There is nothing like the seasoning of a good cook, a machine will never be able to replicate that.
I used to work at a Barns and Noble bookstore. Customers would say, theirs nothing like the feeling of holding a book in your hands and turning the pages, e-books will never be able to replicate that.
I used to work at Bank of America. Customers would say theirs nothing like taking a friendly afternoon trip to their local branch, online banking will never be able to replicate that.
In both cases they didn't need to replicate or foster some sort of nostalgia, the product is just obviously more convenient. I'm fine with a machine rolling my twelve dollar chipotle burrito, especially if it does it faster and without the usual "don't want to work here" attitude.
121 sats \ 8 replies \ @gmd 17 Sep
Feels guilty to admit I prefer Waymo to Lyft as well.
Took the latter one way in SF and tried Waymo for the first time recently on the way back- no pressure to make conversation, no need to tip, and base rate a couple of dollars cheaper.
Sad because on top of the impending job losses, this sort of thing is just leading to further isolation and less socialization in society.
reply
Feels guilty to admit I prefer Waymo to Lyft as well.
Don't feel guilty for using technology that gives you more value.
If people want a psychiatrist to drive them around, they'll be happy to pay a premium. If the market really wants less isolation and socialization in their rideshare app, entrepreneurs will provide.
reply
121 sats \ 1 reply \ @gmd 17 Sep
I think in the short term everyone chooses to not have to make small talk and avoid human contact and go about their ways.
In the long term people avoiding human contact, even superficial encounters, for days at a time leads to increased isolation and loneliness and probably decreased well-being. Increasing Japanification of society where you can go about your entire day without interacting with anyone.
reply
I have human contact with the delivery driver
Does that count lol
reply
Which job losses? Fewer Lyft drivers?
reply
Yes... I imagine in 10 years driverless taxis will drive prices down to where it's unsustainable to still do this as a gig, maybe outside of surge pricing.
It's a crazy contrast to see the Lyft / Uber signs on cars in SF picking people up alongside the driverless Waymo vehicles.
Although maybe they will have more difficulties in cities outside of AZ/CA where weather is not always perfect sunshine.
reply
I’m in Los Angeles and have not seen Waymo
reply
130 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b OP 17 Sep
They are just beginning to rollout there. They are rolling out in Austin right now too.
An Uber driver made me aware of them then I had to pretend they were an abomination.
reply
reply
Those are good examples.
You worked at a bookstore and bank? For real? It’s not like Kamala pretending to work at McDonald lol
reply
Ha!
TheWildHustle has worn alot of hats.
Barns and Noble United States Airforce Bank of America IP Law firm
Kmart Moving company Telephone interviewer User tester 5k organizer AMC movie theatres Internet Safety Evaluator Business development manager Jr. Bitcoin researcher Podcast script writer
Feels like I'm missing some things....but that's pretty much the gist.
reply