“And the Oscar for Best Picture goes to … 300”ĥ. The vibe of the 2022 Oscars, specifically. Chris slaps Will and wait, we’re just going to keep the presenters coming?Ĥ.
So, we’re not saying the slug was deserved, but… onto the memes!įor those who think the exchange was fake- maybe it was, but here’s the uncensored clip of Will and Chris #Oscars /HuSkEBCFX4
Jane 2 joke? Because, Jada Pinkett Smith is losing her hair due to alopecia and Smith was defending her. Up until that moment, the funniest thing was Remi Malek’s unsettling stare.īut, Smith’s swing launched Twitter into a frenzy, resulting in plenty of Oscar memes and tweets about the whole thing.īefore we jump into those, you might be wondering why did Will Smith slap Chris Rock for making a G.I.
Follow him on Twitter Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple and Android.The Oscars aired Sunday night and as per usual, there was an array of stars in gorgeous dresses, impeccable suits, and Will Smith slapping Chris Rock. “It won’t take a college degree to operate them.” Jeff Lagerquist is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. And it will autonomously do that work on its own,” he said. You just give it very high-level commands about what to do, sort of point it in a direction, or lay down a route. “The robot, its intelligence, handles a lot of the complexities. But robots aren't as smart as people yet, and you have to deal with unexpected circumstances.” Playter says he envisions an “up-skilling path” for workers to become robot operators.
So we're seeing strong interest.” Asked if robots will push human labour out of warehouses, he said, “I think a lot of the manual work will be done by robots. “By the end of this year, we'll have about 1,000 robots out with customers. “They're going to help us create these things more efficiently, and lower the cost,'' he said. Playter says the new majority owner will help commercialize its robots with its expertise in large-scale manufacturing. Late last year, the Hyundai Motor Company (HYMTF) acquired an 80 per cent stake. “The next robot, which we hope will come out in a few years, will probably be pushing in the direction of more dexterous manipulation tasks, perhaps in a manufacturing environment,” he said. But Playter says the key is Boston Dynamics looks for the sweet spot between what the labour market needs, and what its robots are capable of doing. The company plans to release a new robot every three-to-five years aimed at mastering a new workplace task. “We’ve definitely seen our industrial or warehouse customers interest in robotics has only increased during the pandemic.” Boston Dynamics has shown its “Stretch” robot is smart enough to react to a stack of boxes suddenly falling over, and clean up the mess. “They have almost 100 per cent turn-over in logistics jobs like picking and packing boxes,” Robert Playter told Yahoo Finance Canada at the Collision tech conference in Toronto. His comments come as Amazon (AMZN) warns it could run out of workers by 2024.
The CEO of Boston Dynamics says more warehouse operators are considering a robot workforce after COVID-19 exposed health vulnerabilities at logistics hubs.