This is supposed to be a book review, but seems to be mostly uninformed blithering by the reviewer.<p>Actual physical robots still aren't very good at dealing with the real world and cost too much. Progress is being made, but it's slow. Having been in the field, it's been discouraging how slow. Robot manipulation in unstructured environments is still very weak. "Pick up thing and put it somewhere" works reasonably well. Beyond that, performance is poor.<p>The robot cost problem is severe. Look at prices on industrial robots or intelligent farming equipment.<p>On the other hand, jobs which involve sitting at a desk and dealing with inputs and outputs which come in via wires (or paper, for retro outfits) are looking vulnerable. If they haven't been automated already. Computers are just so cheap now.<p>This leads to "Machines should think, people should work." Computers are better at organization and scheduling than humans. Humans are better at the grunt work, for now. Consider Uber. Or Amazon's order-fulfillment operations. It's not clear how far that concept will reach. HouseCall tried to do it for plumbers and repair services, but didn't get much traction. Uber is in a space where the product is uniform and the pricing model is simple. HouseCall is not.<p>After reading a review like this, it occurs to me that it's probably not too hard to write a program to review popular non-fiction books. Grind through the text. Run each chapter through a summarizer like the one that used to come with Microsoft Word. From the summary, find key phrases and look them up with Google. Find popular comments on the same subject from people with some notability. Look at the Amazon sales statistics and generate some prose using a modified business earnings story generator. Generate a clickbait title and feed into the Demand Media or AOL content mills.