automation impact on employment

Automation impact on employment

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matšoao
Literekere tse se nang likoloi li teng ho thusa ka khaello e matla ea basebetsi mapolasing
CNBC
Liroboto tsa Bear Flag li etsa literekere tse ikemetseng ho thusa lihoai ho etsa lijo tse ngata ka batho ba fokolang.
matšoao
Literekere tse se nang likoloi li teng ho thusa ka khaello e matla ea basebetsi mapolasing
CNBC
Liroboto tsa Bear Flag li etsa literekere tse ikemetseng ho thusa lihoai ho etsa lijo tse ngata ka batho ba fokolang.
matšoao
Voice automation e ikemiselitse ho senya indasteri ea lireschorente
Forbes
Patlo e fetang 50% e tla etsoa ka lentsoe ka 2020, 'me theknoloji e ntse e tsoela pele ka potlako ho isa moo e tla sebetsa joalo ka mofuta oa concierge.
matšoao
Moo mechine e ka nkelang batho sebaka—le moo e ke keng ea khona (leha ho le joalo)
McKinsey
Monyetla oa tekheniki oa ho iketsetsa o fapana haholo makaleng le mesebetsing.
matšoao
Automation and anxiety
The Economist
Will smarter machines cause mass unemployment?
matšoao
Automation: The future of work
Lenaneo le Steve Paikin
The Agenda examines the effects of automation on job loss in Ontario, how it will shape future employment opportunities. and affect future generations.
matšoao
Will automation take away all our jobs?
Ted
Here's a paradox you don't hear much about: despite a century of creating machines to do our work for us, the proportion of adults in the US with a job has c...
matšoao
AI will create as many jobs as it displaces by boosting economic growth
PWC
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and related technologies are projected to create as many jobs as they displace in the UK over the next 20 years, according to new analysis by PwC.
matšoao
AI and automation will replace most human workers because they don't have to be perfect—just better than you
Newsweek
Economists were skeptical that robots could permanently displace humans on a large scale. But look at what's happening to retail jobs: The economists were wrong.
matšoao
Boiketsetso bo sokelang 25% ea mesebetsi US, haholo-holo e 'bosang le e iphetang': Thuto ea Brookings
CNBC
Batho ba bang ba tla utloa bohloko ba ho iketsetsa lintho haholo ho feta ba bang, ho latela tlaleho e ncha ea Brookings Institution, e bitsoang, Automation and Artificial Intelligence: Kamoo Mechini e Amang Batho le Libaka.
matšoao
Automation e sokela palo ea batho ba fapaneng
Hourma Today
Is a robot coming for your job? That is more likely for Californians who work in Riverside, San Bernardino, Merced or Modesto, according to a report released this month by the Brookings Institution. Those who live in San Francisco or San Jose have a better chance of weathering a coming onslaught of automation and artificial intelligence. The new study by the Washington think tank suggests that int
matšoao
‘Robots’ are not 'coming for your job'—management Is
Gizmodo
Listen: ‘Robots’ are not coming for your jobs. I hope we can be very clear here—at this particular point in time, ‘robots’ are not sentient agents capable of seeking out and applying for your job and then landing the gig on its comparatively superior merits. ‘Robots’ are not currently algorithmically scanning LinkedIn and Monster.com with an intent to displace you with their artifici
matšoao
Automation could replace up to 800 million jobs by 2035: Bank of America Merrill Lynch
ditjhelete
Some half of all jobs worldwide - or 800 million total jobs - could be at risk of becoming obsolete by 2035 due to the rise of automation. Thats the assessment from a new report written by Bank of America Merrill Lynch analysts.
matšoao
AI, moruo oa lingoliloeng, le bokamoso ba mosebetsi
ka megala
Haeba u batla ho utloisisa hore na theknoloji e fetola menyetla ea rona ea mosebetsi joang, sheba batho ba ngolang lirekoto tsa audio hore e be mongolo.
matšoao
Automation to hit African Americans disproportionately
Axios
The trend could weigh down overall U.S. growth.
matšoao
Tech is splitting the U.S. workforce in two
Medium
Tech Is Splitting the U.S. Workforce in Two. A small group of well-educated professionals enjoys rising wages, while most workers toil in low-wage jobs with few chances to advance.
matšoao
Seo re se tsebang ka AI, le seo re sa se tsebeng
Dropbox
Dropbox ke tšebeletso ea mahala e u lumellang hore u tlise linepe, litokomane le livideo tsa hau kae kapa kae 'me u li arolelane habonolo. Le ka mohla u se ke ua ingolla faele ka lengolo-tsoibila hape!
matšoao
Liroboto lia tla, 'me Sweden e lokile
The New York Times
Lefatšeng le tletseng matšoenyeho mabapi le keketseho e ka 'nang ea senya mesebetsi ea li-automation, Sweden e boemong bo botle ba ho amohela theknoloji ha e ntse e fokotsa litšenyehelo tsa batho.
matšoao
Ho fokotseha ha China ho se ho fihlile lifemeng tsa eona. Hona joale liofisi tsa eona li ntse li utloa bohloko, hape.
NY Times
Basebeletsi ba li-white-collar ba tobana le ho fokotsoa ha mesebetsi le meputso e ntseng e putlama esita le liindastering tse tsoelang pele joalo ka theknoloji, ba fana ka maikutlo a hore bohloko ba moruo bo pharalletse ho feta kamoo lipalo tsa semmuso li bonts'ang.
matšoao
How immigrant workers are preparing for automation in agriculture
The World
Immigrants, who comprise the majority of agriculture industry workers in the US, are turning to training and education to make sure they’re not left behind by automation.
matšoao
How Ford, GM, FCA, and Tesla are bringing back factory workers
le haufi le
Ford, General Motors, Fiat Chrysler of America, and Tesla all brought factory employees back to work in the last week or two, and each company published a plan showing how it will keep them safe. The one thing they’re all missing? Testing.
matšoao
California 'gig' worker law e ama bahiri ba ka hare le kantle ho naha
Inshorense Journal
Molao oa California o thatafalletsang lik'hamphani ho tšoara basebetsi joalo ka likonteraka tse ikemetseng o qala ho sebetsa bekeng e tlang, o qobella likhoebo tse nyane hore li kenelle.
matšoao
Likhamphani li ntse li tšoenyeha haholo ka seo basebetsi ba tsona ba se buang
Setsebi sa moruo
Meeli lipakeng tsa mosebetsi oa batho le bophelo ba boinotšing e ntse e le lerootho le ho feta
matšoao
Facebook designed a tool that would let employers blacklist words like 'unionize' in employee chats
Business Insider
Facebook designed a built-in feature for Workplace, the company’s office-communication product meant to compete with Slack and Microsoft Teams, that would let employers suppress workers’ discussions of unionization.
matšoao
Na tech stratifying le ho iketsetsa basebetsi ba rona ho ke ke ha lokisoa?
Tsamaiso
Phuputso ea morao tjena ea Oxford e hakantse hore "47% ea mesebetsi linaheng tse tsoetseng pele e tla nyamela lilemong tse 25 tse tlang ka lebaka la ho iketsetsa lintho." Ho nahana bocha ka basebetsi ba rona, mesebetsi le litokelo tsa basebetsi e ka ba tharollo ea rona feela.