Back to the future
Machines, at the end of the day, are just tools, and tools need to be used by people

One piece of Lang’s imagined urban dystopia that hopefully won’t pan out is the grim imagery of slave-workers moving up and down in cage-elevators and subsisting in underground quarters—in sharp contrast to the opulence on the surface. True, the ugly shadow of inequality looms large over the fastest growing major economy in the world, but workers—not just in India—may have something more in their face to contend with in the near future: Their jobs being taken up by metallic brains, artificial hands and Maria the Maschinenmensch (literally ‘machine-person’ in German).
In India, make that ‘young people’. The billion-dollar question is whether India’s much-touted demographic dividend is up to the task of blending its abilities with those of machines. The answer may be yes or no, if you go by the results of a recent survey, which suggests that over half of fresh graduates are not employable. That’s scary, particularly when you club it with the results of another study—that two-thirds of children who joined a primary school in 2016 will end up doing jobs that don’t exist today (go to Pankti Mehta Kadakia’s ‘Back to the Blackboard’, page 36).
Many of the jobs of tomorrow may sound fanciful, perhaps like much of cinematic sci-fi. But remember that even those made-in-Hollywood blockbusters didn’t do a bad job of imagining the future. Hover cars, iris recognition? You first saw that in 1982. In Blade Runner. Jasodhara Banerjee’s ‘As Strange as Fiction’ (page 60) digs deep into canisters of old movie reels to unearth gadgets and tech that were earlier in the realm of sci-fi but now in our workplaces. The wise man may have been right: “Life can only be understood backwards but it must be lived forwards.”
Best,Brian CarvalhoEditor, Forbes IndiaEmail:Brian.Carvalho@nw18.comTwitter id:@Brianc_Ed
First Published: Aug 03, 2018, 06:40
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