You could argue, BD, that some employees are virtually robots. In the case of where I work, the employer doesn't ever milk, and, although there's some of us out there that really care, there are some that couldn't care less and are only there for the money. I don't see any difference between a robotic milker and a milker who wants to milk like he's possessed because he has something to do that evening. If you have a good herd manager supervising herd health and monitoring the records that come from robotic milking, I can see it would be better, and least more consistent, than human milkers. Just my two cents.