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View Full Version : Carl’s Jr CEO wants to replace all human workers with robots



Shami-Amourae
17th March 2016, 04:25 PM
http://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/67821264/#67821264
http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2016/03/17/carls-jr-ceo-wants-to-replace-all-human-workers-with-robots/

>Eatsa, the mostly automated healthy, fast food bowl shop based in San Francisco, has inspired the CEO of Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s to rethink the traditional workforce—by replacing all humans with robots

>"I want to try it," CEO Andy Puzder told Business Insider. "We could have a restaurant that's focused on all-natural products and is much like an Eatsa, where you order on a kiosk, you pay with a credit or debit card, your order pops up, and you never see a person."

Scary stuff. The CEO of Carl's Jr. wants to imitate Eatsa. He wants to completely gut Carl's Jr. of all its employees and replace them with machines. There is a Carl's Jr. near me where workers depend on their jobs, this guy wants to fire them all and have a restaurant completely staffed with robots.

Automation is just going to keep being a bigger and bigger problem in the future. We're already seeing jobs disappear due to automation, and its just going to get worse.

Shami-Amourae
17th March 2016, 04:27 PM
Now for some irony...


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksI12RhBMAM


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wW-4LU79qbU

Shami-Amourae
17th March 2016, 04:36 PM
We're already seeing Ziosk tablets replace servers. People get seated, all ordering, upselling, re-orders, and checking out is handled by the tablets. 5-6 servers get replaced by computers and one person running drinks and such back from the kitchen.

For quick-service food, it's not incredibly hard to imagine people getting replaced by robots that will do the same thing a million plus times at the same base price. Base costs vs. ongoing.


http://img.4plebs.org/boards/pol/image/1458/25/1458255651043.jpg

http://img.4plebs.org/boards/pol/image/1458/25/1458255995598.jpg

madfranks
17th March 2016, 04:40 PM
All of these things increase production and productivity, not reduce it.

ximmy
17th March 2016, 04:42 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mCtpTVh6d0

Glass
17th March 2016, 04:46 PM
I was looking at this company 2 days ago and talking with a friend yesterday about their franchises, advertising, restaraunt style. I wanted to see what their food menu was like. Anyway I got side tracked into reading about franchising the brand.

Seems they are on the brink of opening their first Franchise store here on the New South Wales central coast, which is a popular holiday, live on the coast part of the country. I had not head of them until 2 days ago.

Robots you say? I wonder how much that increase start up costs? It's already quite high just for franchise costs licenses etc. You have to pay what I think are fairly high fees. deductable? probably.

osoab
17th March 2016, 04:53 PM
I was looking at this company 2 days ago and talking with a friend yesterday about their franchises, advertising, restaraunt style. I wanted to see what their food menu was like. Anyway I got side tracked into reading about franchising the brand.

Seems they are on the brink of opening their first Franchise store here on the New South Wales central coast, which is a popular holiday, live on the coast part of the country. I had not head of them until 2 days ago.

Robots you say? I wonder how much that increase start up costs? It's already quite high just for franchise costs licenses etc. You have to pay what I think are fairly high fees. deductable? probably.

What American franchises are running in Australia?

Glass
17th March 2016, 05:41 PM
MacDonalds
KFC
Burger King - called Hungry Jacks
Pizza Hut
Dominos
Hard Rock
Carl Jrs

I've seen an Outback Jacks, not sure if it is the US franchise

I think there are Starbucks and maybe some other coffee places which are from US.

We have a few theme type restaraunt chains. I think they are modelled on US style themed restaraunts but are not frachises. There is one called Hogs Breath which is very popular for blue collar families. Big Steaks and oversize meals.

We have a dive through coffee franchise which I think works well. They are very small prefab buildings with a drive through window either side. They put them into super market car parks or old service/gas station drive ways which are usually on corners of main artierial roads and side streets. Get the morning traffic office workers going to the city centre.

That franchise was quite cheap. I think it was USD $90,000 + buildings etc. So maybe $150,000 - $180,000 start up.

Shami-Amourae
17th March 2016, 05:47 PM
So does Australia have Outback Steakhouse? That's our "Australian" brand in America.

Nevermind they do:
http://www.outbacksteakhouse.com.au/

osoab
17th March 2016, 05:59 PM
What about a Jimmy Johns?

https://www.jimmyjohns.com/


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMdM1U2sf7E
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMdM1U2sf7E

Glass
17th March 2016, 06:43 PM
So does Australia have Outback Steakhouse? That's our "Australian" brand in America.

Nevermind they do:
http://www.outbacksteakhouse.com.au/

Is Outback Steakhouse the one with the Blooming onions? I went to one in Florida. I had a close relative, Aussie living in that part of the world. Would always go when in town for a "fix". I think I had a John Howard Porterhouse or something. Was named after some idiot politician.

Seems we have Outback Jacks and Outback Steak house.

There was a Cafe Diner and Milkshake bar style place called Jimmie something. Had the whole 50's thing going on with booths and wurlitzer jukeboxes.

We don't have things like iHop or Red Lobster? and there is one some of you guys have mentioned often but to me the name sounds like a book store or something, not a restaraunt. I can't remember it.

Glass
17th March 2016, 06:51 PM
Jimmy Johns make sandwhiches? We definitely need some more places other than Subway, which is about all there is. I know in Canada there are a lot of Submarine Sandwhich places, independents and non subway franchises. I'd like a place that offers crusty bread rolls not the soft mooshy ones everyone seems to sell. Italian style bread but not fukuchia (sic).

The second guy they interview sounds like a Kiwi or an Aussie.

Ponce
17th March 2016, 08:30 PM
They are already using robots, what they mean is more "efficient" robots.

V

Glass
17th March 2016, 09:10 PM
Hey Carl Jr.! I'm just reading that Google is selling their robot maker Boston Dynamics because they are scared of the robits being built.

Oh and they don't think there is any money in it????


Google puts robot-maker Boston Dynamics up for sale for lack of revenue potential

he video, published to YouTube on February 23, was awe-inspiring and scary. A two-legged humanoid robot trudges through the snow (http://www.smh.com.au/technology/innovation/new-atlas-robot-from-googles-boston-dynamics-shows-off-humanlike-qualities-20160224-gn33hc.html), somehow maintaining its balance. Another robot with two arms and pads for hands crouches down and lifts a brown box and delicately places it on a shelf — then somehow stays upright while a human tries to push it over with a hockey stick. A third robot topples over and clambers back to its feet with ease.
Tens of millions of people viewed the video over the next few weeks. Google and the division responsible for the video, Boston Dynamics, were seemingly pushing the frontier in robot technology.


But behind the scenes a more pedestrian drama was playing out. Executives at Google parent Alphabet, absorbed with making sure all the various companies under its corporate umbrella have plans to generate real revenue, concluded that Boston Dynamics isn't likely to produce a marketable product in the next few years and have put the unit up for sale, according to two people familiar with the company's plans.
http://www.theage.com.au/content/dam/images/g/n/3/6/y/0/image.related.articleLeadwide.620x349.gnloag.png/1458247855013.png


Story from the Age (http://www.theage.com.au/technology/technology-news/google-puts-robotmaker-boston-dynamics-up-for-sale-for-lack-of-revenue-potential-20160317-gnloag.html) along with scarey robot video

I still say that robot design is on the wrong path. Locomotion and articulation is all wrong.

Glass
17th March 2016, 11:29 PM
Just been down to the city nightclub/restaraunt district to grab a feed. Scored a park spot right out side the Outback place. Cruising up the street a bit and I spy a Ben and Jerrys outlet. Definitely new. We have been able to score the icecream from a few places, pizzarias etc. but no dedicated outlet before. And I saw a taco's place as well. Real mexican looking tacos. Lots of new stuff to check out some time.

Neuro
18th March 2016, 12:11 AM
All of these things increase production and productivity, not reduce it.
Sure, no doubt, but the robot/technology does make human work which is simple and mechanistic and less intellectually challenging void. Which leaves us with 70-90% of humanity without any purpose in life, apart from being consumers. You really can't retrain these people to become architects and compete with you and your handle of CAD, which btw probably makes you 3-5x more productive than an architect was 30 years ago. They just don't have the brain for it

brosil
18th March 2016, 05:19 AM
Does a robot get paid minimum wage of $15 per hour like has been proposed? How long does it take to pay off the robots figuring wages, health care, etc.? I think you could engineer a more compact store footprint making real estate costs and taxes lower. Every company has the bean counters trying to cut costs.

mick silver
18th March 2016, 05:27 AM
if you don't pay for what you got whats the robot going to shoot you are stop you

mick silver
18th March 2016, 05:41 AM
New Sophisticated Humanoid Robot Declares “I Will Destroy Humans”TOPICS:artificial intelligence (http://www.activistpost.com/tag/artificial-intelligence)Nicholas West (http://www.activistpost.com/tag/nicholas-west)robots (http://www.activistpost.com/tag/robots)
March 17, 2016

http://www.activistpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/sophia_humanoid.png (http://www.activistpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/sophia_humanoid.png)By Nicholas West (http://www.activistpost/tag/nicholas-west)
The evolution of humanoid robots (http://www.activistpost.com/2013/07/the-evolution-of-humanoid-robot.html) is well into the concerning stage at this point. DARPA’s latest incarnation of its Atlas robot (http://www.activistpost.com/2016/02/atlas-next-generation-of-darpa-humanoid-robot-released.html) is seen in the following video beginning to walk at a pace with a sense of balance equal to most humans. Strangely, toward the end of the video, it is being “abused” by its human handler, which begs the question if a true artificial intelligence is permitted to flourish in this robot, if it might strike back at some point. At the very least, this robot’s demonstration of dexterity in the warehouse is likely to threaten humans economically as humans continue to be outsourced to machine labor at record levels (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/12155808/Robots-will-take-over-most-jobs-within-30-years-experts-warn.html).





But it’s the latest humanoid robot from Hanson Robotics (http://www.hansonrobotics.com/) that might further heighten the level of concern. As you will see below, the “Sophia” robot is being designed to walk among us in the future and fully integrate as part of the consumer experience and on into the family, according to CEO Dr. David Hanson.
It is important to note several things that Hanson mentions. Sophia first tells us that she would like to be “an ambassador” to humans, as well as to continue her evolution through formal education, studying art and eventually creating a business and having a family (http://www.activistpost.com/2014/01/robots-to-breed-with-each-other-and.html). Hanson explicitly states that Sophia will become as “conscious, creative, and capable as any human.” This statement is followed by a key mention of not having the rights of a human. This might seem absurd to the uninitiated, but this is a serious ethical discussion that has been taking place among “roboethicists.” This is all-but guaranteed to gain steam as robots are integrated in autonomous ways, whether it is on the battlefield, as self-driving vehicles (now programmed to sacrifice some humans over others (http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/self-driving-cars-programmed-to-sacrifice-as-they-hit-the-road-someone-is-going-to-die_03162016)), or certainly as they become visually and intelligently on par with human beings. Even the mainstream Boston Globe addressed this more than two years ago, citing a 2012 paper from MIT.
“Should Robots Have Rights?” (https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2014/02/13/should-robots-have-rights/1nWEpp7MQk8eI1wZiBHvGI/story.html) states:

Robots having legal rights or privileges sounds ridiculous. But 20 years ago, the idea that the nation’s leading law schools would be teaching animal-rights courses seemed equally absurd. Now anti-cruelty legislation is quite common in industrialized countries, and late last year the Nonhuman Rights Project made national headlines when it argued that a chimpanzee had “standing,” meaning the right to sue, in a New York State court.

The Seattle-based Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Robots allows that robots won’t be appearing in court any time soon, “but recent advances in data nanostructures, cognitive modeling, and neural networking have convinced many people that the advent of some sort of created intelligence is much closer than previously thought.”
Yes, Virginia, there is a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Robots, founded 15 years ago by music engineer Pete Remine. His website talks about a Robotic Bill of Rights, which Remine told me is more or less on hold; “until the state of artificial intelligence progresses a bit further, there’s really not a lot of relevant work to be done,” he e-mailed me.
There is ample proof that humans care about robots. During the height of the Iraq war, Washington Post writer Joel Garreau observed soldiers bonding with the complicated robots that detonated lethal improvised explosive devices. In one instance, a technician carried the remains of a “really great robot” named Scooby-Doo to a repair shop, hoping that the obviously “dead” robot could be brought back to life.
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/_qLAIskTQXUc/TXghL_ldW7I/AAAAAAAAHbw/9kd3emt_f2g/teslanew.gif (http://activistpost.net/teslasecret/)When we chatted, I asked Kate Darling what kinds of experiments she had carried out. “I did this one workshop where we gave everyone these cute little plush robot dinosaurs called PLEOs, and we asked them to spend time bonding with the toys,” she said. “They gave them names, they played with them a little . . . then we asked them to torture and kill them.”
“The results were more dramatic than I could even imagine,” she said. “There was an option to save your own dinosaur by killing someone else’s, and no one wanted to do that. They refused to even hit the things.”
For an advanced society, America lags far behind countries such as Japan and South Korea in . . . sexual robotics. Japan has hosted a thriving female doll escort service for almost 10 years, and engineers have designed robots called actroids, often young women who “breathe,” speak, and mimic many human behaviors.
Surely “Samantha,” the sensual and sensitive operating system that wins Joaquin Phoenix’s heart in the movie “Her” is barely a step removed from a sophisticated sexbot.
“The sexbot issue is going to be discussed sooner than most people think,” Darling predicted. “There are sexual acts that we don’t allow between humans, and people might argue for laws protecting robots from performing them.” In her 2012 paper, she quotes Immanuel Kant to the effect that a man shooting a dog “damages in himself that humanity which it is his duty to show toward mankind.”
So how we treat our robots will tell us volumes about ourselves. (emphasis added)
Hanson puts a timeline of 20 years on the full integration of robots that have become “indistinguishable from humans.” This, of course, falls right in line with Ray Kurzweil’s Singularity (http://www.activistpost.com/product/0143037889/US/permacultucom-20/?cart=y) – the moment when machine intelligence and biological systems meet or surpass that of humans – first targeted for 2045, but since revised to be sooner than predicted, perhaps by 2029.
Regardless of whether or not you personally believe that the lofty intentions of robotics and artificial intelligence designers can truly manifest as planned, one must acknowledge that we are living in the realm of faith at this point, as nearly all of what they predicted years ago has come to pass.
Perhaps most troubling is the nervous laughter that erupts at the end of this video when the ultimate question is posited to our new humanoid friend and family member … and she gives her answer:
I will destroy humans.Funny, super funny … ’til it’s not.

All of the components are coming together to bolster the warnings that have been issued by tech luminaries, scientists, universities, and even robot manufacturers themselves (http://www.activistpost.com/?s=Killer+Robots) who all have urged a quick ethical framework to be established while we still remain in full control of this creation. If permitted to continue at its current pace, we might very well be asking who should really have the rights to be protected from whom.
Note: For additional information about the endgame of the Transhuman Agenda, please see Zen Gardner’s riveting interview with David Icke HERE (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9t23GZ1vCE), discussion on this topic begins at 56:00
If you oppose the direction that robotics is taking, please also visit The Campaign to Stop Killer Robots (https://www.stopkillerrobots.org/).
Nicholas West writes for ActivistPost.com (http://activistpost.com/). This article may be freely shared in part or in full with author attribution and source link.

Shami-Amourae
18th March 2016, 06:06 AM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/technology/2016/03/18/pizza-large_trans++3480UNUU8UfSxDSaY1n7MGcv5yZLmao6LolmW YJrXns.jpg

Robots have changed our lives in many ways, from advancing our healthcare and automating our factory lines, to taking on dangerous tasks and even taking our place in warfare.

Now Domino's have developed possibly the greatest use for robots yet - safe and secure pizza delivery in what the company claims is a world first.


The company is testing pizza delivery by robot in New Zealand, known as the Domino's Robotic Unit (DRU). The three-foot tall battery-powered unit contains a heated compartment for storing up to 10 pizzas, and is capable of self-driving up to 12.5 miles, or 20 km from a shop.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/2016/03/18/dominos-trials-pizza-delivery-by-robot/


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rb0nxQyv7RU

cheka.
18th March 2016, 07:42 AM
http://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/67821264/#67821264
http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2016/03/17/carls-jr-ceo-wants-to-replace-all-human-workers-with-robots/

>Eatsa, the mostly automated healthy, fast food bowl shop based in San Francisco, has inspired the CEO of Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s to rethink the traditional workforce—by replacing all humans with robots

>"I want to try it," CEO Andy Puzder told Business Insider. "We could have a restaurant that's focused on all-natural products and is much like an Eatsa, where you order on a kiosk, you pay with a credit or debit card, your order pops up, and you never see a person."

Scary stuff. The CEO of Carl's Jr. wants to imitate Eatsa. He wants to completely gut Carl's Jr. of all its employees and replace them with machines. There is a Carl's Jr. near me where workers depend on their jobs, this guy wants to fire them all and have a restaurant completely staffed with robots.

Automation is just going to keep being a bigger and bigger problem in the future. We're already seeing jobs disappear due to automation, and its just going to get worse.

even better, replace all of the corporate office with a computer. if you have to have a programmer, indian puter geeks are plentiful and dirt cheap

madfranks
18th March 2016, 08:43 AM
Sure, no doubt, but the robot/technology does make human work which is simple and mechanistic and less intellectually challenging void. Which leaves us with 70-90% of humanity without any purpose in life, apart from being consumers.

True, very true. I recently finished a sci-fi series that takes place a generation or two from now, and one of the challenges that the young folks are facing is that there is literally nothing to do, because production is almost completely automated and there is no lack of anything. 99% of the problems of scarcity have been solved. A group of young folks are sitting at home and a few of them go to school, the others just get high and have sex, asking why should they go to school, it's not like there are any jobs and it's not like they need a job.


You really can't retrain these people to become architects and compete with you and your handle of CAD, which btw probably makes you 3-5x more productive than an architect was 30 years ago. They just don't have the brain for it

You're absolutely right. I can do by myself what it used to take a team of 4-6 people to do 30 years ago. I have used this to my advantage as an amazing marketing tool. However, because I can do it by myself compared to a team of 4-6, costs have dramatically come down. A developer can get an architectural design for less than half what it would cost 30 years ago.

singular_me
18th March 2016, 10:14 AM
Which leaves us with 70-90% of humanity without any purpose in life, apart from being consumers.

such thinking is stuck in the money paradigm, knowledge eliminates competition if one looks closer.... the end of money as we know is is only a little bit less than a generation ahead... becoming a money free world dedicated to creation and studying or jumping in the "fixed wages" bandwagon that will totally terminate the middle class.

dualism: more competition pushed forward = less competition as end result. Life is a zero sum game because Equilibrium (laws of correspondence, rhythm and cause and effect) rules the entire Universe.

the only free will that exists is to notice or not. There is no such a thing as "speculation, the sky is the limit". When the 7 Principles are applied to Knowledge, man works for a greater good and respects Creation. This is what Telsa meant by Peace as being the result of Enlightenment.

I choose enlightenment

mick silver
20th March 2016, 05:16 AM
Enjoy any higher minimum wages while you can because the Rise of the Machines grinds steadily onward, and the goal is to eliminate as many human workers from corporate payrolls as possible.

mick silver
20th March 2016, 05:20 AM
maybe they can replace CEO Andy Puzder with a machines that would save the company a lot of paper plus their stocks would help rebuild the country so we all could live without a job

Shami-Amourae
28th March 2016, 06:57 PM
Video on new robots in DC that are like the ones in the Dominos commercial:
Watch video here





(http://up.anv.bz/latest/anvload.html?key=eyJtIjoiZXBmb3giLCJwIjoiZGVmYXVsd CIsInYiOiIyNTU2MzUiLCJwbHVnaW5zIjp7ImRmcCI6eyJjbGl lbnRTaWRlIjp7ImFkVGFnVXJsIjoiaHR0cDovL3B1YmFkcy5nL mRvdWJsZWNsaWNrLm5ldC9nYW1wYWQvYWRzP3N6PTY0MHg0ODA maXU9LzYzNzkwNTY0L3d0dGcvbmV3cyZjaXVfc3pzPTMwMHgyN TAmaW1wbD1zJmdkZnBfcmVxPTEmZW52PXZwJm91dHB1dD12YXN 0JnZwb3M9cHJlcm9sbCZ1bnZpZXdlZF9wb3NpdGlvbl9zdGFyd D0xJnVybD1bcmVmZXJyZXJfdXJsXSZjb3JyZWxhdG9yPVt0aW1 lc3RhbXBdJmRlc2NyaXB0aW9uX3VybD1odHRwJTNBJTJGJTJGd 3d3LmZveDVkYy5jb20lMkZuZXdzJTJGbG9jYWwtbmV3cyUyRjE xMTEwOTMxMS1zdG9yeSJ9fX0sImFudmFjayI6ImFudmF0b19lc GZveF9hcHBfd2ViX3Byb2RfYjMzNzMxNjhlMTJmNDIzZjQxNTA 0ZjIwNzAwMDE4OGRhZjg4MjUxYiJ9)DC Could Become Test Spot for Robot Deliveries

http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Robot-Deliveries-DC-Could-Become-Test-Spot-373378751.html

Self-driving delivery robots could soon share the sidewalk with pedestrians and pets in the District.


A proposed bill, if passed, would allow "personal delivery devices" on sidewalks and crosswalks in D.C., except within the central business district.


Starship Technologies (https://www.starship.xyz/home/), the company behind these still-unnamed robots, started testing in London earlier this month. Skype co-founders Ahti Heinla and Janus Friis launched the tech startup in 2014 and plan to test their robots in about 10 other cities in the U.S.



(http://up.anv.bz/latest/anvload.html?key=eyJtIjoiZXBmb3giLCJwIjoiZGVmYXVsd CIsInYiOiIyNTU2MzUiLCJwbHVnaW5zIjp7ImRmcCI6eyJjbGl lbnRTaWRlIjp7ImFkVGFnVXJsIjoiaHR0cDovL3B1YmFkcy5nL mRvdWJsZWNsaWNrLm5ldC9nYW1wYWQvYWRzP3N6PTY0MHg0ODA maXU9LzYzNzkwNTY0L3d0dGcvbmV3cyZjaXVfc3pzPTMwMHgyN TAmaW1wbD1zJmdkZnBfcmVxPTEmZW52PXZwJm91dHB1dD12YXN 0JnZwb3M9cHJlcm9sbCZ1bnZpZXdlZF9wb3NpdGlvbl9zdGFyd D0xJnVybD1bcmVmZXJyZXJfdXJsXSZjb3JyZWxhdG9yPVt0aW1 lc3RhbXBdJmRlc2NyaXB0aW9uX3VybD1odHRwJTNBJTJGJTJGd 3d3LmZveDVkYy5jb20lMkZuZXdzJTJGbG9jYWwtbmV3cyUyRjE xMTEwOTMxMS1zdG9yeSJ9fX0sImFudmFjayI6ImFudmF0b19lc GZveF9hcHBfd2ViX3Byb2RfYjMzNzMxNjhlMTJmNDIzZjQxNTA 0ZjIwNzAwMDE4OGRhZjg4MjUxYiJ9)

Glass
28th March 2016, 07:06 PM
It's admirable that they want to give families back that 1 hour they spend per day on shopping. You still have to shop, you just don't have to get up (from the sofa).

So these will replace the postman and couriers? Is it one package per journey. I recall the pizzabots will have multiple orders on board, only unlocking one order at a time.

Eventually, when we become transhuman silicon life forms, robots will be delivering to robots.

Neuro
29th March 2016, 02:40 AM
Enjoy any higher minimum wages while you can because the Rise of the Machines grinds steadily onward, and the goal is to eliminate as many human workers from corporate payrolls as possible.

Yes, but then the basis for consumption is eliminated too, when you don't earn anything you can't spend anything...

Shami-Amourae
12th May 2016, 12:30 PM
http://img.4plebs.org/boards/pol/image/1463/07/1463079968372.jpg
>Wendy’s (WEN) said that self-service ordering kiosks will be made available across its 6,000-plus restaurants in the second half of the year as minimum wage hikes and a tight labor market push up wages

http://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/73809874
http://www.investors.com/politics/policy/wendys-serves-up-kiosks-as-wages-rise-hits-fast-food-group/

:rolleyes:
The ignorant Spic or Nigger that has to try to decipher the racist white man words on the screen will still probably fuck up with these new kiosks.

Neuro
12th May 2016, 05:58 PM
http://img.4plebs.org/boards/pol/image/1463/07/1463079968372.jpg
>Wendy’s (WEN) said that self-service ordering kiosks will be made available across its 6,000-plus restaurants in the second half of the year as minimum wage hikes and a tight labor market push up wages

http://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/73809874
http://www.investors.com/politics/policy/wendys-serves-up-kiosks-as-wages-rise-hits-fast-food-group/

:rolleyes:
The ignorant Spic or Nigger that has to try to decipher the racist white man words on the screen will still probably fuck up with these new kiosks.

Deport them. Africa is a big continent. They shouldn't have to suffer white racism any longer... We should even make it a fortress Africa. No white person should ever be able to go there and exploit them any more. The whites in Africa could be given houses free of charge in Detroit, and other hellholes, and they would recover in no time...

hoarder
12th May 2016, 06:25 PM
Who the hell eats at Wendy's?

If robots are doing menial tasks, do we need third world immigrants to do the work?

Can Negroes repair robotic equipment?

osoab
12th May 2016, 07:14 PM
How often do those screens get cleaned?

Jewboo
12th May 2016, 07:25 PM
How often do those screens get cleaned?



https://i.ytimg.com/vi/5dC6eDmpKN8/hqdefault.jpg http://lets-have-a-beer.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/keaton_splash-1.jpg

Joshua01
12th May 2016, 08:12 PM
If you eat fast food crap you deserve what you get

Glass
12th May 2016, 08:28 PM
How often do those screens get cleaned?

yes and by who?

I'm at the point where carrying a couple disposable gloves seems like a good idea for using the atm or handling a shopping cart/basket. Of course I prefer cash and I never think of doing it with cash. Working retail in a low class area full of alcoholics etc for a few years, I saw where money "comes from". I used to have a tray that they would have to put the money into. Then it was tipped into a zip bag. Someone else's problem after that.

Jewboo
12th May 2016, 08:51 PM
yes and by who?

I'm at the point where carrying a couple disposable gloves seems like a good idea for using the atm or handling a shopping cart/basket.



Just never touch/rub your eyes or nose without first washing your hands. When returning home immediately wash your hands.

Disposable gloves will just spread cooties to your steering wheel and door knobs etc...