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Skynet taking your jerbs

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,440
20,245
Sleazattle
Established safety procedures are only as good as the people following them. We still create triple amputees in my field despite stacks of procedures and rules.

Most safety systems are implemented not to protect the employee but limit liability of the company.

The problem is that when you proceduralize safety, people begin to trust the procedures and lose their self preservation instincts.
 
Most safety systems are implemented not to protect the employee but limit liability of the company...
QFT

Back when I was setting up a hybrid power semiconductor lab for Digital Equipment Corporation and they were all hot to perform routine blood testing on anyone who worked in the lab. I figured out that it was a CYA for the company and got the testing quashed.

This being the same company that had an air cooling system lined with asbestos for PDP-11s under test; I snarfed a sample, had it confirmed as asbestos by a laboratory, reported it to management, who did... zero zip nada.
 

Nick

My name is Nick
Sep 21, 2001
24,064
14,712
where the trails are
Well I have several USB chargers and plenty of machine oil in the garage. I for one welcome our new robot overlords.

(hey, they might be reading this ... you can't be too safe)
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,440
20,245
Sleazattle
hospitals have been using robots to distribute meds to patient rooms for a long time. secure, never need breaks, don't get tired...

Friend of mine from grad school makes surgery robots. Allows the surgeon to essentially scale down their movements so they can execute very precise and microscopic movements. The original concept was to allow a surgeon to operate remotely, but the FDA put the no-no on that one. Was a good way to get military funding to start the business though. Their dream was to have a surgeon back in the states operate on a soldier in the field. That is likely to happen in the future.
 

Nick

My name is Nick
Sep 21, 2001
24,064
14,712
where the trails are
Friend of mine from grad school makes surgery robots. Allows the surgeon to essentially scale down their movements so they can execute very precise and microscopic movements. The original concept was to allow a surgeon to operate remotely, but the FDA put the no-no on that one. Was a good way to get military funding to start the business though. Their dream was to have a surgeon back in the states operate on a soldier in the field. That is likely to happen in the future.
Yes!
A few years ago I tried to find an 'in' at DaVinci, thinking that they were well positioned to make a kazillion dollars soon.
Sadly, they didn't appreciate my obvious value.
:rolleyes:

cool example:
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,440
20,245
Sleazattle
Yes!
A few years ago I tried to find an 'in' at DaVinci, thinking that they were well positioned to make a kazillion dollars soon.
Sadly, they didn't appreciate my obvious value.
:rolleyes:

cool example:
That is the one. My friend has only been working for a few years and has accumulated more value in stock options than my 20+ years worth of life savings.

The in is to get a Research Assistanship at a university doing research on surgery robots.
 
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Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,440
20,245
Sleazattle
Just ask my former colleague who had a small fortune in Worldcom stock options... you can't even mention it around him or he'll start frothing. :D
I knew a guy who sat on $5mm of some dot com bubble company he worked for. He held on to it because he believed in the company. His beliefs were incorrect.
 

rockofullr

confused
Jun 11, 2009
7,342
924
East Bay, Cali
I love how fake that painted background is...
That background is probably neither painted or fake. Most of the filming of Conan the Destroyer was done in the deserts of Mexico. There's plenty of goofy rock like that strewn across the high desert of south west US as well.
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,440
20,245
Sleazattle
Hopefully the IRS didn't have a different opinion on the matter.

You don't get taxed for stock options until you cash out, and then at the lower capital gain rate, because people with stock options work really really hard for that money unlike an hourly labor.
 

StiHacka

Compensating for something
Jan 4, 2013
21,560
12,505
In hell. Welcome!
You don't get taxed for stock options until you cash out, and then at the lower capital gain rate, because people with stock options work really really hard for that money unlike an hourly labor.
That depends on the kind of stock options you have. Some stock option plans trigger taxable income the moment you exercise and hold.
https://www.thebalance.com/taxation-of-employee-stock-options-2388965
Many people were ruined during the .com bubble when they got taxable liabilities on paper money and then the market crashed.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,317
7,742
The problem with Da Vinci is that there’s no haptic feedback. If I were to go in for surgery I’d opt for laparoscopic but not robotic.
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,440
20,245
Sleazattle
QFT

Back when I was setting up a hybrid power semiconductor lab for Digital Equipment Corporation and they were all hot to perform routine blood testing on anyone who worked in the lab. I figured out that it was a CYA for the company and got the testing quashed.

This being the same company that had an air cooling system lined with asbestos for PDP-11s under test; I snarfed a sample, had it confirmed as asbestos by a laboratory, reported it to management, who did... zero zip nada.

In my 20 years of working on industrial machines things have gone from "if you know what you are doing you shouldn't get hurt" to designing things to prevent people from using them to commit suicide.
 

6thElement

Schrodinger's Immigrant
Jul 29, 2008
15,970
13,222
There was a security robot in LGA this week that looked like a Dalek...I was amused at the thought of stairs or a curb.