You have a chair for that?
I sometimes just keep mine in the dryer and just pull them out of there as I need them…
No energy to get all of that out and ironed and folded after a day of work more often than not.
Yes they’re crumpled. Watch me not care because me in low energy state is too busy just existing and has no energy left to care for anything I’m not hyper focusing on atm.
Yes, dishwashers and washing machines are awesome inventions. Though you’d still need to be home to unload the laundry, put it on a rack, gather it from the rack, fold it… Always takes me 20min for the process. Similar for the dishwasher, need to load and unload it, do the coated pans and everything made from wood manually, the crusty cake pans… And then you’ll spend some more time cleaning the house because the vacuum robot can’t do stairs, can’t do tables and the kitchen surfaces… I think there’s still some room for improvement.
And while at it, AI should please also check and pay my utility bills, do the tax forms once a year, clean up my 2TB harddrive, find a cheaper car insurance… I mean it doesn’t really do anything useful and I’m still stuck with all the annoying tasks.
Hmmh. I’m not sure if capitalism is of any help here. Rich people have maids and nannys. And old people. For example my neighbour is super old and she has someone help her with the chores. But usually -I think- we’re raised to expect a life without those kinds of (human) servants. I mean it’s mostly expensive because human labour doesn’t scale that way. Everyone need to pay an individual 4h of minimum wage a week plus another time that amount in social security and other charges (or hire an illicit worker). Whereas on the flipside, washing machines are pumped out en masse and that does scale economically. They’re absurdly cheap for what they do, and will pay off after they helped you avoid 3-4 medieval washing days. And it’s not even backbreaking labour any more.
What I meant was, I don’t think “pay a human intelligence to do those things [laundry, dishes] for you” scales well for me. Or the the average person. We regularly don’t make 10x of what a housemaid costs, so we do that job ourselves. Plus, maids aren’t really part of our culture anymore.
What works exceptionally well, though, is machines. I think both my washing machine and my dishwasher do all categories on the Performance–Cost–Convenience. It all comes out clean, they’re absurdly cheap for the labour I don’t have to do. And it’s convenient.
Right… My original comment you responded to was pointing in that direction, which is why it’s confusing. It sounds like you’re debating against yourself 😅
I mean… We already have robots for laundry and dishes
Tell that to the big pile of clean clothes I have sitting on my chair that long to be folded.
You have a chair for that? I sometimes just keep mine in the dryer and just pull them out of there as I need them… No energy to get all of that out and ironed and folded after a day of work more often than not.
Yes they’re crumpled. Watch me not care because me in low energy state is too busy just existing and has no energy left to care for anything I’m not hyper focusing on atm.
Well, they end up on the chair when I have to use the dryer once a week to clean my bed sheets.
Yes, dishwashers and washing machines are awesome inventions. Though you’d still need to be home to unload the laundry, put it on a rack, gather it from the rack, fold it… Always takes me 20min for the process. Similar for the dishwasher, need to load and unload it, do the coated pans and everything made from wood manually, the crusty cake pans… And then you’ll spend some more time cleaning the house because the vacuum robot can’t do stairs, can’t do tables and the kitchen surfaces… I think there’s still some room for improvement.
And while at it, AI should please also check and pay my utility bills, do the tax forms once a year, clean up my 2TB harddrive, find a cheaper car insurance… I mean it doesn’t really do anything useful and I’m still stuck with all the annoying tasks.
So pay a human intelligence to do those things for you :s
Performance–Cost–Convenience, you get 10 points to distribute however you wish.
Hmmh. I’m not sure if capitalism is of any help here. Rich people have maids and nannys. And old people. For example my neighbour is super old and she has someone help her with the chores. But usually -I think- we’re raised to expect a life without those kinds of (human) servants. I mean it’s mostly expensive because human labour doesn’t scale that way. Everyone need to pay an individual 4h of minimum wage a week plus another time that amount in social security and other charges (or hire an illicit worker). Whereas on the flipside, washing machines are pumped out en masse and that does scale economically. They’re absurdly cheap for what they do, and will pay off after they helped you avoid 3-4 medieval washing days. And it’s not even backbreaking labour any more.
Sorry, I’m not really sure what you’re saying, considering your comment I was responding to. Can you rephrase?
What I meant was, I don’t think “pay a human intelligence to do those things [laundry, dishes] for you” scales well for me. Or the the average person. We regularly don’t make 10x of what a housemaid costs, so we do that job ourselves. Plus, maids aren’t really part of our culture anymore.
What works exceptionally well, though, is machines. I think both my washing machine and my dishwasher do all categories on the Performance–Cost–Convenience. It all comes out clean, they’re absurdly cheap for the labour I don’t have to do. And it’s convenient.
Right… My original comment you responded to was pointing in that direction, which is why it’s confusing. It sounds like you’re debating against yourself 😅
Thx. Yeah, I can’t remember what I was thinking 2 weeks ago. Somehow I felt like expanding on my point 😅. I’ll stop now. Have a nice one.
Cheers, you too!