Everyone with your exact job title in your industry vanishes, how long until awful things happen?

ericbomb@lemmy.world to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 114 points –

I'm a support engineer for dental software. So difficult issues won't get immediate resolutions, and instead development will actually have to fix things because offices will be crying at them for a fix instead of at me.

But the world won't end.

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I'm a sysadmin. So like two days tops before absolutely everything stops working, and we resort to loin cloths and spears.

Honestly if the AWS system admins all died at once I think that'll probably be enough to take us down at this point.

Senior SysAdmin here.

48 hours sounds about right. I usually get an email on day 1 of any holiday, and a panicked call on day 2 because something is down.

By day 3 all the gaps are covered by other admins after I point them at the existing documentation, that noone even looked at.

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Network Engineer.

The internet becomes more stable because we stop fiddling with the internet routing protocols.

I knew it! /s

I'm only joking in the kindest way. Please don't turn off my precious Internet.

Yep, I'm one as well. No more routes to fuck up. No more vlans to trunk by accident.

I'm a digital marketer. The world would instantly start improving probably. you're welcome.

My job title is "Team Member" my industry is "Warehousing" the world literally ends before the day is out.

Since you're now unemployed, wanna join my gang and try to take over the local ware house district full of rice so we can try and survive until humanity has fallen and we can survive on foraging?

Oh no, the Business Systems Analysts are gone. Whatever shall we do. Society won't survive like this. Who's gonna analyze business requirements for systems. A tragedy, to be sure. 😶

Just reminds us of how much of a luxury you are and how much we appreciate having you around :)

Yeah. My team will keep producing software, but from now on its whatever the hell we feel like writing.

The good news is everything comes with a pinball mini-game Easter egg.

The bad news is nothing actually works.

Actually... This might be another one where I'm already living in this timeline and every BA I've met was my personal delusion created by my own brain trying to protect itself from the madness...

Farm worker. Food shortage, widespread food shortage. People would have to change their diets within a few weeks, and learn to hunt to avoid starvation in a few months. Unstaffed farms would be cleaned out for immediate food over time, and the price of anything edible not raised on a farm of some kind would shoot to the moon. Any automated farming that a landowner could run would be the way to go, for lack of workers.

Sewage in the street by days end. Resurging preventable diseases long thought vanished by the developed world shortly thereafter.

I love you and greatly appreciate the potentially smelly and possibly unsafe work you do.

Thank you. It's not as bad as most people think. But there is a cornucopia of smells that one must acclimate to.

Thousands of deaths within seconds. Airline pilot

Would auto pilot not keep them in the air for awhile?

I'm not saying it'll be okay, just wouldn't it be more of a creeping dread as panicked flight staff would call air traffic control for help? Then they would be in utter disarray and overwhelmed trying to guide hundreds of planes to land without an experienced pilot? Maybe a few would have retired pilots on board that with a bit of guidance from air traffic they could land...

En-route nothing would happen for a while correct. Plane goes on as long as it has a programmed route to follow and fuel to stay in the air. But keep in mind that, around the planet, thousands of airplanes are about to land right now. Landings are like 95% flown manually so if all those are suddenly empty in the cockpit they’ll crash pretty much immediately.

Yeah but as soon as they get in the flight seat they would blip out of existence. Also I'm not sure but would anyone even be able to open the doors?

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Commercial? How's your job? Just curious coming from someone who once wanted to be a pilot.

Happiness depends heavily on where in the world you are employed by which airline and what you make of it with your personal attitude. The spectrum of work/life balance is huge and payment can range from negative (pay us to allow you to fly for us) to big bucks (who has the time to spend this much?). Different labour rights in different countries like being fired and deported on a whim or strong unions and rights that protect you almost no matter what. How much free time do you have? Both at destination and at home, what is more important for whom? I had to retire due to a brain cancer diagnosis. So medical stuff is another slippery slope. Back pains? Migranes? You’re on your way out. I loved the job though. I was flexible enough to not be bothered by last minute changes to my flight roster or irregular sleep schedules. Not having kids and a stay-at-home wife helped with that as well. (If your partner works as well, the time you actually see each other can get scarce.) This also applies to friends. Wanna go out with me on a Friday? Should have told me two months ago so I could have requested off days… you get the idea.

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There would be a lot fewer old people by the end of the month... (ICU Nurse)

Software developer. Some software would break down immediately, some would break down over time.

We don't know when everything will have broken down. That's where the fun lies 😈

A slow and painful death.

What will get us here in the US first? Exploits discovered to banking infrastructure that can't be patched? A new virus or ransomware that AVs and firewalls can't be updated to stop? Navigation software for satellites and boats not being able to be updated to deal with ever changing environments stopping trade world wide? All our medical data going poof because an auto purge feature of old data forgets how to count?

Who knows! Tomorrow may look the same as today, 3 weeks from now might look about the same, but sooner or later we'll basically all be running windows XP.

Holy shit my job is worthless

Software Engineer. Things might improve, actually.

There are applications where we actually have to adhere to standards.

Yeah, my post was mostly tongue-in-cheek. (I used to be the official-ish PCI guy where I worked, so I know about the standards to which you refer.) But at the same time, if software engineers didn't exist, we soon wouldn't have NFTs or DRM on cars, coffee makers, and garage doors or secret TV signals for spying on you via your smartphone etc.

You don't know what standard I'm talking about.

You also have no idea how much of your daily life relies on software.

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I'm a software dev.

Looking at this thread, Lemmy's userbase would halve.

If all machine operators vanished anything mass produced would stop getting made.

If we thought catalytic converters were being stolen now, now no new ones are being made!

Childcare educator, a large amount of people suddenly wouldn't be able to work because they have no one to watch their children.

I'm an adjunct professor. If every adjunct professor disappeared today, universities would instantly be better for students and professors. Administrators would hate it, though.

Working in science, so I guess nothing bad would happen. However, humanity will stop progressing for a while, until people are replaced.

Oh no, the self proclaimed scientists who never tried to disproved their hypothesis in their life will get even worse!

You'll all be fighting in the streets for food by the end of next week. Logistics literally moves the world. 🚚

You mean the rice I eat that is grown mostly on other side of the world didn't appear at my door step magically???

Yup. I'm a warehouse manager. The logistics/ transportation/ warehousing industry is already stretched disturbingly thin. If we take away the people who run the places, the world will grind to a halt.

I pressed a few buttons on my computer and as a result am expecting a specific product to arrive at my door step later today.

The level organization and infrastructure required to make it so that I can have 1 of like a million products hand delivered to my door within hours of me deciding I want it is staggering to be honest.

I'm a forklift operator. A lot of things would stop outright. That, or become so slow it might as well have stopped.

I feel called out... like probably nothing bad will happen. Is this what a mid-life crisis feels like? Or is it a stroke?

Systems administrator. I am the "OS mechanic" for the computer world. Within weeks, cascading failure on a scale that would last a decade or more

Payroll admin so... if you hadn't specified that's it was just within my industry I think the whole world would come to a standstill by Friday. Lol.

could be next Friday

Yeah, within the next two weeks for sure. Lolol

10 minutes?

I am IT technician and I can’t have a meeting without a user feels their whole world is crashing if I don’t click the scary button for them.

So I don’t want to imagine if suddenly we all disappeared how they would get on. Probably back to paper and pencils.

Pretty sure the internet would collapse in a matter of hours.

(Cloud Infrastructure and Security Engineer)

Quality engineer. Eventually someone would get around to the work I do. But there would be a lot of avoidable slowdowns and stoppages as parts and processes breakdown without the function that intentionally searches out and fixes problems.

Eventually problems would get painful enough, a person would get assigned to fix them.

And then another problem and eventually another person assigned to fix.

And then hey, wouldn't it more efficient if we assign a person to go after all these problems? And what if they could even be proactive enough to fix problems before they got out the door? And what if we called that person's function Quality?

I do SAP development writing ABAP and making forms.

SAP would go bankrupt because their core product is written in an internal language that's ridiculously complicated and takes decades to fully learn.

The businesses would keep using their systems for many years and eventually migrate to better solutions.

So the world definitely won't end for me either.

Sorry, I don't know what SAP or ABAP mean.

I do and it means they get paid large amounts of money and that they can translate a very select list of words from German to English.

The "large amounts of money" part only applies when you work at SAP or far enough away from them.

Doesn’t matter. The world doesn’t depend on it.

It would suck for Walldorf’s tax revenue.

Paramedic. A lot of people would die at home or on the streets. Many hospitals would be overwhelmed with patients that can't leave. Nursing homes would have to actualy take care of and treat people for once. Drunk collage kids will be allowed to go home peacefully. Police will not be able to pass off uncooperative people to hospitals for a psych evaluation as easy.

For real though, it would not be fun for the world.

Would be nice if we where treated and paid like we matter.

If it's just paramedics and not EMTs then it won't be as bad. People will still die though.

Ah cripes, I'm literally a "software developer." Modern civilization is so, so fucked.

That would be a very strange death as well.

I feel like biggest problem would be hackers wouldn't vanish, but no developers would be around to fix issues.

Like tomorrow and the next day would feel the same as today.

But what about when a new Microsoft exploit is found? Or a medical software can't handle a new treatment?

We wouldn't die instantly, but first world country tech would just slowly start to betray us day by day without updates.

Yeah, software dev disappearance I feel like would result in a slow Jenga game of things becoming more unstable until they all fall down at once. Unless we figure that the world will got completely ballistic at the prospect of multiple millions of people just vanishing, then the knock on effects won't really matter.

Trade, logistics rely on software maintenance, I guess.

It wouldn't be more than a few days. You all don't realize what I do for you. I'm out there every night fighting the night man. Bringing in the day man. I am the fighter of the night man, ahhhhhhaaaayhaahhaaa, champion of the sun, master of karate and friendship for everyone.

I'm a help desk technician... so immediately.

Plan ahead with aggressive demands to turn it off and on again. Good PR be damned.

I could always just set all 1300 computers to reboot on their own in the middle of the night and then schedule and email to send the next day lol

Corporate IT manager

I'm not sure anyone would notice

Yeah. I was gonna say, could be centuries, could be never.

The great IT managers build teams that can keep working without us. The lousy ones will be doing everyone a favor when they vanish.

That said, if I'm the last one, I'm gonna make a killing as a management consultant.

I'm a web developer, so... Not me, but there are people who manage important web portals, for healthcare and security stuff.

As an addiction therapist, I think it would be a long time. As a nurse, about 6 hours before the number would start rising awfully quick.

Social Worker, so maybe some parts of society would come crashing down at first but maybe turn out for the better in the long run. More specifically, working in a hospital currently, helping set up support structures for after the patient is discharged. Maybe we'd end up with people staying in hospitals for longer or visiting more frequently, could be a big hit to our Healthcare system, could force some much needed changes.

So is your thought that social workers are like a band aid that hospitals use?

"We don't need to worry about how patient feels, social worker has that covered."

Just a heads up, I work in Germany. There's a couple different interests involved. Most patients don't want to stay in the hospital for longer than needed (for various reasons, e.g. loved ones at home or less people around in general..), even if they can afford it financially. Then there's the hospital that can only bill the insurance for a certain amount per diagnosis. Also every free bed means another patient we can take care of that might need treatment more than the one we could discharge if only he had a caretaker at home. So by helping patients organize treatments and care after they are discharged we help the patients directly but also the hospital financially and future patients indirectly. The sad part is that it takes a lot of effort to find a caretaker, organize treatments etc. So much so that many relatives or friends of patients aren't able to do it and hand it off to the professionals. It would be these relatives and friends rioting if all of a sudden this burden would be back on them and the still sick patient. So to sum it up I might feel like a bandaid because our system has made it so hard for the laypeople to do what should be more easy.

How exact are we getting? I'm an "assistant term professor", but I'm not an associate or tenure-track position, nor am I an adjunct. So i imagine if just people in my middling position disappeared, we might be fine, a bunch of adjuncts get a raise and a stable job, universities might have to reduce admissions or pack their classes, but we'd probably be fine in the long run. If all college professors disappeared, though, society might collapse. Suddenly you have millions of college students with incomplete educations who need to go somewhere. The brain drain on the world would be immense, and with the death of university-led research, we'd probably enter a dystopian future where all new research is being done by corporations.

I could best be described as an "emergency draftsman". And potential damage could be far reaching in scale.

I work for a company that, among other things, makes replacement parts for things like power plants, chemical plants, any large industrial installation. In many cases, the thing that breaks is a one of a kind part, or something last manufactured in the 1960's, or some other thing that you aren't going to be able to just go buy a replacement. So what happens is someone will occasionally drop a broken something or other on my desk, and I have to figure out what it used to look like, then make a 3d model and a drawing of the part so it can be reproduced.

Ahh so you're who is keeping all thr cold war stuff running!

Graphic designer. AI is getting pretty crazy so you all could be just fine. AI will make you what you want but will it make you what you need? Just sayin.

Cashier & Customer Service. Who are Karens gonna yell at without us?! Society would collapse immediatly.

I would literally just hide. If I'm not too panicked I'll think to take snacks with me.

I don't even want to imagine a world without associate editors.

Admin paper pushers coordinate so others can have frictionless meetings. Most likely all meetings will be awful, and initiatives will not have approvals so fraud will propagate quickly

Oh so business as usual then?

You say this as a joke, but it will not be business as usual. Trust is HUGE when it comes to investments. Without admin, trust goes down, investors become misers, total wealth decreases, and everyone will have the same credibility as a scammer on the phone talking about Nigerian princes etc. So it may not go to a barter economy, but several parts will stagnate because they can't trust investing in their own company's growth.

Alot of people with mental health issues would be wandering the streets. Some would simply die at home due to not being able to look after and feed themselves. A fair few would be going around sexually assaulting young girls/boys (not understanding they're adults & it's wrong) and alot would be so pissed off and confused they be trying to kick the shit out of anyone they'd see. The world wouldn't end but it'd be a pain in the arse to navigate.

Oof yeah we would over night go back to the days of sanatoriums where having mental health issue is more or less just prison with a different name.

the work will be done for people with slightly different job titles? there is a lot of different titles that are mostly the same

Senior software engineer. Lots of bugs and mistakes from juniors and associates. Good luck lol.

Are we 100% certain we're not already in this timeline.

I believe that the many senior SWEs I have met were real - but the state of the Internet does not provide strong evidence that I'm not delusional on that point...

That's an interesting point. I think that maybe customer facing apps have an issue acquiring or retaining talent because the jobs often suck so badly. I've only done one customer facing software job and it was awful. Long hours, insane demands, and harsh management.

It's less bad in corporate environments surprisingly.

People would die as X-rays and medical devices stop working. The power and communication grids would go down. Everyone's financial and personal data would be compromised. No one can make any purchases, because credit carding systems stop working. Cash is no longer accepted because no one knows how to do the math to make change anymore. Humanity would be in a stone age in less than 3 days.

IT helps desk.

Biomed. I fix medical equipment.

Just gonna let that one sit.

Ahh the small decay of our medical industry.

That's a fun way for society to fall.

Risk Analyst. Literally nothing would change except quite a few people would be pretty happy they don't badgered to fill out incident memos

Industrial project engineer. Consequences of losing those jobs? No more new production plants and maintenance forces would quickly get overwhelmed trying to handle upgrades on top of routine maintenance. Profits would plummet. Plants would shut down.

I'm the political advisor to a politician....

You don't want to know

That's the scariest timeline yet:

"Hey where's that piece of paper they gave me before they all disappeared?"

"Which one?"

"The one that said not to do crimes, or whatever. I need to check something."

"Is it a crime sir?"

"Uh...Nevermind. I'm sure it'll be fine. Let's go do this."

Embedded software designer, so a lot of stuff I worked on in my life might stop functioning for whatever reason, small stuff like Nest thermostat you can replace with mechanical ones, etc. Aerotech stuffs might be more problematic... but planes and helis were flying in the 50s without software

Suddenly games wouldn't see a localised version anymore. To play anything that requires language comprehension, you'd have to study the source language.

This thankfully doesn't impact me personally, but people would lose out on some cool content. Not everyone finds it fun to spend years to acquire a language to the degree some games require.

Maybe arcade would make a comeback.

within a few hours. water and wastewater don't treat themselves. water would stop coning out of taps. wastewater would back up into people's homes and without a way to deal with it the environment would go to shit.

damn this makes me feel like i might be doing something important. i should be paid more

I'm physically disabled. So the medical industry would collapse, but it might fix the medical industry too.

I am an teacher at a daycare. Short-term, lots of parents will have to drop out of the workforce to take care of their own children. The economic effects of this will be subtle but extensive. I suspect that in the americas this will be ignored, in Europe this will provoke the writing of policies to help parents, and in Asian countries this might just reinforce traditional gender norms very strongly. I dont know how this wouo

Yeah, it would revive traditional roles, but suddenly nobody would be able to support a family anymore (not those first few years, at least), because life's too expensive for just one breadwinner.

In Europe, society would come together and clap to all those heroic parents.

I mean amarica will do that too, but that will be used to justify gutting some policy or other

I'm a project manager, so kind of a mixed bag. Some things will go off without a hitch, maybe even faster. Others will fall to pieces from a logistics and budgetary aspect. Loads of toilets will be gold plated and encrusted in diamonds

I'm a night auditor at a hotel.

Good luck getting service in a hotel past 11 now.

Depending on how broad we are talking..

I'm Human Resources. Many would be glad we're gone, but Human Resources are there to do many tasks people take for granted such as setting up benefits (retirement, health, life, etc), to vetting and hiring, and mediating between managers and employees. Often times, these require extensive knowledge on how to navigate labyrinthian laws that sometimes change regularly and less-than-friendly benefit companies.

More specifically, I'm a workers compensation specialist within HR. My job is being a subject matter expert and a liason between the employees and an underfunded, understaffed, stretched to the limits Workers Compensation program that is struggling under the weight of a massive worker population with little in funding being provided to it. I anticipate the needs of the work comp program to try to ease the burden of the workers falling into a denial-appeal cycle.

To be fair.. society would march on without us. There'd be this horrible adjustment period for the workforce where managers who may be industry specialized (Like a manager of nurses isn't really trained to handle most HR functions) have to pick up new skills. And for a while you'll probably see a lot of people not being enrolled, disenrolled, tracked, vetted, etc as people figure it out.

Overall, you'd probably see a lot of unions/angry workers and it would probably hasten a long a massive amount of protests and strikes. Human Resources in the private sector acts like a buffer in some ways. Correcting issues individually before they become systemic.

I'm just gonna say right away. I'm pretty confident that's true. Way too many weapons guidance systems, radar, communications, and sensors involved.

Junior PHP Dev. Not great, not terrible. I don't think awful things would happen, but it'd be hella inconvenient for the professionals and seniors.

It sounds very good not to have any Unemployed people, but the more you think about it the more dystopian it gets.

I'm in an industry where there are already not enough of us, and it's already showing. It would get worse to say the least

Production planner here. Eventually you will notice that things are done inefficiently, not in a sensible order or timely manner. It's gonna be really annoying but the world won't collapse.

GIS (Geographic Information Systems) Specialist. If you got rid of just the specialists you probably be fine. The techs, analysts, and admins could hold things together. If all of the GIS experts disappeared all together we would probably start getting hungry pretty quick, and the US military would get a lot shittier. basically, anything that relies on a geolocation is kinda screwed. Lots of it has actually been automated so we might be fine for a bit.

Software might actually stop developing new bugs. People will stop getting frustrated with technology, and world peace will happen.

The automatically controlled systems in cars will go to the dogs. They're already at the door as it is. I guess we could cycle to work, might be a good thing.

My exact job title? Well, my family is sad, but no one else would notice.

I told Dad not to let you choose your own job title. It doesn't even fit on a business card. /s

I'm an industrial mechanic mainly doing cnc machining. The world would grind to a halt in a few days.

I'm an apartment building superintendent, meaning I live in the same building that I manage.

Whether it's a water leak, fire alarm, someone having a medical crisis, or something else, I'm usually called for an emergency of one kind or another at least once every 48 hours. In theory, someone could die if paramedics are delayed by a locked door or the fire department doesn't know which units have elderly/disabled people who need evacuation assistance.