joep721-blog
joep721-blog
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joep721-blog · 5 years ago
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Robots won’t take jobs, they will create it
In recent years, movies such as Robot and 2.0 have been fascinating audiences with the premise that robots will one day take over the world. Superstar Rajnikant’s robot character “ Chitti” is as famous as Terminator of the 90s. Although this idea may sound crazy to some, in one very real sense, robots may very well be taking over the world—the work world, that is. There is no question on coming technologies like AI that will eliminate some jobs, as they did in the past. The argument is rising insisting that AI or “artificial intelligence” will eventually annihilate the majority of jobs and industries that we know today.
The concept of some technology replacing certain portions of the workforce is not unproven or new. Before the agricultural revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries, the agricultural sector had been carried out by manual labour. The revolution entirely changed the sector via tools and machinery that was created to make certain processes, tasks more efficient.
It was the transformation of the agricultural industry, the computer and digital revolution over the last twenty years, that replaced other segments of the work population. Blue-collar and white-collar workers alike have essentially lost their jobs to robots, from gas station attendants to bank tellers to travel agents.
For a teacher or student, this can all sound disconcerting. If the goal of education is to provide people with required skills and knowledge for the future workforce, and various industries are dying out, what does that mean for the educational pathways previously filtering into those industries?
The good news is that there is no alarm, especially if you understand which skills won’t get threatened by the future of work. One of the previously cited Pew studies tells that “even as the majority of experts are largely constant in their own predictions for the evolution of technology itself, they are divided on how to advances in AI and robotics and how will it impact the economic and employment picture over the next decade.”
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joep721-blog · 5 years ago
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What’s the BEST Structural Design Software For 2020?
Today you are going to know EXACTLY what are the most widely used general-purpose structural analysis and design software in civil engineering. In fact, these are the software that helped us to fulfill our various designing goals.
We have gone through the number of software and selected some of the best among them that will help you fulfill your structure design goals.
Autodesk AutoCAD
STAAD Pro
SAFE
RISA
Navisworks
Autodesk Revit
SAP2000
SketchUp
Takeoff
3d Max
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