building construction technique using flying robots. Their demonstration installation, Flight Assemebled Architecture, has just opened at the FRAC Centre in Orléans, France. Four autonomous quadcopter robots retrieve foam bricks and then a networked computer vision system directs their placement. The installation consists of more than 1,500 bricks and is a 1:100 model of what the architects Fabio Gramazio and Matthias Kohler call a "vertical village."
With the job market in the toilet, this video of an iPad 2 being dipped in a stream of molten Hawaiian lava breaks my heart. No, it's not because the poor.
This year ROS celebrates another anniversary--four years of a great community building open-source libraries for robotics. We're excited to celebrate this milestone by announcing ROSCon 2012, the first ROS developer's conference. On May 19-20 in St. Paul, Minnesota (following ICRA), ROS developers from around the globe will gather to learn, share, exchange, and network on all topics ROS. The conference features: Presentations by ROS experts, including robot-specific development, useful packages and stacks, developer tools, and embedded systems.
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Manufacturers are investing in product innovation and added value services as a means to compete and drive growth.
The president’s wants to bring back manufacturing, but new tax breaks and better-trained workers cannot undo the damage done by decades of neglect of the nation’s industrial sector.
The rise of the robotic nation will not create new jobs for people -- it will create jobs for robots.
The unusual thing about the robotic revolution is that the robots will come and displace millions of workers throughout the economy, but the robot industry will create very few new jobs. Millions will be unemployed in America, but there will be nothing for them to do.
Conventional wisdom says that the economy will respond to all of these unemployed workers by creating new jobs for them. But look at our economy today. For the past 40 years, the economy has been generating millions of low-paying service sector jobs that create a large class of employees known as the working poor. 60% of the American workforce makes less than $14 per hour today [ref]. If the economy is going to be creating millions of high-paying, exciting, fulfilling jobs for all of these displaced workers, it would be doing it now. Why can't all of the Wal-Mart/Target/McDonald's/etc. employees who are going to get displaced in 2015 step into their new, exciting, higher-paying jobs right now, instead of waiting? It's because the economy tends not create jobs like that in any sort of volume.
At this moment, instead of creating exciting new jobs, the economy is locked in a race to the bottom. This race is marked by a workplace that continuously creates lower-paying jobs instead of higher-paying ones.
The Race to the Bottom
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Editorial:
It's not important to my strategy that massive amounts of people heed my CyberInterNetics warning. The few of us who are ready to survive is enough to keep humanity viable.
We could've built a socieity that made it where human beings would have been free to follow their psssion since human beings would no longer need to work to feed themselves, clothe themselves, house themselves, etc.
ah well,
~plasmaborne4rel
DAVOS, Switzerland -- Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, is clearly tired of modern-day Luddites complaining about the job-destroying forces of technology.
If you're taking a break from work to read this article, I've got one question for you: Are you crazy? I know you think no one will notice, and I know that everyone else does it. Via juandoming
Yes, yes, CyberInterNetics is being implimented because those who seek to eliminate social security, the forty hour work week, child labor laws, work safety laws, and voting laws love you so much that they are building a smart technology grid to make your life easier. Are you seriously believing this horse shit? The people who are trying to take your retirement pension, your medicare, trying to work you till you drop dead are also trying to care for you? You'd have to be brain dead to see the poltical that is going on and still think you're going to be living well into your old age.
Damn, wise up to the signs spewing forth from Washington DC... it's self evident and crystal clear none of the politicians are working for those of us in the working class. Are we deaf, dumb and blind?
oh well, plasmaborne4rel
http://www.googleconsciousness.com In this talk, Social Media strategists and developers Rome Viharo and Maf Lewis reveal the likelihood that Google's search...
Singularity Blog, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Cosmology, Science and Technology...
Editorial:
While the rest of us are debating tax cuts for the rich and the destruction of social security the 1% have scientist working toward a CyberInterNetic future where they are in total control.
Automation poses a real threat to the factory worker – two armed robots like Nextage can perform many of the same tasks as a human, but only take as much money to run as powering a hair dryer. AIST and Kawada, the developers of Nextage, want to assuage the fears of the working class. Their robot is designed not to eliminate human laborers, but to work side by side with them. The Nextage detects movement and won’t collide with people who enter its space. Without the need for safety barriers used with traditional industrial robots, the Nextage may be able to simply plug into spots previously occupied by human workers. In the video below taken in Tokyo, Kawada demonstrates the versatility of the two armed robots, and highlights how multiple Nextage bots can coordinate their movements to work on the same task at the same time. These robots clearly know the value of teamwork, and humans may actually be allowed to be part of that team.
this new approach is the cost-shared R&D partnership between government and industry, All federal R&D agencies (including the nation’s 726 federal laboratories) will be encouraged to act as partners with industry wherever possible. In this way, federal investments can be
With a little help from what's called the Internet of Things, engineers are transforming cities from passive conduits for water into dynamic systems that store and manage it like the tissues of desert animals.
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