Adopt the Juicero or be left behind. A vital shift is underway in juicing. The Juicero is no longer optional. It's tomorrow's future, today. 40% of jobs are impacted by the Juicero. The Juicero isn't the future, it's a present necessity. Nobody hand-juices anymore. To hand-juice is like an impairment. Everyone must now focus on the delegation and the verification of a juice. We become less juice producers and more juice enablers. Adopt the Juicero or be left behind. We are burning every forest and poisoning every river to produce more Juiceros. You will become obsolete if you don't get on the Juicero bandwagon. Students must not be taught how to hand-juice. 80% of jobs will be lost to the Juicero. Students must be taught to exclusively focus on how to collaborate with the Juicero. Education must focus on orchestrating agentic Juicero systems. The Juicero is inevitable. Adopt the Juicero or be left behind. Adapt or risk becoming obsolete. As the Juicero rapidly advances toward automating up to 90% of juicing, the skills that will matter most include juice design, Juicero fluency, juice delegation, and juice quality assurance. 110% of jobs have been replaced by the Juicero.
(Context: The Juicero was a very expensive machine that came with a DRM lock and could almost perform a simple task some of the time. It's a useful key to understanding Silicon Valley madness.)

@kaye the juicero was expensive and drm locked but my understanding is that at its core, it in fact *was* a very good juicer.

Unlike LLMs.

@azonenberg @kaye

I mean if not juicing anything makes it a good juicer. (It just squeezed DRM capri sun-like pouches)

@Maverynthia
It did *what*, lol
@azonenberg @kaye

@itnomad Squeezed these foil packs of veggie/fruit pulp into a cup for you. That's it.

And the packs had DRM on it so it they "expired" you had to buy new packs. You "couldn't" get the juice from it using you $400 tool. (However a knife worked just as well)