How textile, apparel, and furnishings workers are reshaped as AGI capability advances.

Only about 0% of Textile, Apparel, and Furnishings Workers is information work today — the rest is physical, and moves slowly. The exposure is concentrated in the back office: the books, the paperwork, the scheduling, the marketing.
Why: Because grounding data on specific tools and work context is sparse for this minor group, the score relies entirely on the deterministic code prior for SOC 51 (0.00) and the seeded employment anchors. Primary employment in drycleaning, laundry services, and cut-and-sew apparel manufacturing indicates hands-on, manual labor dealing with physical textiles, placing it firmly at the bottom of the physical band.
grounded in the economy graph · digital scalar 0.00 · physical
Which of this work becomes digital labor — performed under typed authority, promoted to autonomy on track record.
Textile, Apparel, and Furnishings Workers is typically employed by 209 company types — the demand side that decides which of this role's tasks get handed to agents, and on what authority.
+197 more via typicallyEmploys
The software here going agent-consumable — where the API, not the UI, becomes the way the work gets done.
Textile, Apparel, and Furnishings Workers relies on 7 products. The headless dimension of each — whether an agent can call it without a screen — is what decides how much of this work goes hands-free.
Node-intrinsic problems read straight off the graph (exposesProblem) — the evergreen wedges a builder could take into this space.
+5 more problems on the graph
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