r/onejob 13d ago

The future of fast food

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u/pieter1234569 12d ago

Well it sucks now, but this is the worst it is ever going to suck. The next product is going to work better, faster and be cheaper.

A few iterations and it will be everywhere as it’s cheaper than any employee, and can work 24/7.

Don’t look at technology now as say it sucks, look at it as an iterative process where things can only get better.

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u/--o 12d ago

There are food production lines that suck less right now. There are dead end applications that never stopped sucking.

You're just using a thought terminating cliche rather than asking whether a to-order hot-dog machine is viable in the next decade.

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u/pieter1234569 12d ago

Yes, but those are high volume and much bigger.

This needs to be essentially a vending machine, which it easily can be as there is no reason for this not to be stacked. In a year, this can be 10x faster and work 100% of the time. It just seems like each of the components hasn’t been finished yet.

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u/--o 12d ago

In a year, this can be 10x faster and work 100% of the time.

As it it could have been made years ago, so according to you it was done years ago.

Nothing works 100% of the time, that's just pure fantasy.

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u/pieter1234569 12d ago

As it it could have been made years ago, so according to you it was done years ago.

Not cost effectively. This only works with rising wages, and ever cheaper computers and hardware. Now that that became cheap, and labour became expensive, it now makes economic sense to develop these kinds of machines.

But they haven't had long, and they only have lower millions to upper hundreds of thousands R&D so the best YET is this.

Nothing works 100% of the time, that's just pure fantasy.

Most things work 100% of the time, pretty much everything in fact. The internet works because things work 100% of the time. Now this isn't 100.000000000% of course, but 99.9999% absolutely.

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u/--o 12d ago

 Not cost effectively.

Meanwhile you are hiding your assumption that it can be made cost effectively now, in a year, or in the next decade behind "this is the worst it is ever going to suck".

This only works with rising wages

No, automation makes sense when the TCO is lower than wages regardless of where they are moving. 

ever cheaper computers and hardware.

Simple reduction in the cost of the raw materials needed for an automation system are sometimes a way to cross that threshold, but a lot of times it requires an innovation in how they are applied to a specific task.

I can't speak to the hardware side, but the rise in computing power has slowed, so that would have been more convincing a decade ago than now.

Most things work 100% of the time, pretty much everything in fact. [..]  Now this isn't 100.000000000% of course, but 99.9999% absolutely.

Those zeros add absolutely nothing, while every added nine represents potentially exponential increase in design and maintenance, while every removed nine results in increased downtime and repair.

As to your impression that things work 100% of the time, its just another case of our inability to intuitively grasp scale. You are looking at a very small set of things, most of them for a very short time and almost certainly not meticulously documenting every instance of downtime that is rapidly fixed.