“‘tech Economics’ Tag”,2019-09-13 (; backlinks):
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Bibliography for tag
economics/automation, most recent first: 4 related tags, 148 annotations, & 61 links (parent).
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- “Getting AI Datacenters in the UK: Why the UK Needs to Create Special Compute Zones; and How to Do It”, et al 2024
- “More to Lose: The Adverse Effect of High Performance Ranking on Employees’ Pre-Implementation Attitudes Toward the Integration of Powerful AI Aids”, SimanTov-2024
- “McDonald’s Touchscreen Kiosks Were Feared As Job Killers. Instead, Something Surprising Happened”
- “[Yacht Laptops: More Dakka]”, 6510 2024
- “Philippines’ Call Centers Navigate AI Impact on Jobs”
- “AI Doesn’t Kill Jobs? Tell That to Freelancers: There’s Now Data to Back up What Freelancers Have Been Saying for Months”, 2024
- “Election Workers Are Drowning in Records Requests. AI Chatbots Could Make It Worse: Experts Worry That Election Deniers Could Weaponize Chatbots to Overwhelm and Slow down Local Officials”, 2024
- “Generative AI and the Future of Work: A Reappraisal”, 2024
- “Answering the Call of Automation: How the Labor Market Adjusted to Mechanizing Telephone Operation”, 2024
- “Who Is AI Replacing? The Impact of Generative AI on Online Freelancing Platforms”, et al 2024
- “Over 3 Decades, Tech Obliterated Media: My Front-Row Seat to a Slow-Moving Catastrophe”, 2024
- “Thousands of AI Authors on the Future of AI”, et al 2024
- “Generative AI Is Already Widespread in the Public Sector”, et al 2024
- “Artificial Intelligence in the Knowledge Economy”, 2023
- “AI and Jobs: Has the Inflection Point Arrived? Evidence from an Online Labor Platform”, et al 2023
- “Consulting Giants See AI Shaving Years Off the Path to Partner”, 2023
- “Computer Center Sabotage, 1968–3197153ya: Luddism, Black Studies, and the Diversion of Technological Progress”, 2023
- “Explosive Growth from AI Automation: A Review of the Arguments”, 2023
- “”Generate” the Future of Work through AI: Empirical Evidence from Online Labor Markets”, et al 2023
- “LLMs As Workers in Human-Computational Algorithms? Replicating Crowdsourcing Pipelines With LLMs”, et al 2023
- “Online Appendices for ‘Structural Change and Internal Labor Migration: Evidence from the Great Depression’”, Boone & Wilse-2023
- “Structural Change and Internal Labor Migration: Evidence from the Great Depression”, Boone & Wilse-2023
- “Combining Human Expertise With Artificial Intelligence: Experimental Evidence from Radiology”, et al 2023
- “People Hire Phone Bots to Torture Telemarketers: AI Software and Voice Cloners Simulate Distracted Saps Willing to Stay on the Phone Forever—Or Until Callers Finally Give Up”, 2023
- “Appendix for Online Publication ‘Do Robots Increase Wealth Dispersion?’, Et Al 2023”, et al 2023
- “Do Robots Increase Wealth Dispersion?”, et al 2023
- “Today Was the First Day That I Could Definitively Say That GPT-4 Has Saved Me a Substantial Amount of Tedious Work”, 2023
- “Generative AI at Work”, et al 2023
- “When and How Artificial Intelligence Augments Employee Creativity”, et al 2023
- “GPTs Are GPTs: An Early Look at the Labor Market Impact Potential of Large Language Models”, et al 2023
- “The Characteristics and Geographic Distribution of Robot Hubs in US Manufacturing Establishments”, et al 2023
- “GPT-3 As Knowledge Worker: A Zero-Shot Evaluation of AI CPA Capabilities”, et al 2023
- “On the Feasibility of Technosocialism”, 2023
- “Exposure to Automation Explains Religious Declines”, et al 2023
- “AI, Ageing and Brain-Work Productivity: Technological Change in Professional Japanese Chess”, 2022
- “Will the AI Revolution Cause a Great Divergence?”, et al 2022
- “The Wild, Wonderful World of Estate Sales: The Estate-Sale Industry Is Fragile and Persistent in a Way That Doesn’t Square With the Story of the World As We Have Come to Expect It”, 2022
- “Latency”, 2022
- “The Rise of the Machines: Automation, Horizontal Innovation, and Income Inequality”, 2022
- “Robots and Firm Investment”, 2022
- “What Is the Point of Computers? A Question for Pure Mathematicians”, 2021
- “Hyperspecialization and Hyperscaling: A Resource-Based Theory of the Digital Firm”, et al 2021
- “Cognitive Performance in Remote Work: Evidence from Professional Chess”, et al 2021
- “Technological Change and Obsolete Skills: Evidence from Men’s Professional Tennis”, 2021
- “On the Opportunities and Risks of Foundation Models”, et al 2021
- “Does the Rise of Robotic Technology Make People Healthier?”, 2021
- “The ‘Sailing-Ship Effect’ As a Technological Principle”, et al 2021
- “The Life Cycle of Businesses and Their Internal Organization”, et al 2021
- “ChinAI #137: Year 3 of ChinAI: Reflections on the Newsworthiness of Machine Translation”, 2021
- “Film Festivals Are Evolving for the Better: COVID-19 Is Making Big, Week-Long Gatherings of Cinephiles Complicated, If Not Impossible. What Emerges in Their Place Could Change the Cinema Landscape”, 2021
- “The Productivity J-Curve: How Intangibles Complement General Purpose Technologies”, et al 2021
- “Why Working From Home Will Stick”, et al 2020
- “The 2020s Political Economy of Machine Translation”, 2020
- “Industry Concentration and Information Technology”, 2020
- “Superexponential [Modeling the Human Trajectory]”, 2020
- “Modeling the Human Trajectory”, 2020
- “Transatlantic Technologies: The Role of ICT in the Evolution of US and European Productivity Growth”, 2020
- “AI Helps Warehouse Robots Pick Up New Tricks: Backed by Machine Learning Luminaries, Covariant.ai’s Bots Can Handle Jobs Previously Needing a Human Touch”, 2020
- “Testing the Automation Revolution Hypothesis”, 2019
- “Automation As Colonization Wave (OB)”, 2019
- “‘What’s Wrong With The Way I Talk?’ The Effect Of Sound Motion Pictures On Actor Careers”, 2019
- “Does Machine Translation Affect International Trade? Evidence from a Large Digital Platform”, et al 2019b
- “The Robot Revolution: Managerial and Employment Consequences for Firms”, et al 2019
- “Is an Army of Robots Marching on Chinese Jobs?”, 2019
- “Artificial Intelligence and the Modern Productivity Paradox: A Clash of Expectations and Statistics”, et al 2019c
- “‘Automation’ of Manufacturing in the Late 19th Century: The Hand and Machine Labor Study”, et al 2019
- “Profiling the International Academic Ghost Writers Who Are Providing Low-Cost Essays and Assignments for the Contract Cheating Industry”, 2018
- “Hyperbolic Growth”, 2017
- “The Price of Nails Since 1700: Even Simple Products Experienced Large Price Declines”, 2017
- “The Economic Impact of Moore’s Law: Evidence from When It Faltered”, 2017
- “No Great Technological Stagnation”, 2016
- “Before The Startup”, 2014
- “Is US Economic Growth Over? Faltering Innovation Confronts the 6 Headwinds”, 2012
- “Dispelling the Myth of Robotic Efficiency: Why Human Space Exploration Will Tell Us More about the Solar System Than Will Robotic Exploration Alone”, 2012
- “Hall’s Law: The 19th Century Prequel to Moore’s Law”, 2012
- “Americans Do IT Better: US Multinationals and the Productivity Miracle”, et al 2012b
- “Economic Growth Given Machine Intelligence”, 2009
- “InterNyet: Why the Soviet Union Did Not Build a Nationwide Computer Network”, 2008
- “Economics Of The Singularity: Stuffed into Skyscrapers by the Billion, Brainy Bugbots Will Be the Knowledge Workers of the Future”, 2008
- “The Economics of Has-Beens”, Mac2004
- “Computing Productivity: Firm-Level Evidence”, 2003
- “The Skill Content of Recent Technological Change: An Empirical Exploration”, et al 2003
- “Technical Change, Inequality, and the Labor Market”, 2002
- “Long-Term Growth As A Sequence of Exponential Models”, 2000
- “Beyond Computation: Information Technology, Organizational Transformation and Business Performance”, 2000
- “Certificates and Computers: The Remaking of Wall Street, 1967–4197153ya”, 2000
- “Balancing Act: How to Capture Knowledge Without Killing It”, 2000
- “Beyond the Productivity Paradox”, 1998
- “Office Productivity: the Impacts of Staffing, Intellectual Specialization and Technology”, 1996
- “Organizational Transformation As Punctuated Equilibrium: An Empirical Test”, 1994
- “Don’t Fire the Clerical Staff!”, 1992b
- “Survey Finds Low Office Productivity Linked to Staffing Imbalances”, 1992
- “Lisp: Good News, Bad News, How to Win Big [Worse Is Better]”, 1991
- “The Dynamo and the Computer: A Historical Perspective on the Modern Productivity Paradox”, 1990
- “Computer and Dynamo: The Modern Productivity Paradox In A Not-Too Distant Mirror”, 1989
- “We’d Better Watch Out [Review of Manufacturing Matters: The Myth of the Post-Industrial Economy, 1987]”, 1987
- “Designing Organizations for an Information-Rich World”, 1971
- “Optimum Location in Spatial Competition”, 1941
- “Increasing Returns and Economic Progress”, 1928
- “Rise of the Robots Speeds Up in Pandemic With U.S. Labor Scarce”
- “What Explains the Evolution of Management Models over the past Two Centuries?”
- “The Soul of Maintaining a New Machine—First Draft”, 2024
- “Technology Transfer and Early Industrial Development: The Case of the Sino-Soviet Alliance”
- “Remote Work and the Future of Innovation”
- “Beware of the Robot Pharmacist”, 2024
- “The End of Starsky Robotics”
- “The Poor ROI of Autonomy. A Product Dive on How Most ROI Comes…”, Seltz-2024
- “The Puzzle of the Missing Robots”
- “Reflections on Palantir [After Leaving]”, 2024
- “Overboard On Offshore Fears”
- “‘Rasmussen and Practical Drift: Drift towards Danger and the Normalization of Deviance’, 2017”
- “No Human Can Match This High-Speed Box-Unloading Robot Named After a Pickle”
- “An Army of Grain-Harvesting Robots Marches Across Russia”
- “Today’s Robotic Surgery Turns Surgical Trainees Into Spectators”
- “Roomba Inventor Joe Jones on His New Weed-Killing Robot, and What’s So Hard About Consumer Robotics”
- “Selling Software To Large Businesses”, 2024
- “Winged Luddites: Aviators Are the Biggest Threat to Carrier Aviation”
- “The Robots Are Coming for Garment Workers”
- “Alibaba’s Driverless Robots Just Made Their One Millionth E-Commerce Delivery”
- “The March of Robots Into Chinese Factories”
- “The U.S. Productivity Slowdown: an Economy-Wide and Industry-Level Analysis”
- “General Purpose Technologies and the Rise & Fall of Great Powers”, 2024
- “Where Are The Robotic Bricklayers?”
- “Japan Is Both Obsessed With and Resistant to Robots”
- “Kai-Fu Lee on How Covid Spurs China’s Great Robotic Leap Forward”
- “Economists Are Revising Their Views on Robots and Jobs”
- “What Is It like to Work in an Ethiopian Factory?”
- “Is Software Eating the World?”
- “Welcoming Our New Robot Overlords”
- “The Age of Robot Farmers”
- “Paging Dr. Robot”
- “What Robots Can—And Can’t—Do for the Old and Lonely”
- “Invasion of the Robot Umpires”
- “Robotic Milkers and an Automated Greenhouse: Inside a High-Tech Small Farm”
- “The Robots Are Coming for Phil in Accounting”
- “‘We Don’t Need Another Michelangelo’: In Italy, It’s Robots’ Turn to Sculpt”
- “A New Generation of AI-Powered Robots Is Taking over Warehouses”
- “How Graze Mowing’s Self-Driving Mower Is Disrupting the $100 Billion Commercial Landscaping Industry”
- “Tog’s Paradox [Jevons Paradox for Software Features]”
- “Turns Out the Dot-Com Bust’s Worst Flops Were Actually Fantastic Ideas”
- “Inside the Amazon Warehouse Where Humans and Machines Become One”
- “Robots Are Fueling the Quiet Ascendance of the Electric Motor”
- “As Robots Fill the Workplace, They Must Learn to Get Along”
- “These Robots Follow You to Learn Where to Go”
- “Robots Invade the Construction Site”
- “You Can Now Buy Spot the Robot Dog—If You’ve Got $74,500”
- “The Robots Are Coming for Garment Workers. That’s Good for the U.S., Bad for Poor Countries: Automation Is Reaching into Trades That Once Seemed Immune, Transforming Sweatshops in Places like Bangladesh and Bringing Production back to America”
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