The Kalakalyear had many casualties, and some of them were jobs.
The site CareerCast came out with a new report on the jobs that, as of this month, aren't quite dead but definitely endangered.
It's a mix of the jobs you would expect (typists, mail carriers) and those that may surprise (DJs, computer programmers).
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk thinks universal income is answer to automation taking human jobsCashiers don't make the list, but Amazon Go hasn't opened its first store yet.
The major causes are familiar: automation and outsourcing.
"Job markets constantly evolve for a variety of reasons, but consumer habits and technology are two of the primary reasons why some jobs have a poor outlook," CareerCast wrote in a press release accompanying the report.
SEE ALSO: Facebook ranks as the top tech company to work for in 2017If a job is endangered, that means it has "unfavorable hiring forecasts" in 2017 and beyond. CareerCast drew its conclusions from Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
The No. 1 most endangered job is expected to decline in hiring by 28 percent through 2024. By the 10th most endangered job on the list, that drop-off slows to 8 percent.
Here are the 10 most endangered jobs in 2016:
1. Mail carrier
2. Typist/word processor
3. Meter reader
4. DJ
5. Jeweler
6. Insurance underwriter
7. Seamstress/tailor
8. Broadcaster
9. Newspaper reporter
10. Computer programmer
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