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Seems like if you want startup ideas, it would be good to look at these "low screen time" jobs and figure out how computers could make workers more productive, e.g. automated lawn mowers for gardeners.
> and figure out how computers could make workers more productive

Meh. Why half ass it? Figure out how computers could make workers obsolete. Cause someone else will/is.

I saw this and I'm like "oh shit this is going to tell me to fix my posture". Thank god it didn't
Want Better Pay? Stand next to a person having a heart attack with a scalpel in your hand. Our research shows that these persons ("surgeons" in the vernacular) make many hundreds of thousands of dollars each year!
radiologists make good money without blood and knife.. well at least in the u.s. :)
Until their skills are outsourced to imaging clinics abroad (maybe you mean interventional radiology, dunno)…
More likely to AIs, although the medical lobby is quite strong and will probably manage to get the benefits of AIs but still require a radiologist to certify.
Want better pay? Kill the intelligent robots or kill our current forms of capitalism.
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USSR crash survivor here. Believe me, there are things worse than the current form of capitalism.

Besides, the trouble isn't about capitalism per se, our economy is simply in another stagnant stretch, where the corporations with formalized models and piles of cash perform better than lean and smart startups. As soon as another disruptive tech appears on the horizon, the history will repeat itself - the dinosaurs will be too slow to follow and new Microsoft and Apple will arise.

In Europe (at least Scandinavia and Germany), the discussion about unconditional basic income is becoming a thing now :) When our work gets more and more effective, either 1) the cost of living for all individuals drop or 2) a few people benefit and get really, really rich while those whose jobs are less needed drop income. The latter is what's happening right now. But does a society want that?
> Essentially there are two rules here: don't post or upvote crap links (...)

I'm surprised that wsj.com spam is doing so well on HN.

One of the moderators said that news organizations like wsj and nytimes were "standard" on HN. So they get special treatment - even when the articles are behind paywalls or post clickbait nonsense.