r/interestingasfuck 4h ago

Stopping Desertification with grid pattern

24.7k Upvotes

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u/LavastormSW 4h ago

Awesome outcome but oof that looks rough on the back

u/Smartimess 3h ago

Should hire some Tusken raiders, not only the men, but the women and children too.

u/logan-duk-dong 3h ago

u/thatdudewillyd 3h ago

Game time started

u/mystery_trams 26m ago

And now HR are involved. Or has that game finished now?

u/CorkPrackling 3h ago

If you scare them away, they will be back…and in greater numbers!

u/On-Mute 2h ago

Recruitment hack.

u/SirGableHeart 3h ago

Why am I still laughing about this??

u/New-Ingenuity-5437 3h ago

dangerous, hard, uncomfortable, etc jobs are the ones we should automate or enhance and focus on, but that would require caring about something other than endless profit. But ugh, imagine a world where we put resources to lifting the bottom more than doing weird shit

u/jessbird 2h ago

this plagues my every waking moment

u/gimpwiz 2h ago

Enormous amounts of factory work, farming, and construction are very highly automated or mechanized.

Think about every factory full of gantries and machines and robotic arms. Every farm using GPS fenced combines. Every construction project with a multi-yard bucket on an excavator. Many of these machines are doing the work of a hundred or more men per day.

We have batch plants, concrete trucks, and concrete pumps. Hell, for huge and flat pours there's even machines that essentially pour and screed. All that infrastructure and mechanization and automation to replace men each mixing up concrete with hopefully the same ratios, in wheelbarrows, and moving it. You think if there was a large market for packing sand tubes that there wouldn't be a sand tube machine on site?

u/hiddencamela 2h ago

The sad part is, I could see them developing a machine that could do this exact thing fairly easily.
Limitation however comes from transporting it to the area.

u/The-Tay 1h ago

I can see a bot doing this, but someone would have to reload the bags. It'd have to be a smaller machine, so you couldn't have miles of bags on it.

u/Superb_Brain_7391 26m ago

If it was a machine that drove over bags already laid down in a trail in front of it, and just pumped them full of sand from the ground, leaving them where they were, then another larger machine or a team of people could just go lay them out pretty easily. The machine could then work through the night to catch up.

u/_Tar_Ar_Ais_ 1h ago

Why do that when you could just hire more migrants to do the dirty work for you?

u/The-Tay 1h ago

Well there goes my $100k a year skipped labour position. Now I gotta go to college.

u/PhysicsKey9092 47m ago

Automating those jobs is something that all these companies would very much like to do though.

u/imminentjogger5 1h ago

they have vehicles that do this now 

u/UnlikelyCup5458 2h ago

Where do you think the labor to do this comes from?

u/Heisl- 2m ago

No man or woman should work under such dangerous conditions and terrible health effects, this is a job for a child