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Secure Your Future with an Understanding of Robotics

Author: Frank Rock
by Frank Rock
Posted: Apr 11, 2019

It is an unfortunate reality that the future of the modern workplace lies in automation. Humans will begin losing their jobs because a suitably advanced robot can do it better than they can, and for a cheaper price.

If you’re below the age of 30 right now, it is likely that you will see automation begin to seriously impact certain industries before you’ve reached the big five-oh. Something like long-distance trucking will be devastated by the innovation of self-driving cars, and manufacturing jobs will begin to be phased out as more autonomous robots are developed that can do precision-based tasks.

If you’re involved in robotics, you have an advantage over your peers when it comes to the future. Your understanding of a speed controller or brushless motor might be what guarantees you have a job when it looks like everyone else is losing theirs.

It is grim to think about, isn’t it? Yet it’s a very real concern, and economists worldwide know that it’s coming. Preparing for this future is just a good move, especially if you have a family to take care of. While there are many jobs exiting the workforce, there are also jobs entering it.

In particular, there will be many jobs available that are dedicated to the development, construction, operation, and maintenance of these would-be job-takers. Possessing an already-existent understanding of at least one or two of those categories arms you with advanced knowledge that sets you apart from the competition.

In other words, it makes you unique. It drives down potential education costs and it prepares you for a whole new way of work. While the speed controllers you work with aren’t as advanced as the ones in a factory, and while the brushless motors you tinker on are certainly nowhere near as powerful or large as the ones you’ll see in a manufacturing plant, the principles are often identical. You’re just working with a much larger model.

There are several careers you can get into in order to secure your future. Each will differ on how involved you are with robotics directly, but they all involve them. At a minimum, each career requires that you understand how robotics work, and having an intimate understanding of the hardware involved will give you a boost.

Some of these careers include, but are not limited to:

  • Mechanical Engineers
  • Aerospace Engineers
  • Electro-Mechanical Technicians
  • Sales Engineers
  • Information Research Scientists
  • Software Developers
  • Operators

A solid understanding of technical ideas will be essential, but if you’re already involved with robotics in your personal life it’s likely you already possess this.

There will be many avenues available to you in a robotics-based career, and it is likely that you can acquire a position that heavily involves other industries. For example, an information research scientist that works for a robotics provider will obviously be dealing with robotics-based data… but the job itself is more in the realm of statistics and analysis.

If you would like to find a way to more directly make use of your pre-existing knowledge—to really put all those speed controller and brushless motor facts to good use—a career in the realm of mechanical engineering may be the way to go. You’ll work directly with hardware in your day-to-day life, and you’ll constantly be seeking ways to improve upon technology that has already been refined to a great extent.

No matter which path you take, your future will be secure if you get a head start on learning the skills that will dominate the workforce when the day comes.

About the Author

I am frank and provide the content which is based on technology and electric motors.

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Author: Frank Rock

Frank Rock

Member since: Nov 24, 2018
Published articles: 11

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