I’ve seen a point made about concrete 3d-printers for building assembly: you can make a structure with them, but such structures are nowhere near a finished building, for most building uses, because you still need things like wiring, plumbing, insulation, windows, things like sinks toilets and light fixtures, etc. Maybe you could get around this by making prefabricated modular sections in an automated factory that a machine can put together in various configurations, but this will be far less flexible.
I’ve seen a point made about concrete 3d-printers for building assembly: you can make a structure with them, but such structures are nowhere near a finished building, for most building uses, because you still need things like wiring, plumbing, insulation, windows, things like sinks toilets and light fixtures, etc. Maybe you could get around this by making prefabricated modular sections in an automated factory that a machine can put together in various configurations, but this will be far less flexible.
This highlights the misunderstanding the world seems to have about AI taking jobs.
AI doesn’t take jobs. AI makes existing work efforts able to be done by fewer people. That’s it.
It also creates jobs in the realm of improving, supporting, and maintaining those systems.
What used to take ten people will now take one. And they’ll be specially trained to operate at that level.