Is programming the perfect robot job? Will I be able to go to work, not talk to anyone , then go home? If so I'm sold.
No. In most cases it's teamwork (think about it, large software projects can not be completed by a single person), and in some cases you also talk with the client
not programming but a lot of robots are IT specialists.
there are no robots that can actually code well anyway, you're talking about people who don't understand natural languages, so forget about programming languages.
if you don't want to be in IT fixing printers and making logins, you could always be a technician for a small laboratory or repair shop. don't really have to deal with anyone. warehouse work and security are also options for dipshit robots.
>>35709901
>IT specialists.
Hows the pay?
>>35709957
considering you will never travel or go out, it's a life of luxury. like 40k in a regular city.
>>35709857
Yea but a good side to that kind of interaction is that it's about something a robot would be comfortable and knowledgeable with.
>>35709773
>Will I be able to go to work, not talk to anyone , then go home?
you should probably get this out of your head, m8. any job that employs more than one person is going to require you to interact with (at least) coworkers at some point.
>>35709773
it takes a SHITLOAD of effort and motivation to become a proffesional (paid) programmer if coding isn't your natural passion (and since you're here you probably have no passions ), especially now that Junior Programmer jobs require you to know lots of other APIs, frameworks and libraries
somehow nobody ever mentions that