andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2020-12-06 12:00 pm
mtbc: photograph of me (Default)

[personal profile] mtbc 2020-12-06 01:03 pm (UTC)(link)
While I don't object to clone towns as much as Bill Grimsey (I returned to the US after all), I congratulate you on finding a BBC story that asks an interesting question in its title and has anything approaching an actual answer beyond the click.
danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2020-12-07 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Assuming that the robot kitchen is not snake oil then, at £250k a unit I think the application is takeaway kitchens not domestic kitchens.
danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2020-12-07 10:18 pm (UTC)(link)
What does a takeaway chef cost a year? £30k? This would replace two of them. Pay back in 5+ years depending on maintenance and support costs. Marginal I think. Depends if a) the auto-chef is faster than a human chef and b) if kitchen capacity is a limiting factor on sales.

danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2020-12-07 10:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Key thing to remember I think is that an auto-chef could work 24 hours a day most days.

So, you could replace the whole staff of a small restaurant if you got your process scheduling right.
danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2020-12-08 09:51 am (UTC)(link)
If one were taking this model to extremes then the person helping with orders etc could in the first instance be an AI chatbot and in the second instance remote.

The anti-vandalism could be dealt with in two ways - CCTV linked to a vigorous alarm receiving centre or just doing takeaway and having a shopfront which is basically a set of ATM for food.

But, if you have a place for people to sit and eat you still need a cleaner and I think that's harder to automate then cooking.
danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2020-12-08 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
Lol, and also not-lol.

That's an expensive way to get rid of a cleaner.

This is kind of the nub of the coming AI jobs apocalypse. Some jobs seem quite difficult for a robot / AI to do but very easy for a human - to the point where the human is not paid enough to make developing the AI / robot. Cleaning strikes me as one of the best examples of this. It's full of out of context problems that a human can solve easily. And the capital costs of a non-AI alternative are not cheap.