FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Fri Apr 25, 2025 11:24 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Apr 24, 2025 2:54 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Thu Apr 24, 2025 2:06 pm
The goalposts really went for a wander didn't they?
I am looking at that reduced claim, and comparing it to the title of this thread, and wondering if you can account for any slippage?
Good catch—and fair to call that out.
But I don’t see it as slippage so much as
scaling the argument appropriately over time. The thread's original claim—that AI, robotics, and clean energy will end labor and money entirely—is still where I think we’re headed in the long term. The 80% prediction by the late 2050s? That’s the
threshold where the system starts tipping irreversibly in that direction. Not the final state—just the turning point.
Think of it like glaciers melting. The early signs don’t mean all the ice is gone—but once you're 80% in, the trajectory is set, and there's no going back.
So no, I’m not moving the goalposts. I’m just showing you where they’re currently standing—and where they’re heading fast.
So it's not US per se that needs to prepare for this zero cost future, it's us in 2057. We don't know enough about them just yet to even prep for becoming those guys though. What comprises this 20% of work that isn't done by robots? Are there 20% of people stuck working junior doctor hours while everyone else is homeless and wretched, or is there some Keynesian division of labour going on already so that everyone has access to work and working one or two shifts per week is sufficient to live the good life now that automation has ensured everything costs sod all?
Your aversion to detail derails your project.
Alright, fair point—you want
detail, not big-picture speculation. So here’s the roadmap, broken down by decade, showing exactly
why I stand by the 80% automation prediction by the late 2050s. This isn't sci-fi or hand-waving; it’s a synthesis of current trends, credible projections, and real-world developments that are already shaping the future.
2025–2030: Laying the Groundwork
This phase is already unfolding. AI and robotics are improving fast—machine learning systems are becoming more autonomous, and robots are entering more industries (healthcare, logistics, agriculture). Meanwhile, solar and wind are becoming cost-competitive, and battery tech is improving, creating the energy foundation needed to power large-scale automation.
Example: Tesla’s gigafactories are already blending AI, robotics, and solar energy to run highly automated, clean-energy production lines.
2030–2040: Scaling Up
This is when automation starts showing up in ways that impact daily life.
- Self-driving vehicles, drones, and automated delivery systems start wiping out entire categories of jobs—long-haul drivers, warehouse sorters, delivery staff.
- Energy breakthroughs (like progress in fusion research through ITER) begin reshaping global power infrastructure.
- Mass-scale production and logistics increasingly run without human labor.
Example: Waymo’s autonomous vehicles—already functional—will likely dominate urban transport by 2040. No need for taxi, bus, or rideshare drivers anymore.
2040–2050: Integration and Optimization
Here’s where that "irreversible tipping point" comes into view.
- Robots take over dangerous or repetitive jobs in construction, elder care, and security.
- AI handles diagnostics, scheduling, customer service, basic legal processing, and financial analysis—tasks that currently employ
millions.
- Fusion, if successfully commercialized, adds massive, clean power to the grid, fueling everything from smart homes to automated public infrastructure.
Example: Boston Dynamics’ robots—by now far more advanced—will likely be a fixture in sectors that still rely on human physical labor.
2050 and Beyond: The New Normal
This is where we cross into full-system transformation:
- The cost of producing basics—food, water, shelter, transportation, energy—approaches zero.
- Work exists, but not out of necessity. It’s creative, supervisory, or voluntary.
- The 20% of remaining jobs? Likely clustered in complex caregiving, high-touch services, and deeply human creative or philosophical roles.
- Education, law, and governance restructure themselves around a post-labor, post-money world. Universal Basic Income or something like it becomes essential to stabilize society.
Example: ITER or its successors are online, and fusion is feeding clean, abundant energy into fully automated societies.
So to answer your question directly:
Yes, it's us who needs to prep for this future. Not people in 2057—us, now.
Why? Because the infrastructure, legislation, and cultural adaptation required to
handle that tipping point take time. If we wait until the 2050s to figure this out, the fallout will already be underway.
And your final question—
what does that last 20% of work look like? Probably things like:
- Psychological care
- Early childhood education
- High-concept design and innovation
- Governance and conflict mediation
- The arts, storytelling, and philosophy
In other words, the stuff machines can’t fake well—because it requires lived experience, empathy, or cultural context.
So no, this isn’t goalpost shifting. This is the
timeline, mapped out. You wanted detail? There it is. Now let’s talk about what to do with it.