In reply to Beer Baron :
Kreb (Forum Supporter) said:
Every field will have its holdouts. Someone mentioned bartenders being obsolete. Not hardly. The best ones do very well on charisma and the exact sort of thing that bots and AI will never be able to.
A bartender's job is *not* to serve drinks. A bartender's job is to give customers an enjoyable experience.
Chatted with a small brewery that had shifted to self-service taps. Take a card that logs what you drink, pour your own beer by the oz, check out later. They *still* used bar staff. They just spent more time interacting with customers and helping guide their selections (as well as collecting, cleaning, and stocking glassware).
If all people wanted was a glass of beer or wine, you can buy that at the store and pour it for yourself for a fraction of the cost of going to a bar.
A bar is not about drinking. A bar is about socializing. The staff is a critical component of driving that.
I want to agree with you, and I do. But I can see an ever growing swath of the population moving away from that at a rapid pace. Well before AI, people assigned human traits to a variety of non human items. Even though the interactions were largely one way, they still bonded with those things as if they had human like qualities. Pets, characters in video games, heck, many people bond with their cars like they are sentient. Soon though your car will be literally telling you, "Hey let's ditch this boring freeway commute and find a twisty back road. I know your favorite." As a child of the '80's, there were countless humanized robots in TV and movies that people bonded with. I just watched Short Circuit with my kid the other night. Tell me Johnny 5 wouldn't make a popular bartender. There will still be humans doing customer service work, but I can see robots/automation/AI filling ever increasing roles, and a growing percentage of the population actually preferring non-human service.
When self checkouts started appearing in supermarkets years ago, I thought they were stupid. Why should I, as the customer, do their job for them? But I soon discovered that I could do it faster and better. And since the average service had declined substantially, I didn't miss the human interaction. My local higher end grocer still has human checkers, no self check, with great service. But I'm too cheap to pay the substantially higher prices.
California just fast tracked automation in the fast food industry, by raising minimum wage for workers to $20 per hour. I predict a 75% decrease in fast food employment in the next 5 years. McDonalds and the like will have few employees, they have been trending that way already. In and Out and Chick-Fill-A will stay largely human staffed, but their standards and pay are higher.
I've been telling my kids for years now, learn robotics.