What To Do When Machines Do Everything. Roehrig Paul

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Название What To Do When Machines Do Everything
Автор произведения Roehrig Paul
Жанр Зарубежная образовательная литература
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Издательство Зарубежная образовательная литература
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isbn 9781119278689



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      Malcolm Frank

      What to Do When Machines Do Everything

      What to Do When Machines Do Everything

      How to Get Ahead in a World of AI, Algorithms, Bots, and Big Data

      Malcolm Frank,

      Paul Roehrig, and Ben Pring

      Cover image: Kirill_makarov/Shutterstock.com

      Cover design: theBookDesigners

      Copyright © 2017 by Cognizant Technology Solutions U.S. Corporation. All rights reserved

      Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey

      Published simultaneously in Canada

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      Wiley publishes in a variety of print and electronic formats and by print-on-demand. Some material included with standard print versions of this book may not be included in e-books or in print-on-demand. If this book refers to media such as a CD or DVD that is not included in the version you purchased, you may download this material at http://booksupport.wiley.com. For more information about Wiley products, visit www.wiley.com.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:

      Names: Frank, Malcolm, author. | Roehrig, Paul, author. | Pring, Benjamin, 1962- author.

      Title: What to do when machines do everything: how to get ahead in a world of AI, algorithms, bots, and big data / Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig, and Ben Pring.

      Description: Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., [2017] | Includes index.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2016049472 (print) | LCCN 2017004469 (ebook) | ISBN 9781119278665 (cloth) | ISBN 9781119278672 (pdf) | ISBN 9781119278689 (epub)

      Subjects: LCSH: Automation. | Information technology – Economic aspects. | Technological innovations – Economic aspects.

      Classification: LCC HD6331 .F664 2017 (print) | LCC HD6331 (ebook) | DDC 658/.05 – dc23

      LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016049472

      PREFACE

      We know what you might be thinking: When machines do everything, what am I going to do? It's a good question.

      If machines can do everything, then how are humans going to make a living? How are we going to pay the rent or mortgage or put food on the table? How are we going to survive when software eats all the knowledge work?

      Even if you have reached a stage in your career in which you feel safe from the rise of the new machines, how will your children thrive when computers can out-think, out-work, and out-manage them? What do they study? Where do they focus? And will they have any chance of living a life as good as yours?

      At work, how should your company be structured when so much can now be automated? What will happen to all those middle-class, middle-management knowledge jobs that currently stand as the economic bedrock of our society?

      These are all good questions – the right questions – for indeed, something very big is going on.

      The rise of artificial intelligence is the great story of our time. Decades in the making, the smart machine is leaving the laboratory and, with increasing speed, is infusing itself into many aspects of our lives: our phones, our cars, the planes we fly in, the way we bank, and the way we choose what music to listen to.

      Within the next few years, AI will be all around us, embedded in many higher-order pursuits. It will educate our children, heal our sick, and lower our energy bills. It will catch criminals, increase crop yields, and help us uncover new worlds of augmented and virtual reality.

      Machines are getting smarter every day and doing more and more; they will soon change our lives and our work in ways that are easy to imagine but hard to predict. So what does one do?

      These are the questions that have been going through our minds for a while, too. Anyone with a casual interest in the future can see these issues swirling through the zeitgeist at the moment: in movies (Ex Machina and Her), on TV (Black Mirror, Humans, and Battlestar Galactica), in books (Superintelligence and Rise of the Robots), and in countless articles in the press. But we have more than a casual interest in the future.

      As the leaders of Cognizant's Center for the Future of Work, it is our job to figure out how the future of work works. We engage with many of the world's leading companies, universities, analysts, technologists, and economists to make sense of the great change we are all experiencing as well as to fathom how work will be reimagined, reconfigured, and restructured in the years to come. We do this to understand how new technology will shape the opportunities we have and the threats we face and to foresee how man and machine will relate and coexist.

      So we've spent the last three years thinking about what to do when machines do everything, separating the hype from the reality on the front lines of global business.

      The book you're holding contains our answers to these questions.

      The bottom line? It's going to be all right. In fact, better than all right, because AI is about to usher in a new industrial revolution that, for those who manage it properly, will generate significant economic growth.

      Will the new machines displace many current workers? Yes. However, on a larger scale, new machines will also create work that is better, more productive, more satisfying than ever before. The new machines will raise living standards and usher in a period of widely distributed economic growth that will be far stronger than any we've seen in the Western world during the past 50 years.

      But there's a catch, which is expressed in the “what to do” part of the title of this book.

      You and the company you work for and represent must accept, embrace, and leverage the fact that, minute by minute, machines are doing more and more of the work we perform today. That is the underlying assumption at the heart of this book.

      This is where many people get stuck. They start tumbling down existential wormholes: Will machines need us? Who will control the machines? Will machines act in the best interests of humanity? Again, these are great questions that prompt fascinating discussions, all of which we like having as much as the next person, particularly with