Hidden One
Member
RIP to more jobs.
Guaranteed basic income, y'all. If we do this right, we're headed for Star Trek!
(But we won't do it right. So we'll probably just kill each other...)
This. The sooner we get folks off jobs and able to live their lives as they want without having to do 40 hour work weeks, the better.
Slay, Amazon, slay.
Some folks want to head out and grab what they need. Some would rather wait to have it delivered. It's really an option. Maybe Amazon will have "Delivery Guys" like Pizza places have if they build enough of these "Go" stores around the nation in Urban areas while folks that aren't Urban will have to go to the "Go" store physically to get their stuff instantly.
I don't think society was really relying on your average retail cashier for any of that. Besides, the app for this would likely be keeping a running tally of exactly what you bought and what the total cost is so far. If anything it makes it easier to consciously track cost because you don't have to keep a running tally in your head.Yes, what our society really needs is more friction-free ways to buy stuff without having to think consciously about what it costs.
So what's stopping someone without the app from just taking items and walking out without paying?
That would teach them to be less clumsy.
We can easily stop this through legislation. We just need for our legislative leaders to actually show some courage and fight to protect jobs.
I wonder what it will take for people to turn on Amazon. They have been such a destructive force within our economy and treat their employees like human garbage.
They didn't magically bring this into existence out of thin air, how many computer scientists and engineers did they hire to create this store? Would you rather we save the jobs of cashiers and not create any technological innovation?
Amazon has tons of work for programmers and engineers, if they weren't working on this they would have been working on something else in the company. Programmers are in high demand. People who work the cash register aren't. And sure there is a reason for that but I don't think we should just toss those people aside anyways. Especially when programs to help those people get into new fields aren't terribly likely to expand in the next couple years.
It's also incredibly reductive to suggest that not wanting automation to completely take over means no innovation in technology.
I responded to a ridiculous post with one of my own.Yes, because I'm sure you've never knocked something over at a grocery store. Jesus Christ people are assholes about retail.
I wonder what it will take for people to turn on Amazon. They have been such a destructive force within our economy and treat their employees like human garbage.
FAQ
What is Amazon Go?
Amazon Go is a new kind of store with no checkout required. We created the worlds most advanced shopping technology so you never have to wait in line. With our Just Walk Out Shopping experience, simply use the Amazon Go app to enter the store, take the products you want, and go! No lines, no checkout. (No, seriously.)
We can easily stop this through legislation. We just need for our legislative leaders to actually show some courage and fight to protect jobs.
I wonder what it will take for people to turn on Amazon. They have been such a destructive force within our economy and treat their employees like human garbage.
Automation is not a train that is going to stop.So another technology that removes even more jobs from the economy? No thanks.
What do you think programmers do everyday? To automate tasks in one way or another.
Well, seeing as I am a programmer, yeah I think I have some idea of what programmers do all day. And I would certainly argue that programming is a lot more than just automating tasks.
I'm not saying that technology isn't going to replace a lot of jobs but I feel that we need to slow down on implementing automation or else a lot of people are going to end up suffering because of it. Progress is important but if it's at the expense of lives I think we can afford to wait a little bit for our checkout-less stores. Humanity isn't suffering all that greatly by progress not eliminating cashiers immediately, so maybe we as a society should work on transitioning people first so they don't end up starving when automation hits.
Well, seeing as I am a programmer, yeah I think I have some idea of what programmers do all day. And I would certainly argue that programming is a lot more than just automating tasks.
I'm not saying that technology isn't going to replace a lot of jobs but I feel that we need to slow down on implementing automation or else a lot of people are going to end up suffering because of it. Progress is important but if it's at the expense of lives I think we can afford to wait a little bit for our checkout-less stores. Humanity isn't suffering all that greatly by progress not eliminating cashiers immediately, so maybe we as a society should work on transitioning people first so they don't end up starving when automation hits.
ED209: Halt!!! You have failed to sign in when walking in the store. You have 20 seconds to comply. 20, 19, ......
Customer: OK! *signs in* There!
ED209: 18, 17, 16.....
Customer: I signed in!!!!!
"Meaningless". Do you know how the economy works at all? We are a consumer based economy. If people don't have money to buy things the economy damn near stops working. So even a "meaningless" job like a cashier or clerk has actual meaning. That person gets paid, pays bills, buys things and that supports other jobs downstream. You eliminate too many jobs then things dry up and there aren't people with money to buy things from these stores. So then these stores close because they have no customers. Etc.This notion that people want to ignore technological advances to keep meaningless jobs in circulation is absurd, put pressure on the government to come up with a solution that doesn't stifle human innovation
Full automation of retail will be here very soon. Amazing.
Even if it makes the prices cheaper?
If it doesn't, no chance any one can stop this anyway.
Shoplifting challenge accepted.
I already turned.
Between them not paying tax in the UK and reported poor work conditions, plus my own preference for supporting small businesses, I'm not prepared any longer to give Amazon my money except in very rare circumstances.
Automation is not a train that is going to stop.
Respect.
We might not be able to stop it, but we can certainly regulate it. Rolling over and giving up is what the people who stand to profit from it want us to do.
We lose manufacturing jobs, people tell us that nothing can be done. Now we begin to lose service sector jobs, and people tell us nothing can be done. At some point we need to push back against corporate greed and the consolidation of wealth/power.
I don't get why people keep bringing up "middle class jobs" when referring to jobs like cashiers/stockers.
If you've ever worked retail, you know that these are purely poor/high school student type jobs. Unless you think 10$ an hour makes somebody "middle class", it doesn't actually affect the "middle class" whatsoever. Outside of making their shopping easier of course.
Yes, jobs will be lost and that's tragic, but if you think it affects anybody beyond those who could have their wage loss supplemented by a halfway decent welfare system, or a system that rewards people for learning a skill/trade, you're deluding yourself.
If you're assigned to this Amazon project would you protest and/or quit your job?
So basically,
I don't get why people keep bringing up "middle class jobs" when referring to jobs like cashiers/stockers.
If you've ever worked retail, you know that these are purely poor/high school student type jobs. Unless you think 10$ an hour makes somebody "middle class", it doesn't actually affect the "middle class" whatsoever. Outside of making their shopping easier of course.
Yes, jobs will be lost and that's tragic, but if you think it affects anybody beyond those who could have their wage loss supplemented by a halfway decent welfare system, or a system that rewards people for learning a skill/trade, you're deluding yourself.
In theory it sounds cool, but anyone with an Amazon account could just walk in, pick a load of stuff up, have no money on their account, and just walk out. It makes no sense.
I found the video introduction pretty sad. Everyone just walks in, grab their stuff, walk out.
There is no interaction among the customers. At least there is some interaction between the customer and cashier.
I found the video introduction pretty sad. Everyone just walks in, grab their stuff, walk out.
There is no interaction among the customers. At least there is some interaction between the customer and cashier.
Well I'm web based so I wouldn't be assigned to a project like that anyways. I'm not suggesting that Amazon is some evil organization or anything, just that they aren't going to consider the impact this will have on people's lives. I think it's the place of the government to step in and regulate corporations, because you can't expect corporations to do what's in the best interest of people. I'm not saying shut down automation entirely, only that it needs to be slowed down a bit while we can get things worked out for the people who will need it.
I'm not sure I understand why you're in such a rush to take jobs away from these people.
At no point have I said that I'm against progress only that we need to consider the cost of that progress in human lives. And ultimately the progress of automation is a form of progress that mostly only benefits corporations not consumers so I don't think it's an absolute priority over everything else.