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chaotic_disorganizer ,

inb4 construction Robots

atomkarinca ,

he chatgpt, finish this construction robot.

MxM111 ,

Reply from GPT4:
Certainly, to give you a comprehensive response, I need a bit more context. Are you looking for a conceptual design, a story completion, a technical specification, or something else related to a "construction robot"? Please provide additional details so I can tailor the response to your needs.

Ragdoll_X , (edited )
@Ragdoll_X@lemmy.world avatar

Honestly we’ll probably get there eventually. There are already AIs capable of making video game footage look realistic, and we can simulate physics in game engines with some degree of accuracy.

There will likely come a point when researchers are able to simulate the physics and graphics accurately enough that they’ll be able to train AIs in these simulations and have them work in real life.

KSPAtlas ,
@KSPAtlas@sopuli.xyz avatar

Factorio

UrPartnerInCrime ,
Lucidlethargy ,

They can 3d print houses now… And it’s only going to get better.

Blapoo ,

I take it you haven’t seen the recent advancements in both robotics and LLM powered agents

asbestos ,
@asbestos@lemmy.world avatar

I didn’t, mind providing links?

Blapoo ,

Yep. AutoGen + MemGPT (+Locally hosted models) youtu.be/VJ6bK81meu8?si=mGnvMTJsLn_vMvRb

Basically, a small company of self-refining LLM prompts that output meaningful results + a robust memory management for more long-term back and forths. Instead of “one input, one output. Next”

Another example: youtu.be/5Zj_zstLLP4?si=nHu4vHwidRmvuViY

I can share more examples and papers if desired.

On the robotics front, the focus is still on training custom models for given actions. Which is having some success: youtu.be/Jy3zjXK4ao4?si=yFdqnl8z9Z8Becsc

youtu.be/WlIYa3lH5UI?si=FQSZAm44h3FuuCoR

I’m convinced these “hivemind agents” will pass custom model training soon

Vampiric_Luma ,
@Vampiric_Luma@lemmy.ca avatar

I’m interested!!! I’m SUPER interested!!!

TimeSquirrel , (edited )
@TimeSquirrel@kbin.social avatar

I'll be convinced they can fully replace most trade work when they figure out fine motor control and finally build servo or hydraulic systems that don't act all janky and with slop a mile wide. When they can strip a wire, and then terminate it into a screw terminal, and then install an outlet in the wall. All with one robot, using each tool as needed as finely tuned as a human would do it. And also being able to adapt to different situations on the spot. For instance "shit, the hole for the outlet overlaps a stud, wtf do I do to fix this" type stuff.

From what I've seen even from the best like Boston Dynamics, there are still many decades to go before we have fully capable robotic trade workers.

photonic_sorcerer ,
@photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Many decades? Try five years.

evranch ,

Big lol. Doing unattended trades work is practically the definition of general AI, something we don’t see happening any time soon.

Build prefab RTMs in a factory? Today, if the desire was there. Design the house around the line and build it like a car.

Run a new circuit from the basement to an upstairs bedroom, in an old house with weird idiosyncrasies? Not in our lifetimes. The combination of mapping, movement, intuition and the fact that something is guaranteed to go wrong and likely require rethinking the whole job makes this a very hard problem™.

Believe me if someone can invent a robot that can navigate a lumpy, rat infested crawlspace and install pipe/wires/insulation the apprentices of the world will be eternally grateful

rwhitisissle ,

If Tesla has given up on fully self driving cars, wherein driving is a much simpler mechanical activity to replicating the full breadth of human construction tasks, then I don’t see how people are expecting tradecraft to get replaced by Mr. Fixitron anytime soon.

asbestos ,
@asbestos@lemmy.world avatar

Wow! I honestly can’t keep up with this stuff anymore… It’s insane how fast it’s advancing.

Blapoo ,

I do it for a living and have given up being up to date on all the new shit going on. Billboard gets the W for now. LLMs cannot build houses in isolation.

What everyone is missing is that they don’t have to. The right LLM with the right question can output a meaningful “decision” or “judgment call”. That’s all you need. Ask the right series of questions. We’ll call it “thinking”. I really believe that well is pretty deep. Will it be the first version of “AI”? Maybe. Maybe not. But it’s gonna be a big milestone that is going to soon fuck up everything.

I can’t wait :)

Ringmasterincestuous ,

If it’s LLM and robotics it better get used to having dick in it

asbestos ,
@asbestos@lemmy.world avatar

holy fuck thanks for the laugh

plinky ,
@plinky@hexbear.net avatar

They’ve learned to asnwer to emails?

AngrilyEatingMuffins ,

They’ve been able to do that for a while. They got GPT to hire someone to break CAPTCHAs for it.

XEAL ,

LLM haters in 3… 2…

BelieveRevolt ,

Bazinga so-true

UlyssesT ,

Nerd rapture into the loving arms of the godlike but submissive holo waifu and ultimate comeuppance for the unwashed rabble is always, always just around the corner. Just you wait. wojak-nooo

iHUNTcriminals ,

Ai made this to pretend it’s an idiot political nut.

doublejay1999 ,
@doublejay1999@lemmy.world avatar

Your skills are irreplaceable, and your body is expendable . Work harder !

iforgotmyinstance ,

Inb4 Boston Dynamics rolls out the self-building building.

anon232 ,

We can 3D print buildings so we’re almost there.

NaibofTabr ,

Sort of… we can 3D print walls out of specific concrete blends that run nicely through an extended hose system that runs from the mud pump to the print nozzle. But, concrete has a limited time as mud before it starts to harden, so you can only print for so many hours before you have to stop and flush out the pump and hoses before it turns into rock, and the concrete mix can’t be too chunky (like including gravel) to flow through the system.

Also, if you get all that right, then you can print walls… but not structural frames that would support a multistory building, or plumbing or electrical wiring or insulation or windows or roofs…

We’re a long way from 3D printing a building wholesale.

Zyratoxx ,
@Zyratoxx@lemmy.world avatar

Have you seen the newest South Park special cuz your post made me think of it. ^^

BelieveRevolt ,

Trad West sus

Did you share a meme from a fascist page on purpose?

semperpeppe OP ,

Man, what sort of thing you made me just discover ahahaha

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted ,
@EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I know this probably wasn’t op who did this, but I have to ask: who the hell puts a watermark on a meme?

some_random_nick ,

Quite a few well known memers, not the peseants though

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted ,
@EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I don’t even understand the benefit of it. It’s not like memeing is a job where you have to protect your intellectual property. Why even do it? Do they think so highly of themselves that they need to “protect” memes that they create? They’re randos on the Internet adding captions to images, not V/A professionals…

It also goes against the longstanding spirit of Internet memes, that they are things to by definition be shared, not intellectual property to be bound.

Ser_Salty ,

They want to drive traffic to their pages so they can make ad and sponsor money

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted ,
@EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Assholes.

AgentGrimstone ,

Wait til you see the head nodders and finger pointers on videos.

Smokeydope ,
@Smokeydope@lemmy.world avatar

You should take a few minutes to watch this video if you want to see how serious memers can get about ‘stealing memes’ kids with partially developed brains with too much internet access and free time obsess over nutty things

Omega_Haxors ,

Timotainment’s watermark is a main character in his videos.

Aggravationstation ,

Where? I can’t see it

BuboScandiacus ,
@BuboScandiacus@mander.xyz avatar

On chad’s helmet

Churbleyimyam ,

Ironically you could use a Stable Diffusion AI plugin to remove the watermark in GIMP.

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted ,
@EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Serious question (because I’m a dumbass): why is this ironic?

quo ,

deleted_by_author

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  • EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted ,
    @EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Two questions:

    1. “wojack”?
    2. I would have never taken TRAQ_WEST_ to mean “Open AI”? Clearly I’m misunderstanding; can you explain?
    Nicbudd ,

    This is such a boomer meme

    Sanctus ,
    @Sanctus@lemmy.world avatar

    Lmao they are 3D printing houses right now. We’re all jobless in the future, bud. Thats a good thing.

    Dangdoggo ,
    @Dangdoggo@kbin.social avatar

    No they aren't :/ They can make bricks and 'print' walls, which is really just a cool way of pouring concrete. Hardly printing a house.

    Strykker ,

    Have you seen a 3D printed house? They look like shit with their lumpy walls, and you still have to run all the plumbing power, and ventilation.

    Nurse_Robot ,

    Yeah, technology will never continue to develop!

    Dangdoggo ,
    @Dangdoggo@kbin.social avatar

    Nobody is saying that but reading a headline that says "Construction company prints some walls!" and then saying "welp that's it they're out here just 3D printing whole ass buildings" is pretty uh... Dumb.

    Nurse_Robot ,

    And the picture says “your skills are irreplaceable.” If you truly believe that basic construction is irreplaceable then I have bad news for you.

    HauntedCupcake ,

    The point is that literally right now houses are not being 3D printed to a good enough standard that we would even think about replacing workers.

    It is also true that technological progress will change that sooner or later.

    I don’t think there’s a disagreement here

    Dangdoggo ,
    @Dangdoggo@kbin.social avatar

    I have bad news for you because it seems obvious you have never done basic construction: You're not replacing builders with computers any time soon.

    Kanda ,

    He thinks it’s a good thing

    Netrunner ,
    @Netrunner@programming.dev avatar

    He thinks we get universal welfare.

    I think we get a bigger wealth gap and huge poverty.

    ChickenLadyLovesLife ,

    Once the elites have everything they need or want provided by AI and machines, we get death.

    nolight ,

    There are more of “us” than “them”.

    DeepGradientAscent ,
    @DeepGradientAscent@programming.dev avatar

    There is a danger. The select few of “us” who are “more equal” will become “them”.

    How do you think slavery sustains itself? A few slaves get to become slave-masters when the old masters die.

    I guess it boils down to the age old questions of what is the value of a human life, and who gets to decide what laws we base upon the answer to the first question.

    nolight ,

    What I meant was that “they” can not just simply erase “us” from existence once we stop providing them enough value, I believe in a revolution of some kind if such practices were to be tried.

    Though I do not believe it would be rational nor beneficial for the elites at the first place, I was just pointing out that there is little chance of that happening.

    rwhitisissle ,

    There were more natives in the Americas and Caribbean when the European settlers arrived, too. Only one side had way more advanced military technology and no scruples around genocide and slavery.

    rwhitisissle ,

    I can only imagine 50 years from now, when climate crisis is in full swing, there are no more salaried jobs for people without extreme, cutting edge technological specializations or PhDs, and people are doing shit like menial servant work or acting as delivery drivers for 16 hours a day for the ultra wealthy just not to starve, you’ll have some 70 year old zoomer politician that introduces a bill to legalize prostitution in order to open up “new sources of income for struggling Americans” while quietly including a clause that effectively creates death camps for the poor. Conservative Americans will praise the bill on the basis that it’ll get rid of “welfare queens” and create more economic opportunities for the people who don’t get turned into Soylent Green.

    50 years after that, America is littered with the hollowed out ghost towns of long abandoned suburbia. The coasts have been destroyed by flooding from the melted ice caps. Automated workers outnumber Americans 10 to 1. There are around 30 million Americans left in the continental United States. Almost all of them are literal slaves after slavery was re-legalized. Almost everything is owned by a handful of incredibly powerful families. Virtually everyone lives in or around Chicago. Whatever hope people once had for a better future is a long distant dream of a bygone era as the world slowly dies and the people who are left simply persist without ever truly living.

    ChickenLadyLovesLife ,

    Virtually everyone lives in or around Chicago.

    And hilariously, everyone is still paying the Saudis for parking.

    M500 ,

    Just wait until someone connect chatgpt to one of those gigantic 3d printers that print buildings.

    Are we really that far from having “AI” do this?

    Acters ,

    Still need someone to build it for the computer. What would really help the “AI” is to have something that can handle the creation of different interfaces and modules. Then, it would need to solve or mitigate the maintenance conundrum of repairing itself when it breaks.

    TheBlue22 ,

    Shit tears itself down in 2 weeks

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    You can’t 3D print laying all the pipe and the electric cabling and adding fixtures and insulation and all sorts of other things homes need.

    You can 3D print the basic structure. That’s it. You’re saving on bricklaying or carpentry.

    ImpossibilityBox ,

    And the second that it is economically viable the companies will be dumping their bricklayers/carpenters down the drain and replacing them with computer controlled construction methods.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    When will it be economically viable to dump all the people who have to set up the equipment and all of the people who have to do everything but make the basic structure? Is this ‘house set up and entirely built by robots down to the light fixtures with no human intervention’ a near future proposition?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Damn, you really are stuck in the past, aren’t ya

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    I’m stuck in the past because that’s not an economically viable thing to do within the foreseeable future?

    Would I be stuck in the past because I said I don’t think people are going to be commuting by personal jetpack any time soon?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Yup

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Sorry… you honestly think people will commute by personal jetpack one day?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Why can’t they?

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Because it’s a stupid fucking idea.

    Are you under the bizarre impression that every prediction about the future will come true at some point?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Are you under the bizzar impression that the world is going to stay the same as it is now?

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s not an answer.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Literally anything I put is an answer to you

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Nope. I asked you if literally any prediction about the future will come true. Please answer the question.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    March 18, 2028

    Happy?

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Nope. That still doesn’t answer my question. Yet again: Will literally every prediction about the future come true?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Will infinite monkeys eventually write all of Shakespeare?

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Very suspicious that you refuse to answer a yes or no question. I’m starting to think I should report you for trolling.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Report me all you want dummy. I literally answered “yup” long ago and you’re still digging like you’re going to accomplish something.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Ah, I guess I missed your answer. If every prediction about the future is true, it includes all the predictions that humanity will be wiped out relatively soon, meaning that house building will never be fully automated and no one will commute by personal jetpack. But also all housing will be automated and people will commute by personal jetpack.

    At the same time.

    I can’t wait to see how you resolve civilization simultaneously collapsing and advancing.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Now you’re getting it

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    No, I’m really not getting it. I don’t get how two completely opposite things can simultaneously happen. That sounds literally impossible to me.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Schrodinger would like a word with you

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    You really shouldn’t talk about things you don’t understand. First of all, that wouldn’t literally happen to a cat. Secondly, that’s not what a quantum superposition is.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    I was a porr attempt at a joke. You’re allowed to laugh a little dude. I don’t know what will happen in the future. Nobody does. I choose to belive in a world heading towards Star Trek over Mad Max. We have bad ‘jetpacks’ now. Why is it so hard to think they’ll upgrade to the point where they will be more accessible in the future. A la what happened the buggies and cars. They would be self driving I presume to.keep everyone more safe cause trusting the average person to fly is a bit much, but idk maybe.

    We may also start ww3 at any point. Still don’t know the future. I guess for my own sanity I try not to think that way. But like, if you really want to get into thus we have to bring up a lot more subjects, mainly UBI. But, regardless, most jobs being automated, including construction, so everyone gets to be happier is a world I want to live in.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    So now you’ve gone from 'house will definitely construction will definitely be entirely automated" to “I don’t know what will happen.”

    Fascinating.

    As far as jetpacks- people don’t want to fall to their deaths if they run out of fuel or have engine trouble on the way to work in the morning. I would have thought that would have been obvious.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    I 100% believe it will be, I was trying to relate to you asshole

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    You have a strange way of relating to people- arguing with them, refusing to answer their questions, making trolling comments, insulting… not to mention never asking the person you’re trying to relate to any questions about themselves.

    Is this how you claim to relate to others?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    How’s your day been?

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Sorry, after you’ve insulted me, especially since you didn’t apologize for it, I’m not particularly interested in telling you about my day. It’s strange, but I’m just not inclined to have a friendly discussion with someone who just called me an asshole.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Ok

    jasondj ,

    When was it economically viable to replace hand-sewn lumber with lumber mills?

    Then they went and made portable electric saws. What a world!

    And then electric drills! And laser levels!

    Remember paper ledgers and abacuses? Ever hear of Microsoft Excel?

    We keep making tools that always increase productivity and reduce time and cost. It’s Constant incremental progress, and on a large scale it’s great because it frees up (human) resources to focus on new industry and technology, which furthers the CIP. On the micro scale, there may be a small number of temporarily displaced workers as jobs shuffle around and workers re-skill.

    But at this particular intersection of technology, we are at a pretty bad spot. We are on the verge of massive progress in multiple industries, and wealth has concentrated in the elite classes. “Temporarily displaced workers” won’t have the capital to re-skill or invest their own resources into new industry. This is bad.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    When was it economically viable to replace hand-sewn lumber with lumber mills?

    When they did it. Because they could process a huge amount more lumber. I’m not sure I understand.

    Marin_Rider ,

    what they are saying is that in the past, technological leaps meant increases in productivity and generally freed the displaced workers into new careers, but this time the sheer scale of change that is imminent doesn’t leave time for that. it’s going to be bad

    sleepy555 ,

    Yeah, like how blacksmiths can’t find any work these days anymore. It’s heartbreaking.

    mycatiskai ,

    There are artisan blacksmiths that probably make bank doing custom jobs like blades and ironwork gates and other such artistry.

    ghost_of_faso2 ,
    @ghost_of_faso2@lemmygrad.ml avatar
    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    We have robots that work in warehouses moving stuff precisely all the time. Placing pipes should be no problem.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Yes, moving things in a warehouse is exactly the same as laying plumbing and AC ductwork. There’s literally no difference in terms of complications.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Yes cause technology never gets better than it’s first iteration. There’s literally no progress ever. One and done

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    How soon do you think it will be before technology reaches the point that we can build completely functional houses with just robots? Give me a timeframe.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Do you want tonights winning lotto numbers also? How about which team will win the super bowl this year?

    Nobody can tell exact time frames. But the future is happenening old man

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    So robots will totally take over house building and humans will have nothing to do with it at some indefinite point in the future and that’s why people right now should be worried about their jobs. I see.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    I believe most jobs will be fully automated

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    When? Why should that make people worried about their jobs now?

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    In the future. And I literally never said people should be worrying about you, you’re putting words in my mouth bro

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s what this thread is about.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    All I said is that we could have the possibility soon to have robots that place pipes. You’re making this into a bigger thing

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s not what this thread is about.

    UrPartnerInCrime ,

    Literally it is but ok

    saruwatarikooji ,

    Yes, we should be worried about it now.

    It will happen and it will be much better if we can figure out how to handle the masses of unemployed before it is a problem.

    This attitude of kicking the can down the road is exactly how things turn catastrophic.

    IndefiniteBen ,

    You’re right that robots aren’t going to be able to replace plumbers or electricians in traditional building projects.

    But why can’t we change how new buildings are built so the method better suits robots. I’m sure with current technology we could design a building that could be built entirely by robots.

    I don’t think it’ll happen because it will take a lot of time and money to develop such a holistic system, with no return on profit until it’s a complete system.

    greenmarty ,

    Well at one point i lead bunch of those “workers” on real project and oh boy, in some cases, i would much rather have robots do it.

    AngrilyEatingMuffins ,

    You can. They’ve already built prototypes that fit on the back of a semi

    SomeAmateur , (edited )

    Not so much of the physical building, but I bet the designing isn’t too big of a stretch. Think something like procedural generation to make 2/3 of a floor plan and have humans make sure it makes sense and add details.

    hackris , (edited )

    Ahhh yes. In capitalism, if you create a machine that can replace say, 10 people, you don’t give them 1/10 of the work. You fire them and maybe hire someone to operate it.

    Machines and human workers can coexist. They don’t have to replace them.

    Edit: Of course they should replace them, but only after we get good living conditions for unemployed people, which are currently non-existent.

    Kedly ,

    Yeah, we arent going to get our Jetsons future if we refuse to restructure our society towards not having to work instead of just fighting the tech because its taking our jobs away

    UlyssesT ,

    The Jetsons had bullshit jobs for the sake of bullshit jobs. There’s got to be a better way than that.

    AngrilyEatingMuffins ,

    They should replace them. What really needs undoing is this imbecilic idea that only workers deserve to live comfortably.

    hackris ,

    Of course, the end goal (mind the word “end”) is to replace them. However, in this current situation, where many people are struggling to find a job, it’s not good.

    herzberd ,
    @herzberd@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    I wish the bar was at living comfortably. As it stands it feels like the average person doesn’t think non-workers deserve to live :/

    interolivary ,
    @interolivary@beehaw.org avatar

    They should replace workers and people should deserve to live without being workers, but it should also be painfully obvious that our current economic system won’t support this idea, and won’t until we do some pretty drastic things.

    It’s not that we couldn’t build a post-scarcity society probably even right now given some pretty radical adjustment of resource allocations, we just don’t want to build one – “we” being the 0.01% that have such insane amounts of wealth that they’ve essentially taken over the whole economic system, largely thanks to eg. dumb fucks like Reagan and sociopathic fucks like Thatcher and the people who idolize them buying into the idea that they too can be that rich because the wealth will somehow magically trickle down.

    AngrilyEatingMuffins ,

    That would be the mentality I’m talking about us needing to kill. Regardless, AI will help with this problem, in both it being inevitable that it will provide people with more free time (due to efficiencies or unemployment) - which is needed to be able to effectively revolt - and it will help address the issues of transforming our economic model, as the machines will have a much better way of distributing goods and services. Also capitalism needs workers to have money so that they can buy the products they produce, which should at some point necessitate a universal basic income, which will further help erode the work = money paradigm.

    interolivary ,
    @interolivary@beehaw.org avatar

    If you think this current brand of capitalism requires plebs to have money, I’m not sure how you explain the fact that when taking inflation into account wages have been either stagnant or actually going down ever since the 70’s / 80’s, the amount of wealth owned by the same plebs compared to the “financial ruling class” (mainly executives and such, and especially the banking sector thanks to deregulation) has shrunk dramatically, and cost of living keeps getting higher, while at the same time the compensation for the “financial ruling class” has grown at a frankly exponential rate.

    Sufficiently advanced AI will, if anything, make it even more likely that that “ruling class” will realize they don’t need quite as many of us around because all we do us suck up their resources and complain how we haven’t eaten anything but cup noodles in a week and our teeth hurt.

    RizzRustbolt ,

    Yep, there will always be room for humans in the suffering industry.

    Zerush ,
    @Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

    I think there were already projects of this with ChatGPT

    https://file.coffee/u/xZ5ccuDTAuy_M09hU8QFh.jpg

    Obi ,
    @Obi@sopuli.xyz avatar

    I was gonna say Netherlands as that’s the kind of shit I expect from Dutch architects, but upon further inspection, Germany?

    Zerush , (edited )
    @Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

    Austria, Museum of Modern Art in Vienna. I have no information about the substances or medications the architect has taken.

    Well, meanwhile in Canada…

    https://file.coffee/u/UcQRri2OnTU_DMlu8lsnD.jpg

    meowMix2525 ,

    Looks like a normal day in Australia to me…

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