Submitted by GodOfThunder101 t3_11gjtn4 in singularity
jibblin t1_jaq2f01 wrote
Reply to comment by just_thisGuy in Figure: One robot for every human on the planet. by GodOfThunder101
I don’t wanna do this but whatever is higher than trillions could be there. With inflation by the time we get there especially. Imagine every human on the planet having access to a robot. Could sell so many variations and customizations. Could sell software to change what the robot does. It’s insane the possibilities.
Ricky_Rollin t1_jaq306e wrote
Wouldn’t it be cool if you could let the robot work for you? I mean like go to work for you. Ahh a man can dream.
On a different note, I was born in 84 and it’s kind of been pretty insane growing up from analogue to digital and in such a short time AI and robotics. I don’t think theirs ever been a time in history where we’ve seen life changing inventions every 7 years or so.
jibblin t1_jaq3x30 wrote
And I hope in the next 30 years we have this kinda robotics. I used to read Isaac Asimov books growing up and it’s been a dream to live in fully capable robots like that. I hope we have it soon 😩
Clarkeprops t1_jaq7050 wrote
Kind of like the movie surrogate
Nastypilot t1_jar58pc wrote
Question as a person born in 2005: What changed technologically since 1990's?
godog t1_jarx6cm wrote
Born in 1991 for reference
When I was a kid, there was more or less no internet as we think of it today. It existed, but only tech nerds used it for much: images took time to load and were poor resolution, videos you can forget about, and forums were the main thing
People watched TV, read books and went outside much more
The internet slowly gained more features. When i was in middle school, the first social networks (myspace) started to appear. At first these were not full of "rage bait" stuff because the attention economy was only just beginning. YouTube was born around this time, and it was the first time the internet went from being weird nerds to being "most people"
Early devices like iPods and flip phones would become smartphones by the time I was in college. YouTube went from blurry videos that took forever to load to something like it's present form, with lots of videos and ads and things
Most of the early internet was spread across 100s of forums and fun sites like ytmnd, but by the time of the smartphone it consolidated around "the five websites" that exist today
The culture changed a lot around this. The early internet was more anarchic, and felt separated from society, but soon the two would become more integrated.
Since then, well, you'll be old enough to know what occurred
Nastypilot t1_jarxiip wrote
Alright, thank you, that answered my question a bit.
jambokk t1_jaruywt wrote
Pretty much everything.
Nastypilot t1_jarvg0m wrote
Er, that doesn't really answer my question, I grew up in 2010's, earliest memory I have is from 2009, I have no frame of reference for the 90's.
jambokk t1_jarw5ip wrote
Well the biggest one that comes to my mind that has changed everyone's day to day life, is the fact that practically everybody has an internet capable super computer in their pocket, for better or worse. Smart phones are pretty fucking sci-fi if you were born pre-1990.
Nastypilot t1_jarwanq wrote
Huh, interesting.
flyblackbox t1_jaszex0 wrote
The biggest things I can think of, born in 1987.
We had to make phone calls from a phone connected to a wall at all times and if you weren’t there to answer the phone, too bad. There was no cell phone service, or World Wide Web until about 1995, and only a few people even had email in the early 90s.
Trying to navigate to a physical location was a either a guessing game or literally looking at a map and trying to figure out where you were, where you were going, and running your finger across the map to see what roads went that way. If you didn’t have a map, you had to stop and ask for directions where someone else would tell you how many turns to make or what landmarks you would see on the way.
Oh and to learn any fact, you had to either know someone knowledgeable on the topic and ask them or physically go to a library, hope that had a particular book on the topic and that someone else hadn’t already taken it out before you got there.
just_thisGuy t1_jaypeog wrote
Internet and smart phones are huge. It was very hard to find out anything before than, you went to the library and had to do a lot of research and probably only going to get good enough answers, now you could get almost perfect answers (as long as humans know about it). This is why ChatGPT is such a big deal too, you get answers even faster and more exact on more topics. ChatGPT is making me feel the same as around 1995 when Internet was becoming useful for more average people.
Bierculles t1_jaq9bcx wrote
I hope that at that point i can buy a mech soon after
techy098 t1_jarj1m8 wrote
Every human would not be able to afford robot unless it is given to them by the govt.
At the moment humans have jobs because we do not have cost effective robots or for that matter we do not have yet effective and easily trainable AI which will eat up most white collar jobs in a decade after they become available.
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