You would still need someone to be the final authority on what each element
was.
For most jump elements naming the element for the data input would be sufficient if there is a technological process for determining takeoff edges and rotation.
But occasionally skaters execute jump elements in ways that require some interpretation of exactly what the skater did and how that fits into the definition of allowable jump elements. E.g., a skater does a jump, turns on the ice, followed by double toe. Someone has to determine whether it was just a double three without the free foot touching the ice (just call the combination, let the judges reduce the GOE according to their guidelines) or whether there was weight on the other foot during those turns, e.g., a step out, and which program this is (+COMBO for short program, +SEQ for free skate).
Even weirder things can happen that don't have exact precedents or exact rules. A computer wouldn't know what to do with those and a human would need to intervene to interpret how to match up what just happened with what the rules allow and what they say about how to handle various categories of errors.
Most non-jump elements have levels. There are numerous details that the tech panel looks at to determine the level of a spin or step sequence or lift. It would be much more difficult for a computer to perceive those details and apply the appropriate rules.
The technical panel doesn't determine whether/how much a spin traveled. That is left up to the judges in awarding grades of execution for quality.
In case you're not familiar with everything that the technical panel does, here is the
handbook with the detailed guidelines.
If and when technology is ready to take over some of those decisions, that could lessen the load on the panel so they could focus their attention on the non-jump elements.
But you'd need to come up with other ways to determine the levels/base values for all the non-jump elements.
Do you anticipate that technology will be able to evaluate the difficulty of these elements as set out in these guidelines?
Or do you want to get rid of the concept of levels altogether and make everything "choreographic" elements and let the judges each reflect difficulty as well as quality in their grades of execution? That would lead to more subjectivity than the current system.
If you're aiming for less subjectivity, then it might make sense, when the technology is ready, to take the determination of jump takeoff edges and rotation out of the hands of the technical panel.
But not to abolish the technical panel entirely.