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Comment by guiomie | original | Weave Robotics launches Isaac 1, a $7,999 home robot with Fall 2026 deliveries
[−]guiomie · 2026-07-01 Wed 19:36 UTC · link
Same, I suspect its awful and their strategy is to improve and rely less on it, which would be fine to me if they'd be transparent about it.
[−]throw310822 · 2026-07-01 Wed 20:16 UTC · link
Can't wait for the Uber version, where anyone with five minutes to spare can fold your laundry from their home.
[−]gigel82 · 2026-07-01 Wed 22:33 UTC · link
Holy dystopian shit, you might be right. This might just be their new favorite answer when people ask what are all the jobless humans to do after the AI takeover? This... live in squalor, hooked up to VR headsets and doing menial work remotely for the oligarch class, while the AI learns the last few non-automated tasks from them. It's a theme I've seen in many movies over the years.
[−]deadbabe · 2026-07-01 Wed 22:46 UTC · link
Or maybe it can be used to provide job opportunities to people currently underserved, for example, if you are bound to a hospital bed you can get a VR telepresence job to make some money and help pay your medical bills.
[−]ceejayoz · 2026-07-01 Wed 22:47 UTC · link
Gross.
[−]gigel82 · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:01 UTC · link
We're doomed if regular people have fully absorbed the propaganda to the extent that they'd think asking invalid hospital-bed-ridden people to work remotely for the uber-rich rather than fixing the tax situation so that those uber-rich can buy one less golden toilet for their private planes (and the state can provide for those poor people) is a good idea.
[−]ryandrake · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:39 UTC · link
I think (hope) the poster who suggested that was being sarcastic, although it's hard to tell anymore!
[−]Schiendelman · 2026-07-02 Thu 04:27 UTC · link
The math doesn't math. You could tax all the ultra rich people at 100% and it wouldn't significantly change the social contract. The part people don't like hearing is that it's a lot of the middle class that has to pay much higher taxes if you want those guarantees of minimum living standards.
[−]goobatrooba · 2026-07-02 Thu 06:06 UTC · link
Citation needed.

Here is one for the contrary (just a book review. The citation is the book).

https://cleantechnica.com/2026/04/06/we-need-to-tax-billiona...

[−]fn-mote · 2026-07-01 Wed 23:01 UTC · link
The oligarchs just have people to come do these tasks.

The target audience is the “regular-rich bourgeoisie”.

[−]gigel82 · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:02 UTC · link
That's an ever-dwindling section of the population. Middle class and upper middle class is going away, we're very clearly heading towards ultra-polarization.
[−]ryandrake · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:15 UTC · link
For some reason I always get pushback for pointing it out, but we are very quickly heading towards a bifurcated world like Elysium, possibly minus the space station, where a tiny ultra-rich class lives in luxury while physically separated and protected from billions who live in squalor. We're producing everything needed to build and enforce that world!
[−]mlmonkey · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:28 UTC · link
Don't worry, Musk is working on the Space Station part ...
[−]netsharc · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:48 UTC · link
So, we'll have Elysium minus the space station..
[−]selectodude · 2026-07-02 Thu 04:47 UTC · link
The meek shall inherit the Earth… but not the moon.
[−]genewitch · 2026-07-02 Thu 05:15 UTC · link
That's a Patton Oswalt bit; "no, haha, the meek shall inherit the earth, that's right. we're going to Mars. Bye!"
[−]azan_ · 2026-07-01 Wed 23:03 UTC · link
How is it worse compared with workers that are currently employed by the oligarch class? It's not like they don't have people doing menial work for them right now. And automation of menial work is a good thing!
[−]storus · 2026-07-02 Thu 02:28 UTC · link
Do you think the current AI automated menial work and left only the fun parts? It seems like the opposite, it took any fun from coding and left the drudgery of debugging code one didn't write intact.
[−]azan_ · 2026-07-02 Thu 06:12 UTC · link
Please read the comment I’m replying to.
[−]smnc · 2026-07-02 Thu 00:03 UTC · link
Alex Rivera's 2008 movie Sleep Dealer is not without flaws, but it left quite an impression on me. I watched it it after seeing it recommended here in a comments thread on an article about military drone operators, I should probably watch it again with fresh eyes.

EDIT: Jeez, it looks like that's an 11 years old thread. Time does indeed fly.

EDIT 2: The source for the claim is paywalled, but this is how the Cultural impact chapter of the movie's Wikipedia page closes:

> In 2025, Rivera noted that a tech CEO claimed the film had been an inspiration for his company to employ a remote labour force in the Global South in order to operate robots in the Global North, and that the film has been used in pitch decks for various start-ups.

... once again bringing to mind the "At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus from the classic sci-fi novel Don't Create The Torment Nexus" meme.

[−]ares623 · 2026-07-02 Thu 03:22 UTC · link
Nah. At least with Uber the driver has self-preservation as an incentive to not just fuck around. What incentive would a freelance nobody have to not do the funniest shit possible inside a stranger's home at least once.