I mostly agree with you, though I noticed if a job is mostly made of constantly changing tasks that are new and dissimilar to previous tasks, there is some kind of efficiency problem up the pipeline. Its the old Janitor Problem in a different guise; a janitor at a building needs to perform a thousand small dissimilar tasks, inefficiently and often in impractical order, because the building itself was inefficiently designed. Hence why we still haven’t found a way to automate a janitor, because for that we would need to redesign the very concept of a “building”, and for that we would need to optimize how we build infrastructure, and for that we would have to redesign our cities from scratch… etc, until you find out we would need to build an entire new civilization from ground up to, just to replace one janitor with a robot. it still hints at a gross inefficiency in the system, just one not easily fixed.
I mostly agree with you, though I noticed if a job is mostly made of constantly changing tasks that are new and dissimilar to previous tasks, there is some kind of efficiency problem up the pipeline. Its the old Janitor Problem in a different guise; a janitor at a building needs to perform a thousand small dissimilar tasks, inefficiently and often in impractical order, because the building itself was inefficiently designed. Hence why we still haven’t found a way to automate a janitor, because for that we would need to redesign the very concept of a “building”, and for that we would need to optimize how we build infrastructure, and for that we would have to redesign our cities from scratch… etc, until you find out we would need to build an entire new civilization from ground up to, just to replace one janitor with a robot.
it still hints at a gross inefficiency in the system, just one not easily fixed.