A
few things are going on here. There's a "zing" factor that grabs you.
They're playing on the stereotype of snotty baristas one I haven't
generally found to be true. Since it's in a magazine that also has an
advertisement for a $6 million house and features multiple watches that
cost 6 figures, playing on this particular stereotype can't help but
have an "it's so hard to get good help these days" vibe. And while all
that is very provocative, what I found most fascinating about the ad is
the notion it's selling: that machines can save you from having to deal
with people.Typically, we hear that technology is replacing human labor
at a rapid pace and are warned that we may all end up in the service
industry one day unless the trend abates.
This
ad combines a dig at a subset of service industry workers with the
suggestion that people could avoid them too... if they buy a machine to
make their Cappuccino at home.You want to get attention to the issue.
Yes, some of these hearings are highly charged {$} and political, and
those are the ones that get into the newspapers.Household scissors It
doesn't say that the machine will perform better than the human. The
conceit of the add is that it makes drinks exactly as good as a barista.
The ad doesn't say the machine is cheaper either.His alleged lewd acts
are said to have caused £450 of damage lift door, carpet and {$} the
extinguisher following the incident on October 31.Mini Vivi Nova Clearomizer 2.0ml vivi nova v4 All
of the ostensible value added is the opportunity to bypass human
contact. For me, that's a counterproductive pitch. The idea of excellent
coffee drinks made easily at home sounds appealing. But mentioning
baristas makes me think of the coffee shops that I frequent. As longtime
readers know, I often work best at those places, and I almost always
get to like the people with whom I briefly interact, whether at the best
independent shop by my house, the name of which I'll never reveal, or
the Starbucks location in El Segundo that's my favorite in that chain.
On
the other hand, I'd much rather purchase a car, register for wedding
gifts, or buy electronics without a salesperson there to upsell me,
patronize me, or slow me down. And I always feel uncomfortable when
someone wants to carry my suitcases.But for the next few months, copies
of the Boston Dynamics robot will be trained to rush to humanity's aid Vertical Washing Machine for sale.All
of this is to say that I recognize service industry tradeoffs exist,
and that they're a factor that will shape which jobs get automated. I am
nevertheless mildly surprised to see a company come so close to
explicitly employing a "machines are more pleasant than people"
argument. Even if most consumers aren't baristas, all consumers are
people. How much human solidarity do they have?
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