Don't be dissin' Burgmans - they rule !!!Oh, thought this was going to be a thread about Burgmans...
If you read the article it's not just about money, it's also about job security in the face of increased automation.Ah yes... the ol Jimmy Hoffa style of negotiations
... we call that extortion
This guy HAS to go away. There is a vid of an interview with him saying (I'm paraphrasing) "You can't have an economy without us. Screw around and find out"
NOPE
Job security just because a role was once required is a race to the bottom. IIRC, every piece of construction equipment over a certain weight that operates in NYC requires a full-time union oiler left over from steam days. Wtf. And then we wonder why everything is so expensive.If you read the article it's not just about money, it's also about job security in the face of increased automation.
What happens when the robot drops your container ? Too bad, so sad...
They can and they doIf robots can do the job faster/cheaper/better,
At that point, it seems cheaper to setup something like shippsy 101 miles from the dock. If the driver happens to get a change order before arriving at shippsy, whoops, things happen.I don't if the STILL do, but Vancouver docks had a rule that if a seacan was destined withing 100miles of the dock, it had to be "de stuffed", unloaded on the dock. (they'd take the stuff out of one can and put it in another... which quickly morphed into sitting beside the can for 4 hours and doing nothing... and getting paid for it)
Kinda negates the "containerized transport", and is just a make work project for Vancouver longshoremen... which is why most seacans going to Vancouver get unloaded in LA, and trucked... it's cheaper.
How do you get a new big screen if the can never gets open?They can and they do
There are now container yard were the only thing us humans do is monitor the equipment.
No place for a dumb longshoreman.
I don't if the STILL do, but Vancouver docks had a rule that if a seacan was destined withing 100miles of the dock, it had to be "de stuffed", unloaded on the dock. (they'd take the stuff out of one can and put it in another... which quickly morphed into sitting beside the can for 4 hours and doing nothing... and getting paid for it)
Kinda negates the "containerized transport", and is just a make work project for Vancouver longshoremen... which is why most seacans going to Vancouver get unloaded in LA, and trucked... it's cheaper.
Can my cousin resurrect his VHS / Beta rental business and be guaranteed customers? His staff wants their jobs back. Forever.If you read the article it's not just about money, it's also about job security in the face of increased automation.
Bring back Blockbuster !!!Can my cousin resurrect his VHS / Beta rental business and be guaranteed customers? His staff wants their jobs back. Forever.
If they don’t like automation, take away their climate controlled tow motors, replace them with pump trucks.If you read the article it's not just about money, it's also about job security in the face of increased automation.