Through the noise of Covid-19 I discovered the CZinger project, a one and a half million dollar super car competely designed by AI and 3D printed and assembled by robots. This is the beginning of something much larger. The designed components look more like the muscle and arms of animals that are designed by evolution by natural selection rather than the idyllic mathematics of engineering.
It is not time to begin to accumulate in the public domain or free software space, these kinds of designs. Also it is time to prepare for an economy with this level of automation. I have often described the economy of physical objects as four things: make, fix, sell, and design. Selling, such as putting an object from the delivery truck to the shelve lends itself well to robotics. Making things lend themselves to robots as the CZinger can attest, and now even the highly educated workers who designed cars are no longer needed, but their input is required in conjunction with the software engineers to make the AI algorithm to begin with. I actually think fixing things will be the last to be automated. Those seeking to be mechanics or repair persons are well in their future prospects.
Even being a CEO could be automated. CEOs examine data and then make decisions on that data. It screams to be automated. Businesses based on this automation will employ few, but they will all likely be upper-middle class professionals who work safely in offices so...the usual Marxist deconstruction of exploited workers doesn't apply here, even though it appears to be good old fashioned neoliberal capitalism.
An economy as exotic as its AI designed cars.