*They say it's struggle to find delivery people, turns out people don't like getting work delivering food to people that are likely going to rob them or steal orders etc.*
So, if McDonald's saves so much money on employees, then the cost of their food should decrease, as you are not tacking on the cost of salaries . The cost of robots is also declining. Can't blame the employees or robots for food costs going up. Sounds like an inflationary process coming to me.
@@BrianYYH With the decrease in jobs, the demand has massively declined. Even after stimulus, the demand has plummeted, so the companies are resorting to raise the price, to remain afloat. Always see both sides of the coin, to understand economics or anything else.
@@tanvi1756 McDonald Corporation’s stock has almost doubled in price since pre-COVID times. Last year they saw a 10% growth in sales. They’re doing just fine.
@@BrianYYH Yes, that's correct. Post corona, the big companies have got bigger and the rest of 99.99% companies have been struggling. This is a global phenomenon, now being seen in each and every part of the world. That's why the big stock indexes are rising, as they include only top 0.01 % of all of the companies, as their component stocks. And after AI, massive consolidation is being seen across sectors, globally, whereby big companies are taking over profitable mid and small companies. While the rest of mid and small companies, have no other option than to close their operations. The "pure capitalism" is at its peak. 🌻🌻. This is the purest form of capitalism, the humans have ever seen.
The whole installation doesn't look optimized for robotic cooking. The tools like the friers are designed for humans. They should learn more from food factories rather than conventional fast food restaurants.
4:04 this is actually what differs a "JOURNALIST" from a "VLOGGER" Notice this (he says) : The computer robot identifies the type of food and places it in the appropriate fryer. [That thing there is exaggeration making it sound like aw so revolutionaize] but if the script is done by an Engineer (Vlogger) this is how it should be : The Computer identifies the type of food by reading the QR Code on the handle bar and put it in appropriate fryer. it does it by targeting the orange color in their vision (which is the handle bar) there is no Artificial intelligence going on here. this is PURE programming.
@@blink182bfsftw no Traditional CV is all pure programming there is now more modern CV using ML models but in this case it just using a cam as a literal scanner.
@@blink182bfsftw Computer Vision is just the method of how you capture and process images. You can hard program shapes for the system to detect, in which case it is not AI. AI requires some form of learning algorithm on top of that base processing layer that allows the system to reach its goal without explicit programming of how to do so.
To all the people hating on automation: are you going to go out and force people who don't want these jobs to work them? If the positions aren't being filled then they become automated. Yes, on the one hand it is a cost-effective solution, but there's also the argument that people simply don't want to do these kinds of jobs anymore. A century ago, society praised the rise of automation as they predicted it would allow people to work 4 days a week for a living instead of 5 days. Not everyone wants to be a workaholic.
Ditto. Robots are here to assist human lives. To free up our time to do other things. To save lives by taking on the dangerous tasks. To tirelessly look after humans when no one is around or available immediately. To ensure the security regardless of time.... many of us embrace the era of Robots
@@anneliu3816 Then why are the first uses of these robots doing dangerous jobs. Seems to me they are taking warehousing, driving, manufacturing and cooking jobs. AI is taking programming and other related jobs. All that will be left is management jobs and poor addicts.
@@Burningarrow7They clearly must benefit from these systems that they find so beneficial, I don't know if they noticed,but it's to many people with free time & homeless & stealing everything they get their paws on ..🤔😔
When i was younger and lived in NY there was no way you could even pay me to drive into the city. I visited a few years back and i rented a car bcs i was staying in NJ, My son was young and really wanted to see the city and visit FAO. Decided to drive, the toll was eye watering to say the least. Not to mention that DT traffic. The Public transportation system was a godsend to me. It gave me so much autonomy as a young adult. It allowed me to get jobs that I wld never have gotten in the bronx. When I became of working age I didn’t have to take out a predatory car loan in order to participate in my state’s economy. The state where we live now simply DOES NOT offer anything comparable. And I think it’s a shame.
Exactly. They're complaining that they can't hire people. A USED 10 year old car is around 10k now. That's by their own admission, 1/2 of a years wage for a full time minimum wage worker. How can people afford to work these jobs? The companies have been avoiding taxes and we haven't been investing in our future. Also... they're like "it's cheaper".... yeah, sure it is. Notice how they say it's "software as a service" that they're offering. Betting it's not going to be cheap for long. They can change their prices at any time. Once they've got market share, the robots will be MORE expensive.
36:15 Narrator, talking about robot dog: "...and even remind people to maintain social distance amid the pandemic." Random Jogging Asian Dude, looking at robot dog: "My life is in danger. I must think fast!"
I was listening to this Marathon while doing chores, wasn't looking at the screen, and was wondering why the video conferencing software Zoom was making pizza packaging more sustainable? Hahahaha!
Not when you add up that the restaurant is open 24/7 and that's actually 3 persons jobs @ 6k per month, take out 1 hour of breaks and it's way more cost-effective. Makes me laugh when it says it will allow the other servers more time to talk to the customers, no it doesn't if you have that time your job is redundant, you're not being paid to stop and talk to customers.
I want a fully automated kitchen that can repair food, cook it properly and then clean up all the mess. That will be one of the holy grails of domestic robotics
I really missed horse coachmen riding people all around the country, too bad the automobile ruined their ability for further employment. "Said no one ever."
they're like "it's cheaper".... yeah, sure it is. Notice how they say it's "software as a service" that they're offering. Betting it's not going to be cheap for long. They can change their prices at any time. Once they've got market share, the robots will be MORE expensive. Also, it's 20k per year.... how often do they break down? and they charge what? 10k per year. (now, betting that's a "get 'em hooked fee" it'll jump 200% plus in less than a decade... mark my words) Imagine those mcdonalds ice cream machines..... but for everything on the menu.
When I managed my restaurant I balanced the schedule. Not like the entire business is run by teenagers, so use some reason here. My staff showed up at 3PM during weekdays and varied times over the weekends. Pre pandemic I had a bunch of teenagers who worked for me, especially the Summer. @@dannydaw59
Push a button that says rush. Remember, these aren’t humans you don’t need to give them instructions just turn something on or off to have them act differently
I don't understand the need for vision system on the fryer robot. Robots remember where they put things and PLC's can use timers and other logic to track what is cooking and for how long.
Flippy doesn't call in sick. Flippy doesn't have a family to feed or valuable job skills to learn so they can later contribute to society. Flippy doesn't ask for a raise. Flippy doesn't care about customer complaints.
I feel like most of it will be replaced by robots. AI can take your order and tell the robots to make the order. You only need 1 person to actually take the payment and hand the customer the order. Watch, it won't be long until robots will be manufacturing Teslas.
@Outspoken117 I think so people have a human connection and people don't freak out and boycott the restaurant or business. Honestly i welcome this if the government will implement UBI.
these are harsh, dangerous, underpaid, undesirable jobs and we should be celebrating their automation. we just need to make sure displaced workers are financially guaranteed through a just transition.
I think if all food industry adopts robots and can bring down the food costs a lot , that will benefit whole lot people than the no of people working in only food industry
"bring down the food costs a lot"... don't make me laugh. Lower costs mean higher profits, not lower prices. If, you think it lowers prices, you're incredibly naive, or a fool...
Doesn't require "Time-Off" but does break down and require repairs whenever it wants. This is the modern version of the copy machine, it will always be in disrepair.
We have the tech to make robots cook our food, but we keep eating unhealthy fast food and getting sick. No wonder why robots will rule the world someday.
R&D companies/inventors are notoriously bad marketers/business people. Look at Nikola Tesla. The combination of Woz as the tech guy, and Jobs as the marketing guy was the perfect team to start Apple...
Great Video. So you pay programmers/techs and bankers 10 000 hours to work on and design then pass around something that can do 10 000 hours of human work, that is before you tear it apart and take out the grease, dirt and re build it and sell it as recycled robot garbage. This is great more money for everyone. All so we can be lazy and stay alive longer. Not a bad deal...
Every robot is a person being put out of work. Economically speaking, the 50's were America's greatest time because before computers and robots and imports and outsourcing so many people needed to be employed and they all got a piece. Now everything is automated and outsourced and the executives get it all.
Restaurant jobs are hard to fill because they don't pay a "living wage". It is that simple. Waitstaff don't even fall under minimum wage law because of tips. The hourly rate is $2.18/hr. Anyone who says that automation is not intended to replace human workers is lying to you. Just ask all those welders at the auto plants about all the robots they maintain in their "re-trained" jobs now... :-P
@ 4:50 time marker in the video. On the left side, it mentions that the average restaurant worker in the U.S. was paid $12.07 per hour in 2022, with a reference to 11.7 million restaurant workers. On the right side, it shows the cost associated with a robot in the kitchen: $3,500 a month with a $10,000 installation fee. Let's break down these numbers for a single restaurant: Human Worker: Hourly rate: $12.07 Assuming a full-time schedule of 40 hours per week, the weekly cost is $12.07 x 40 = $482.80. Monthly, assuming 4 weeks, this would be $482.80 x 4 = $1,931.20. Annually, the cost is $1,931.20 x 12 = $23,174.40. Robot: Monthly cost: $3,500 Installation fee: $10,000 (one-time cost) Annually, excluding the installation fee, the cost is $3,500 x 12 = $42,000. Including the installation fee in the first year, the total is $42,000 + $10,000 = $52,000. Now, to compare the two, let's consider a few things: The robot's installation fee is a one-time cost, while the human worker's salary is ongoing. Over time, the cost of the robot may amortize and become more economical if it's durable and requires minimal maintenance. The human worker's cost could increase with raises, benefits, and other employment costs. Robots can work continuously without breaks, holidays, or sick days, which could increase productivity. The quality of work, customer satisfaction, and the type of tasks performed may differ greatly between human workers and robots. This is a qualitative aspect that may influence the decision beyond mere cost-effectiveness. With the information given, if a restaurant's primary concern is cost and if the robot can perform the required tasks with minimal downtime, then over a longer period, the robot may be more cost-effective. However, this does not account for other factors that influence such a decision, including the impact on customer experience, the quality of work, and potential maintenance costs for the robot.
The argument about the cost of packaging has to be the most short-sighted. Cheap packaging is what is killing the Planet - with trash pollution and un-recyclability. Packaging SHOULD COST MORE - so that some of its cost goes towards making recyclable packaging materials, cleaning up and recycling.
Best part of the industrial composting is that RNG is made and captured as a byproduct by some companies now which is carbon neutral to negative and can be used to get heavy transport like long range big rig tractor trailer trucks and locomotives off fossil fuels.
when i did catering 35yrs ago, the chef would hide a couple of steaks under my breaktime fries. BET flippy cant do that kind of team building
LOLLL Hahahaha
A.I., robots, and drones? One word: Slaughterbots... ;-P
So Mcdonald's can't get their ice cream machine to work but they can get a robot to work?
Yes, The robot is a different machine, and it's not made by Taylor 🙄
Ice cream machines are extremely complicated pieces of equipment.
😄🍦
Ice cream machines in general seem to be out of service a lot
THE ICE CREAM THING IS A CONSPIRACY
@@alexmijoI know you're trolling, but Johnny Harris did a-hole video on McDonald's's's ice-cream machines.
Can it put love in the food like grandma though? 🤔
Companies find the most innovative ways to not pay people or taxes, lol.
Welcome to the wasteland
Capitalism
LOL! Yeah! They're greedy AF.
*They say it's struggle to find delivery people, turns out people don't like getting work delivering food to people that are likely going to rob them or steal orders etc.*
You would do the same if you had A company as well so what are you talking about.
So, if McDonald's saves so much money on employees, then the cost of their food should decrease, as you are not tacking on the cost of salaries . The cost of robots is also declining. Can't blame the employees or robots for food costs going up. Sounds like an inflationary process coming to me.
Companies are never looking to save consumers money. Only increasing profits and cutting expenses.
okay but how does that improve mcdonalds bottom line?
@@BrianYYH With the decrease in jobs, the demand has massively declined. Even after stimulus, the demand has plummeted, so the companies are resorting to raise the price, to remain afloat.
Always see both sides of the coin, to understand economics or anything else.
@@tanvi1756 McDonald Corporation’s stock has almost doubled in price since pre-COVID times. Last year they saw a 10% growth in sales. They’re doing just fine.
@@BrianYYH Yes, that's correct. Post corona, the big companies have got bigger and the rest of 99.99% companies have been struggling. This is a global phenomenon, now being seen in each and every part of the world.
That's why the big stock indexes are rising, as they include only top 0.01 % of all of the companies, as their component stocks.
And after AI, massive consolidation is being seen across sectors, globally, whereby big companies are taking over profitable mid and small companies. While the rest of mid and small companies, have no other option than to close their operations.
The "pure capitalism" is at its peak.
🌻🌻. This is the purest form of capitalism, the humans have ever seen.
Lol, how is Jim Cramer wrong so often over so many years and still on the air? 🤣
"the robot's computer vision identifies the type of food" => JUNK FOOD
The whole installation doesn't look optimized for robotic cooking. The tools like the friers are designed for humans. They should learn more from food factories rather than conventional fast food restaurants.
It’ll take a month before the machine is gummed up with grease and stops working properly lol
4:04 this is actually what differs a "JOURNALIST" from a "VLOGGER"
Notice this (he says) :
The computer robot identifies the type of food and places it in the appropriate fryer.
[That thing there is exaggeration making it sound like aw so revolutionaize]
but if the script is done by an Engineer (Vlogger) this is how it should be :
The Computer identifies the type of food by reading the QR Code on the handle bar and put it in appropriate fryer. it does it by targeting the orange color in their vision (which is the handle bar)
there is no Artificial intelligence going on here. this is PURE programming.
Isn't computer vision considered AI? Recognizing a colored object counts I think
38:10 39:32
@@blink182bfsftw no Traditional CV is all pure programming there is now more modern CV using ML models but in this case it just using a cam as a literal scanner.
@@blink182bfsftw Computer Vision is just the method of how you capture and process images. You can hard program shapes for the system to detect, in which case it is not AI. AI requires some form of learning algorithm on top of that base processing layer that allows the system to reach its goal without explicit programming of how to do so.
To all the people hating on automation: are you going to go out and force people who don't want these jobs to work them? If the positions aren't being filled then they become automated. Yes, on the one hand it is a cost-effective solution, but there's also the argument that people simply don't want to do these kinds of jobs anymore. A century ago, society praised the rise of automation as they predicted it would allow people to work 4 days a week for a living instead of 5 days. Not everyone wants to be a workaholic.
Ditto. Robots are here to assist human lives. To free up our time to do other things. To save lives by taking on the dangerous tasks. To tirelessly look after humans when no one is around or available immediately. To ensure the security regardless of time.... many of us embrace the era of Robots
@@anneliu3816 Then why are the first uses of these robots doing dangerous jobs. Seems to me they are taking warehousing, driving, manufacturing and cooking jobs. AI is taking programming and other related jobs. All that will be left is management jobs and poor addicts.
@@outspoken117 I seriously don't know what the two idiots above you are on about.
all the illegal migrants are sour
@@Burningarrow7They clearly must benefit from these systems that they find so beneficial, I don't know if they noticed,but it's to many people with free time & homeless & stealing everything they get their paws on ..🤔😔
I hear that SpaceX is going to start launching trash into the Sun as a business... Starship as a garbage scow? ;-P
I just want one of those yellow quadruped robots to use as my horse 🐎
I can't wait for robots to make consistent fries at McDonald's :).
When i was younger and lived in NY there was no way you could even pay me to drive into the city. I visited a few years back and i rented a car bcs i was staying in NJ, My son was young and really wanted to see the city and visit FAO. Decided to drive, the toll was eye watering to say the least. Not to mention that DT traffic. The Public transportation system was a godsend to me. It gave me so much autonomy as a young adult. It allowed me to get jobs that I wld never have gotten in the bronx. When I became of working age I didn’t have to take out a predatory car loan in order to participate in my state’s economy. The state where we live now simply DOES NOT offer anything comparable. And I think it’s a shame.
Exactly. They're complaining that they can't hire people. A USED 10 year old car is around 10k now. That's by their own admission, 1/2 of a years wage for a full time minimum wage worker.
How can people afford to work these jobs? The companies have been avoiding taxes and we haven't been investing in our future.
Also... they're like "it's cheaper".... yeah, sure it is. Notice how they say it's "software as a service" that they're offering. Betting it's not going to be cheap for long. They can change their prices at any time. Once they've got market share, the robots will be MORE expensive.
36:15 Narrator, talking about robot dog: "...and even remind people to maintain social distance amid the pandemic."
Random Jogging Asian Dude, looking at robot dog: "My life is in danger. I must think fast!"
Now they just need some robots that can buy the food.
Best comment :) So true...
I just read that fast food restaurants are closing. So what happens next?
The company Zume closed operations in June of this year. Info should be updated to reflect this
i was going to sawy how the hell are they charging 3500 a month for servicing and stating they're saving 900 a month for the role of a fry cook
I cant eait for robots to chew the food for me so i can just sit back and gulp down the regurgitation
bahahah 7.8 million on SALARIES?! lmaooooo
I was listening to this Marathon while doing chores, wasn't looking at the screen, and was wondering why the video conferencing software Zoom was making pizza packaging more sustainable? Hahahaha!
8:35 These minimum wage jobs lookin about as attractive as this lady speaking on the issue 😂
Better have your Sword of Damocles ready...
so i guess its cheaper to keep uploading old docs
STOP HOLDING BACK; GIVE US THE FUTURE, WE CAN TAKE IT!!!
Ok well they better start sending that universal basic income then, I’m waiting!😎💰
no mention of Tesla Optimus?
Better title: Rise of the machines
It's a brutal world for the working men and women. People are going to do their best change how we do things for the better.
Robots will be everything humans never were but could be.
Its like making an advanced version of "humans".
They will do so much good for everyone.
That robot's making a pizza! We're all doomed.
SURELY 3,500 A MONTH is MORE expensive than a human
Not when you add up that the restaurant is open 24/7 and that's actually 3 persons jobs @ 6k per month, take out 1 hour of breaks and it's way more cost-effective.
Makes me laugh when it says it will allow the other servers more time to talk to the customers, no it doesn't if you have that time your job is redundant, you're not being paid to stop and talk to customers.
He wanted to say , " Flippy doesn't have Blue Hair and drive alone in a car with a Mask on " 😂.
I want a fully automated kitchen that can repair food, cook it properly and then clean up all the mess. That will be one of the holy grails of domestic robotics
And I'm sure they still want you to tip the robot 😂
I really missed horse coachmen riding people all around the country, too bad the automobile ruined their ability for further employment. "Said no one ever."
Robot owners that are hoarding all the jobs should pay the taxes and social security for all those workers they are putting out of the work market
More robots than fish in the ocean cleaning it by 2050 hopefully 😆
They need to make these robots work on oil rigs not fast food
Oil rigs lol. There is no goofy oil juice in the ground
Make sense.
Is this 1 re-upload? I have seen the White Castle part before.
23:25 LOL You just outted him poisoning people with his PFAS compostable crap?! hahahhaa
Will you cry when your robot dog "Spot" gets run over by an autonomous driving delivery truck? ;-P
Lol...
I have a question, are we living in a cyberpunk era? You know... Dystopian future?
Why not have blue tooth-enabled digital meters?
What happens when I get my Star Trek food replicator into production? ;-P
Prices will not drop. Robots are very expensive.
They don’t need brakes
Miso Robotics early investor here!!! 🔥💯🔥💯
they're like "it's cheaper".... yeah, sure it is. Notice how they say it's "software as a service" that they're offering. Betting it's not going to be cheap for long. They can change their prices at any time. Once they've got market share, the robots will be MORE expensive.
Also, it's 20k per year.... how often do they break down? and they charge what? 10k per year. (now, betting that's a "get 'em hooked fee" it'll jump 200% plus in less than a decade... mark my words)
Imagine those mcdonalds ice cream machines..... but for everything on the menu.
...will the I.T. technicians providing maintenance and troubleshooting be underpaid too?
Absolutely.
Fast food jobs should be mostly for teenagers who live with their parent. If I had zero bills, $12 an hour is not so bad.
How would you get a fast food meal at lunch during the school week? The teens can't work then.
When I managed my restaurant I balanced the schedule. Not like the entire business is run by teenagers, so use some reason here. My staff showed up at 3PM during weekdays and varied times over the weekends. Pre pandemic I had a bunch of teenagers who worked for me, especially the Summer. @@dannydaw59
@@dannydaw59college student
They have classes during the day too.
@@dannydaw59 well not all of them.. but I do get your point
Hats off you!
But, how fast does the robot respond when the front yells, "RUSH!"?
Push a button that says rush. Remember, these aren’t humans you don’t need to give them instructions just turn something on or off to have them act differently
The real question is, do you want your food cooked by robots? Not me!
I don't understand the need for vision system on the fryer robot. Robots remember where they put things and PLC's can use timers and other logic to track what is cooking and for how long.
Boston dynamics robots will be used as robot soldiers for sure
Who's gonna buy sliders if all jobs get replaced by robots
Very nice. The portion size could be bigger with the savings from less employees...
Or exactly the same while companies pocket the savings.
But the portion sizes won't be bigger. Same portion sizes more money. And then there is the social cost of over feeding people.
Flippy doesn't call in sick. Flippy doesn't have a family to feed or valuable job skills to learn so they can later contribute to society. Flippy doesn't ask for a raise. Flippy doesn't care about customer complaints.
Flippy does not take up hospital beds,cause traffic jams,use up affordable housing and does not need maternity leave
I feel like most of it will be replaced by robots. AI can take your order and tell the robots to make the order. You only need 1 person to actually take the payment and hand the customer the order. Watch, it won't be long until robots will be manufacturing Teslas.
Why do you need a person? Cash is to be done away with soon, replaced with digital credits.
@Outspoken117
I think so people have a human connection and people don't freak out and boycott the restaurant or business.
Honestly i welcome this if the government will implement UBI.
Can't wait for the day robot's can shop, cook, clean your home
No sanitation problems with robots. And no rude or nasty service
Great documentary I salute you
With profits from robot's, the working robots should pay social security
Doesn't call in sick? What if it breaks down every couple months? McDonald's can't even hold down an ice cream machine.
Bay Area-founded pizza startup Zume reportedly shuts down after raising $445 million.................
Where is Tesla Optimus?
I hope they take all jobs
Zume literally closed down LMAO
these are harsh, dangerous, underpaid, undesirable jobs and we should be celebrating their automation. we just need to make sure displaced workers are financially guaranteed through a just transition.
Freedom bucks! Liberty $. Yang 2024.
Spoiler: they aren't
it's shameful to purposefully put people out of work
@@naplzt4k was it really shameful when horse and buggy jobs were taken away when cars took over transportation?
financially guaranteed? um shouldnt they just go get another job?
They do need breaks, to charge 😂
I think if all food industry adopts robots and can bring down the food costs a lot , that will benefit whole lot people than the no of people working in only food industry
"bring down the food costs a lot"... don't make me laugh. Lower costs mean higher profits, not lower prices. If, you think it lowers prices, you're incredibly naive, or a fool...
So there is economic justification to spending six figures to replace a single minimum wage worker in a fast food environment?
CNBC likes to repeat the same audio and video content over and over within the very same video, while thinking the audience would not notice.
36:34 what handheld is that?
Edit: 37:11 is a better shot of it.
Looks like a JXD S192.
Doesn't require "Time-Off" but does break down and require repairs whenever it wants. This is the modern version of the copy machine, it will always be in disrepair.
Could you buy "Spot" just as a pet to have around the house?
But, when it gets run over by an autonomous driving delivery truck, you'll cry... ;-P
@@igorschmidlapp6987 LOL, probably!
Soon we will be able te say, we mastered the ability to be mastered by the ability of our robots.
this is a repost... saw this video months ago and now it is 7dyas old.
We have the tech to make robots cook our food, but we keep eating unhealthy fast food and getting sick. No wonder why robots will rule the world someday.
They know plastic melts right also there’s agents that could literally disintegrate plastic
Didn't hear them say anything about maintenance and repair downtime
R&D companies/inventors are notoriously bad marketers/business people. Look at Nikola Tesla.
The combination of Woz as the tech guy, and Jobs as the marketing guy was the perfect team to start Apple...
How robots save Zhomies. 🎉
Tesla bot where in video? I mean it is gonna do all of these things combined...
Great Video. So you pay programmers/techs and bankers 10 000 hours to work on and design then pass around something that can do 10 000 hours of human work, that is before you tear it apart and take out the grease, dirt and re build it and sell it as recycled robot garbage. This is great more money for everyone. All so we can be lazy and stay alive longer. Not a bad deal...
Every robot is a person being put out of work. Economically speaking, the 50's were America's greatest time because before computers and robots and imports and outsourcing so many people needed to be employed and they all got a piece. Now everything is automated and outsourced and the executives get it all.
yeah but like isn't that the governments job to redistribute the wealth from the robots to the population fairly, the robots themselves are great no?
do you want to flip burgers?
no
Some people’s work is making the robots. Job creation
8:26 isn't she putting the buns on raw burger side up or am I just not seeing it right
Did fillipie did that too
Engineers will become the cleaners
I had to tell the guy with the masters degree not to starch my boxer shorts yesterday... ;-P
Restaurant jobs are hard to fill because they don't pay a "living wage". It is that simple. Waitstaff don't even fall under minimum wage law because of tips. The hourly rate is $2.18/hr.
Anyone who says that automation is not intended to replace human workers is lying to you. Just ask all those welders at the auto plants about all the robots they maintain in their "re-trained" jobs now... :-P
@ 4:50 time marker in the video. On the left side, it mentions that the average restaurant worker in the U.S. was paid $12.07 per hour in 2022, with a reference to 11.7 million restaurant workers. On the right side, it shows the cost associated with a robot in the kitchen: $3,500 a month with a $10,000 installation fee.
Let's break down these numbers for a single restaurant:
Human Worker:
Hourly rate: $12.07
Assuming a full-time schedule of 40 hours per week, the weekly cost is $12.07 x 40 = $482.80.
Monthly, assuming 4 weeks, this would be $482.80 x 4 = $1,931.20.
Annually, the cost is $1,931.20 x 12 = $23,174.40.
Robot:
Monthly cost: $3,500
Installation fee: $10,000 (one-time cost)
Annually, excluding the installation fee, the cost is $3,500 x 12 = $42,000.
Including the installation fee in the first year, the total is $42,000 + $10,000 = $52,000.
Now, to compare the two, let's consider a few things:
The robot's installation fee is a one-time cost, while the human worker's salary is ongoing. Over time, the cost of the robot may amortize and become more economical if it's durable and requires minimal maintenance. The human worker's cost could increase with raises, benefits, and other employment costs. Robots can work continuously without breaks, holidays, or sick days, which could increase productivity. The quality of work, customer satisfaction, and the type of tasks performed may differ greatly between human workers and robots. This is a qualitative aspect that may influence the decision beyond mere cost-effectiveness. With the information given, if a restaurant's primary concern is cost and if the robot can perform the required tasks with minimal downtime, then over a longer period, the robot may be more cost-effective. However, this does not account for other factors that influence such a decision, including the impact on customer experience, the quality of work, and potential maintenance costs for the robot.
The argument about the cost of packaging has to be the most short-sighted. Cheap packaging is what is killing the Planet - with trash pollution and un-recyclability. Packaging SHOULD COST MORE - so that some of its cost goes towards making recyclable packaging materials, cleaning up and recycling.
Good luck to humans when robots take over.
If Flippy malfunctions can the humans take over quick?
Best part of the industrial composting is that RNG is made and captured as a byproduct by some companies now which is carbon neutral to negative and can be used to get heavy transport like long range big rig tractor trailer trucks and locomotives off fossil fuels.
Replace all the UAW workers with them
So, who repairs and operates the machine. Who programs it. How long does it take a skilled worker to clean the machine?
The future.