📌 Industrial robots today are programmed to perform specific and repetitive tasks, which limits their versatility; to make them perform different actions, they need to be reprogrammed by a person.
🤔 What will happen to #businesses that cannot keep up with this #technology if it gains traction? On what other aspects can those businesses focus their competitive advantage, and how should we reimagine the very idea of competitive advantage in a world where industrial #robots can learn and work autonomously? What kind of technological and #social divide might arise from these innovations?
It gathers a lot of data and interesting observations. Here are the ones that struck me the most:
📌 Generative #artificialintelligence excels in tasks that require natural language processing and content creation, outperforming humans in terms of speed and cost-effectiveness.
📌 Generative AI's efficiency impacts high-value tasks in white-collar roles, potentially offering comparable performance to humans at a fraction of the cost.
📌 Generative AI has led to unexpected user behaviors, including AI as software partners, educators, companions, and even sources of therapy, indicating significant #market opportunities.
📌 Many generative AI companies achieve rapid #revenue scale, often reaching $10-million-plus run-rate revenue faster, indicating quick product-market fit.
Check out this photograph / digital artwork that would look great framed and hanging on your wall in your home or office or produced on a variety of products.
An original display used to welcome people to a Farmers Market in Prague in the Czech Republic.
If your “housing plan” is just to build more market price suburban homes you can go fuck yourself with the rustiest metal spike you can find. That’s me being polite.
Rising prices are a normal market indicator of unsatisfied demand. And the normal market reaction is to increase the supply to try to meet that demand. Which is exactly what happened here...
I'm not sure why this particular chain of events is anything other than fully expected and realized.
In a classic bit of #market segmentation & the use of #anxiety inducing #health claims the #babyformula market seems rife with dodgy practices & a lack of effective regulation;
moreover, with the UK having one of the lowest rates of #breastfeeding in the world, we might wonder whether this is linked with other health issues we are confronting.
Not only do spurious health claims need to be stopped, we should ask whether formula is really the right way to go at all?
I spend a lot of time finding and testing recipes to sell online, at farmer's markets, and at the roadside stand I set up on my family's property in the summer.
That is in addition to other things I sell, like stickers and candles.
What are some things you would stop by and check out and consider buying, knowing it was created and produced locally?
I've already got vegetables down, anything excess from my garden I turn around and sell or give away. We also sell our chicken's eggs when we have an abundance.
But what about hot sauces? Baked goods? Home goods you could be interested in? Jewelry?
I don't intend to make a full time job out of selling these items, unless that is somehow how it pans out. Plus, being in Wisconsin, I can't just have a roadside stand up all year.