It’s nice to have principles, but in a few years you’re going to have to find a new way to get around.
It’s nice to have principles, but in a few years you’re going to have to find a new way to get around.
To get to the other side.
It’s not clear that “review” here means that the original solution by the system was different from the human solution. Perhaps 350 out of 700 were identical, I can’t say, but it’s certainly not true that the entire system was just humans watching video feeds, and that’s the claim I’m disputing.
I see that Amazon Go nonsense parroted a lot here on Lemmy. It’s not true.
Humans are involved in resolving issues (like self-driving cars that get stuck), and training, but it’s not just a bunch of people watching cameras and updating a spreadsheet of your groceries.
The Verge has an article on the subject.
Maybe if you’re rude to more people you can fix everything.
That recruiter might work somewhere less shit in the future, so I’d rather not burn a bridge unnecessarily.
I’ve been job hunting for 3 months. Hardly any recruiters are reaching out, and my applications go nowhere. A recruiter from xAI reached out the other day, and I couldn’t bring myself to even apply. I told them I wasn’t interested without specifying why, but it’s Elon.
Do you have a replacement in mind already?
I worked at Amazon for 8 years. That’s not how it works.
But the technology does actually work.
You don’t come up with an idea, announce it to the world, and then start figuring out how to implement it.
That’s not true at all. I personally know a person who worked on that technology.
Human beings got involved only when necessary. Do you really think Amazon wants to pay humans to be cashiers?
I admire your patience. :-D
Compelling argument.
You’ve made a compelling case against yourself.
Maybe I’m being overly paranoid (this is Lemmy, after all), but doesn’t this seem like a step toward something troubling?
Just attempting to format those in a more readable way.
I appreciate your reference. :-)
The evidence is like a million textbooks from 30 years ago that all say there are 9 planets. Pretty convenient.