The house is very clean, seems to be working well.
I am very tired of working, she comes one day and takes two days off.
We hear many such phrases in our daily life, because it is difficult to find domestic helpers in Pakistan.
Whether they are housewives or working women, the topic of their conversation is always the 'house help' required for household work.
But did you know that this problem is going to be solved over the next decade as experts say that by 2033, about 39 percent of the tasks at home and caring for your loved ones will be automated by robots.
Researchers from Japan and the UK asked 65 artificial intelligence experts to predict the use of automated technology in common household tasks over the next 10 years.
After which the experts said that during the next ten years, most of your home grocery shopping will be done under automated technology systems, that is, robots or machines will do the shopping for you, but children or the elderly will be taken care of. There will be less reliance on artificial intelligence.
The research has been published in the Plus One journal.
Researchers from the University of Oxford and Japan's Ochanomizu University wanted to know what impact robots might have on household chores. He also tried to know the answer to the question that if robots will do our household chores, will they at least pick up the garbage for us?
The researchers observed that robots designed 'for household tasks' such as robot vacuum cleaners 'have become the most mass-produced and sold robots in the world.'
The team of researchers asked 29 AI experts from the UK and 36 AI experts from Japan for their predictions regarding the use of robots in the home.
The researchers found that male experts in the UK were more optimistic about home automation than their female counterparts, while the opposite was the case in Japan.
But the tasks that experts think automation could be different from are taking care of your loved ones, teaching your child, spending time with your child," says Oxford Internet Institute researcher Dr Lulu Shi. Or caring for an elderly family member, only 28 percent are likely to use robots.'
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