Tesla’s Humanoid Robot Revolutionizing Musk’s Vision
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Tesla thinks it will be able to sell an Optimus robot to every single person on earth, all on its way to selling at least 20 billion of them in total.
MIT professor Daniela Rus explains how AI-powered robots are being trained to safely assist in homes and daily life.
Unitree just dropped its latest creation, the R1 humanoid robot, and people are talking. At only $5,900, it's the most affordable bipedal robot we've seen so far. The low price has taken the tech world by surprise and kicked off a wave of excitement.
I’ve worked at the bleeding edge of robotics innovation in the United States for almost my entire professional life. Never before have I seen another country advance so quickly. In the span of the last few years, China has overtaken the U.S. as the ...
Tesla's price-to-sales (P/S) ratio currently stands at 13.3. Using that multiple, its Optimus unit would need to generate annual sales in the ballpark of $301 billion to be worth $4 trillion. That represents 6% of the total market projected by Morgan Stanley and only 4.3% of the market projected by Citi.
Robots used to need our help to keep going. They had to be plugged in or manually recharged. Now, UBTech is changing that. The company’s new humanoid, the Walker S2, has a feature that could reshape the future of factory work. It can swap out its own ...
Reinforcement learning—the fancy AI industry term for trial and error—was used to train it, including looking at videos of "human motion references" to improve its movements. The result, as you can see, is a robot that can adjust to different shots on the fly and return the shots very naturally for some long rallies.