Jump to content
Check your account email address ×

HOLY SHIT! F7Ben and Trump were right!


Recommended Posts

1 minute ago, Nazipigdog said:

Neocons got drunk as fuck and the whole world blew up. 

I wonder how much Viagra got consumed while fox news blared on the low def projection tv's in the living room :lol: fucking retarded faggot ass neocon fucks 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 hours ago, f7ben said:

Hey....we can get Chinamen to do simple electrical buildouts for pennies on the dollar in Chicago if you like? Sound good to you??? I mean the quality of the end product wont be there but who gives a fuck....right ballsack?

I see your simple mind doesn't have anything to add, so sad. 

Since you mentioned construction, the future is now 😎

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94yDP7AGRes#action=share

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Mileage Psycho said:

I see your simple mind doesn't have anything to add, so sad. 

Since you mentioned construction, the future is now 😎

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94yDP7AGRes#action=share

 

 

 

 

 

What's sad is you standing on your soap box like someone in the know proclaiming american steel is dead :lol:

 

Here's a little chart for you....see if your simple mind can grasp it.

 

STLD

 

 

stld-stock-forecast.png

Edited by f7ben
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

57 minutes ago, f7ben said:

What's sad is you standing on your soap box like someone in the know proclaiming american steel is dead :lol:

Here's a little chart for you....see if your simple mind can grasp it.

STLD

I never proclaimed that American steel is dead, what is dead is the amount of employees required to produce it, so while you and Mr. Trump are all warm and euphoric in your regressive mid 20th Century mindset the reality is much different.

 

Quote

 

Steel industry foresees high-tech future with fewer workers

Joseph S. Pete joseph.pete@nwi.com, (219) 933-3316

Oct 11, 2015

CHICAGO | In the future, the steel industry could be higher tech, with more robots and fewer workers.

Industry leaders see the steel business evolving over the coming decade. Change could come fast and it could be painful.

U.S. Steel Chief Executive Officer Mario Longhi chaired a panel discussion on Manufacturing the Future: The Next Era of Global Growth at the World Steel Association's annual conference at the Fairmont Chicago Millennium Park Hotel Sunday. Panelists talked extensively about robots taking over manufacturing jobs, but said technological advances could also create new positions such as for digital mechanical engineers, data scientists and business operations data analysts.

“You said we will have three billion people that will be deriving their income in the future in some shape or form,” Longhi said. “The advancement of technology to a very high degree has inhibited job creation. How could countries figure out a way to bridge that gap, which could lead to a very significant social change?”

Speakers envisioned a rapid transformation that could include more automation displacing traditional production jobs, 3-D printing and plastic cars eating away at demand for steel, and pencil lead-based graphene potentially replacing steel altogether.

"I'll give you fair warning that you will be provoked and challenged and maybe a little frightened," American Iron and Steel Institute Chairman and SSAB Americas President Charles Schmitt said.

Longhi said the steel industry has “all the bricks for smart manufacturing, but not the connectivity.” Historically, steelmakers haven’t been as nimble or as influenced by new technological developments as companies in other sectors, he said.

“As we’ve seen the speed of transformation due to new technologies is very, very fast,” Longhi said. “Most of our businesses require on a regular basis billions of dollars to be invested that will have to last for two or three decades.”

Technology is advancing exponentially and threatening to disrupt many industries including medical testing, finance, automaking, pizza delivery and even steelmaking, said Vivek Wadhwa, a futurist and the director of research at Duke University. An iPhone 6, for instance, has seven times the computing power of the NASA Curiosity Rover on Mars.

Such breakneck advances will soon change everything from where energy comes from, how we pay for consumer goods and how we test for disease, Wadhwa said.

"You need to start thinking differently," Wadhwa said. "Your industry is going to be disrupted like every other industry on the planet."

Over the last few decades, automation has led to thousands of job losses in Northwest Indiana mills. It’s possible to walk a full mile while a thin sheet of steel whizzes by without seeing a single worker. Train cars drive around on their own, with no conductors.

Technology today is advancing exponentially, faster than people appreciate because they typically only think linearly, Wadhwa said. As computing power increases and costs come down, advanced robotics are becoming more practical in industrial applications.

As of this year, manufacturing in the United States is now cheaper than in Europe and China because of robots, Wadhwa said.

“(The Chinese manufacturer) Foxconn announced three years ago they were going to replace a million workers with robots. It never happened, so we thought this was a hoax also,” Wadhwa said. “The reason it didn’t happen was because those robots were not dextrous enough to assemble circuit boards. Guess what? We have those now. The robots are now dextrous enough to thread needles. We’re going to have robots everywhere serving us, doing our chores.”

Robots can just do some jobs more efficiently, Wadhwa said. Drones for instance likely will take over pizza delivery, he said.

“We send a human being in a two-ton vehicle to deliver two pounds of flour with some ketchup on it. We could just drone that over,” he said.

They’re also cheaper than employing people, he said.

“Robots don’t join labor unions,” Wadhwa said.

Technological advances have made manufacturing more vastly more productive -- but stunted job growth in the sector -- and the downward trend in manufacturing employment is only likely to continue, said Jaana Remes, an economist and partner at the McKinsey Global Institute. However, society has generally been good about creating new jobs in other areas as outmoded positions like horse drivers disappear, she said.

“That has to be the main worry about manufacturing for the last 100 years,” she said. “Already in the 1920s, we were worried what we’d do with all the free time when we only had to work two days a week."

She said innovation has been creating new jobs as quickly as the country has lost them from the change in technology.

"In the U.S. over the past 25 years, fully a third of the rise in new net jobs came from occupations that didn’t exist or barely existed 25 years. Computer programmers, analysts, even fitness instructors: those we didn’t really need at this scale 25 years ago.”

http://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/steel-industry-foresees-high-tech-future-with-fewer-workers/article_39802679-a0fc-5caf-b0c3-27c12602687f.html

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nope....that's not what you said.

Also I work in a state of the art mill and it requires 1000 people give or take to run it. You know nothing. Post some more pics of shuttered mid 20th century mills ...

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Platinum Contributing Member
22 minutes ago, f7ben said:

Nope....that's not what you said.

Also I work in a state of the art mill and it requires 1000 people give or take to run it. You know nothing. Post some more pics of shuttered mid 20th century mills ...

That is his go to move. :lol:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, f7ben said:

Nope....that's not what you said.

Also I work in a state of the art mill and it requires 1000 people give or take to run it. You know nothing. Post some more pics of shuttered mid 20th century mills ...

This reminds me of when he was a soybean expert a few weeks ago yet has never even seen one before :lol: 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Platinum Contributing Member
5 minutes ago, Rod Johnson said:

This reminds me of when he was a soybean expert a few weeks ago yet has never even seen one before :lol: 

Vince...a Knowitall.....say it ain't so! :lol:

He is the American version of Red Rocket/Newfie. 

Edited by Jimmy Snacks
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

49 minutes ago, f7ben said:

Nope....that's not what you said.

Also I work in a state of the art mill and it requires 1000 people give or take to run it. You know nothing. Post some more pics of shuttered mid 20th century mills ...

 

Hate to say it , but if Obama or Clinton were in office , Vin's outlook and position on this would be a complete 180 .   I know that's a huge reach as none of this would be happening with either of those 2 at the helm

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • USA Contributing Member

No doubt automation will take away some jobs but more jobs are created by it as well.  Robots don't run themselves, workers are needed to keep them "functioning" to keep the line running.  When a line goes down you need someone on hand that has an understanding of what needs to be done to get things running again.  I once worked for a wire house and  was always running around keeping automated equipment running.  The operators and the guys in the white shirts with ties had no clue...... just wanted it fixed now.

You posted the "brick laying robot" but in the video it mentions that employees are still needed to run it, the advantage was it sped up the process. Not really a loss of jobs, more an increase in productivity. 

In many instances your not killing jobs your just changing job rolls.  

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Trying to pay the bills, lol

×
×
  • Create New...