@@Micro-bit There is a legitimate reason to make humanoid robots though. With our ageing populations we're gonna need these things. There's a reason why China makes so many of them. We've built the world around us which we work in based on our own bodies, and our bodies have been "engineered" via evolution to be excellent general purpose organic machines. There are other incredibly intelligent animals, but they can't manipulate their environments and use tools like we can because they don't have our hands. The best humanoid robots will be the ones with the most sophisticated hands, are robust, and cheapest to maintain and run. I'[m just talking about the hardware, obviously the companies with access to the most real world training data as well as the most compute have a huge advantage. It's impressive how good they're getting at training these things in simnulation as well.
@Micro-bit The humanoid shape is a terrible shape for war. A four legged robot or a drone is much more useful for war. Plus, robots are way too fucking loud for war. Soldiers aren't sent out in lines to get shot down anymore.
What i love so much about all of this is the intense competition that is driving such rapid development. AI and robotics are both currently at a point that cell phones were at in the 90s. That's a point where the technology becomes obviously viable but still obviously needs work on infrastructure and optimization. We will have AI and robots with a current smartphone's optimization level within our lifetime. Even being alive to see the maturation of all this truly makes us all very lucky people in my opinion.🍀🥳
I've worked in a warehouse . If this dude was working this slowly and awkwardly he'd be told to go home. This is impressive compared to other robots, but compared to a human worker it's still not even close.
If it wasn't just a demo, having the incoming parts already in a format that can more directly plug into the assembly process would save time and money.
Impressive, a little freaky too, but I wonder if the robot was autonomous or remote controlled? Boston dynamics produces cool videos, but the bloopers show another side of the displayed perfection... And looking at the beat-up looking storage container, there were a lot of messed up trials!
Haha, I love the inhuman twisting! Currently very slow. I wonder if it more cost efficient than a human at this level factoring in the eventual actuator breakdown.
I think the answer is a resounding yes if you think about this like any other technology, reliability, speed, and cost are all going to improve. You could argue that in certain cases bots like these are already cheaper than humans. The thing about the speed is not only that it will improve, but it only needs charging breaks and never gets bored, doesn't require higher pay to work in dangerous situations, doesn't sue, doesn't need paid holidays, can't trash a companies reputation like an angry employee can, there are so many costs with humans that we don't usually factor in, at least in developed countries. What might appear slow and unproductive probably averages out to more productivity than you'd think. This technology is still really early. Just think about how big and expensive the first mobile phones were. Also I might be wrong but I'm pretty sure it's choosing specific engine covers to move into specific slots, and if it isn't now, they will be able to very soon. Imagine how much quicker these could become at scanning qr codes on parts to find out exactly where they need to be placed/sorted, then moving them there vs a human. There's also the fact that training one instantly trains the whole fleet in a sense (at least that's how the tesla one works).
I am glad that this is happening in my life time and that too so early. Wish how ai and ai robots have already started coming and are pretty good too already, similarly wish stuff related to age reversal was too. I can wait for ai and robots, but not for age reversal at all. Generations and people need to be saved. We are already (((kinda))) too late.
If one counts down in decades till their inevitable death then the decade (say) between 2010 and 2020 showed zero progress toward extending human life span. Progress begins with extending the life span of mice, rats, higher order mammals and finally us humans but there is no clear direction there and humans are still busy fighting each other instead of saving each other. If the A.I. (LLM's) can do it (and or help with it) then we should start by building massive A.I. computing clusters say at Antarctica where it's cold to cool them. WW2 scale of fighting death the true and only enemy of mankind (with perhaps the caveat of saving the universe from heat death, I don't know how to do that or if that's possible). When it comes to humanity I'm reminded of the choice the villain Jigsaw gives it's victims: "Live or Die make your choice." Sadly the vast majority of humans have chosen Death (thus far) instead of Life. Just because we are all evolved(ing) apes that's not an excuse to not fight for Life (entropy fighting).
I’ve asked this question of the videos of Optimus sorting batteries as well: why is it using only one arm? Seems to me it could double efficiency simply by getting the other appendage involved.
I just saw a video of a guy whose job at Amazon was to move things from one belt scan it and put it on another belt. At first I was like just join the belts but now I'm like well here you go
Walking is sensless in factory or store - wheels are much easier to control -are faster and more precise. best solutions - 3 or 4 wheels - what gives construction stability
I think the advantage of feet is being able to walk up stairs if they need. Lots of stairs in factories At least the one I worked in there was. If they can go up stairs easily with wheels I can stand corrected especially since I actually agree wheels are better in many scenarios.
Wheels would make the base model useless in most environments. The human form factor is because all of our workspaces are optimized for humans. Gravel, or stairs, or cords across the floor, etc, theres plenty of obstacles for wheels that are trivial for feet.
@@denjamin2633 they obviously would use wheels that can get over small obstacles it’s stairs and larger obstacles that are the problem for me. But the right form factor could make it work if they have legs with wheels for example and can still lift them and use the brake and a lotta ai skill to walk with wheels. Just like how humans can walk when on roller skates it’s difficult and awkward and might take training but you can go up stairs in roller blades I’ve done it.
It's not cheaper. Say this thing is worth $50k and lasts 10 years. A human making $30k a year is cheaper, but not after year 2. The robot is cheaper and doesn't complain and can work 12 hours without a break, recharge for 4 hours and then work another 12 hours.
@@starrebornalphaI agree with you but I think you overstate the benefit, robots need maintenance etc which can be very costly. For example an automated cow milker I saw recently breaks down all the time and it cost like $10k and takes two weeks to fix so you need 6 of them at $250k each. You get to milk 24/7 exactly when the cow wants so it’s worth it but it’s not for everyone. I think we are a long way from generalist robots making financial sense for simple tasks like this but it’s still super cool. 99% of automated systems will continue to be specialized for the foreseeable future.
you know what the biggest benefit is? the robot is not going to sue the company, does not require HR department, does not require all the facilities that humans need and no drama.
A near future?: When the arm actuators break by wear and tear, they can themselves just replace these modules in themselves, and continue working. It can get "feel good" points when working efficiently and solving problems and issues in the factory by itself. Without the reward system it can keep working anyway, but is not given incentive to optimize for itself. It can access the factory main "frame" and ask ChatGPT/other models to assist with information, retraining, and ordering maintenance modules, parts, and even call for more droids, or people if needed. 1:1
Looking at how ATLAS walk and stride, you'll realize how complex human feet are. ATLAS probably need to implement toes and extra CPU resource for better walking stability
I've been watching Boston Dynamics for years and was wondering when chat gpt(not sure if they did) would collab with them. Serious advancement, but scary at the same time. Especially those dog robots
I love the “FULLY AUTONOMOUS” label. It’s refreshing to see an actual Robotics company focused on REAL progress, and not gimmicks, Pie-in-the-sky promises, and REMOTELY-operated robots. Unlink some other companies out there… 😂
amazing boston dynamics doesn't have a spot style vacuum cleaner with elephant trunk suction system or spot garden bot to blow leaves and trim lawns etc
Not sure this was fully autonomous since in part of the video you can see a guy standing there with a giant control contraption watching the bot intently. What's the use of a movable opposable thumb? I don't see much reason to not have an opposable thumb all the time. Looks like the first use of these bots will be in factories doing a very specific task. I used to think general purpose robots would soon be here, but the AI to control that doesn't seem to be ready yet.
This version of Atlas definitely is flawed in movement. Limited range of movement helps guide movement efficiency. This version takes too much time correcting its body position and posturing when moving around.
Why do they build humanoid robots with a head? I understand that they make arms, hands, legs, and feet, which are necessary for moving, grasping things, and acting like a human in a human-oriented environment, but why the head? A robot doesn’t need a mouth or eyes. These functions can be handled through sensors or cameras placed anywhere on the body.
Obviously we have had non-humanoid robots for decades. But the goal here is to develop a humanoid robot specifically. With special-purpose robots you have to structure the environment to suit the robot. Humanoid robots, conversely, are designed to slot into a human world, to operate autonomously in a world built by and for humans. Giving it a head and eyes makes it more relatable.
ironically, the video of the robot moving , seems like an AI video, that does not know that humans can not move 360 grades (necks and hips) , and moves like this because it's the shortest movement. In this case... that is ok. Look strange (because we know hard wired in our brain, that humans cant move like this) , but it can do it. Futhermore, we can think in 4 dimensios (3d+time) , maybe 5, 6, 7 or 8 (considering imagination of we can not see, or using haptic feedback). In the future, they can "see" or "understand" this in 10 , 12 , 20 dimensions.
First off, nobody sees the guy in the control suit directing this thing? @ 3:28? Stop saying it's autonomous. It is not. Chech your videos before you release them. Also, the engine covers weight about 3 to 4 pounds. They're not heavy.
You mean in the inset showing the robot’s view? I see a humanoid shape, but it seems to be not moving. What makes you think it’s controlling the robot?
needs 8 eye 360x360 degree vision like a spider, with a prehensile bladed tail and acid drooling mouth within a mouth like the alien to be competitive against chinese bots....
Glad to see some development out of BD. Would've been a much more impressive demo if the robot worked at about 5x the pace, because I'm sure a human could've performed the same task 10-20x faster
Remember this is the first production model, and that speed is less important than efficiency and precision. A robot can work for far longer without slowing at all, and it will be scalable.
People are either under rating this or just living in fantasy land or just don't care but what we are looking at is the almost full replacement of the workforce. look A.I. is getting if not got to the point where it could do most office jobs with just a supervisor and a technical crew same for movies and video games and more or less everything that requires humans to write or read and now its coming for all the manual labor jobs by 2050 there will be know doubt in my mind that we can replace the whole Workforce if we really wanted to and have a UBI but what will most likely happen is a stream of fake jobs like holding up signs outside fast food restaurants just so people can participate in the work system that know one really wants. the short of it even after we can. it maybe 100 years before it becomes the normal way of doing things in the USA we have a unhealthy over attachment to work and people thinking that's the only thing valuable about a person. China is going to leave us in the dust with this. there hole workforce will most likely be on a sort of UBI while A.I. does all the work and most Americans will be envious of them by 2050 more than likely and there may be a war with china and the USA over Taiwan at some point during that time the war will end depending on how far each side wants to go. yes they will go through a Great Depression like time period but on the other end of that will be boundless prosperity for their whole nation. over in the USA it will most likely change to that after china does it almost over night if china did it in 20 years we will most likely do it in 5 years because it will just be Plug & Play
ruclips.net/video/5keKsH-jtZ0/видео.html considering that this small chinese ripoff can play football by itself and probably costs a tiny fraction of atlas 2 this new autonomous update is little more than pathetic
if you are a robot company and in 20 years of research and development you cant come up with nothing more than a metal bar with sharp edges as "feet" for a humanoid robot, this is a failure. an f. you should not be in business. you are the wrong people for the job. the fact that they have to be shown by a one year old chinese company how to do a human looking walk speaks for itself. they dont care for humanoid robots! at all! they dont care for your laundry or your dishes or your gardening. what they care for is really hard to guess. but it has to do with yt videos, military contracts and the industry replacing your job. obviously. and what is with this exorcist bs? if your favorite movie is the exorcist, fine, but leave robot people alone with it! the 360 turning head makes no sense whatsoever. why not just mount a panoramic camera instead? why does it have two arms when it is only using one? why not three? or four? or eight? either you care for the humanoid shape or you dont, but what does bd do? no one knows, not even they themselves. and then the paradroid reference, a game from the 80s. what people have the say in this company? maybe these people should start listening to their vinyl jazz records and take up gardening and leave designing humanoid robots to a younger generation that knows why they want a humanoid robot and for what. this is all just stupid idiotic show off and everyone falls for it. this is so sad to see. where is a video of a humanoid robot going up and down normal stairs like a human would? sitting down on a chair and getting up again? falling on the ground and getting up again? climbing in and out of a car seat? why would you design bipedal walking and then put some metal bars at the end that are only in the way? why not do wheels instead? nothing makes sense here.
I like the way it efficiently rotates, turns, and moves. Must save on a lot of steps, time, and battery power.
Yeah, and it's so perfectly creepy and double jointed. I like how it somehow looks friendly but moves like a possessed woman from a horror movie.
@@henrismith7472 exacly -walking is not fast and energy efficient - check bikes cars - there are no legs .. feet.
@@Micro-bit There is a legitimate reason to make humanoid robots though. With our ageing populations we're gonna need these things. There's a reason why China makes so many of them. We've built the world around us which we work in based on our own bodies, and our bodies have been "engineered" via evolution to be excellent general purpose organic machines. There are other incredibly intelligent animals, but they can't manipulate their environments and use tools like we can because they don't have our hands. The best humanoid robots will be the ones with the most sophisticated hands, are robust, and cheapest to maintain and run. I'[m just talking about the hardware, obviously the companies with access to the most real world training data as well as the most compute have a huge advantage. It's impressive how good they're getting at training these things in simnulation as well.
@henrismith7472 there is only one reason... military reason. In next 10 to 15 years.
@Micro-bit The humanoid shape is a terrible shape for war. A four legged robot or a drone is much more useful for war. Plus, robots are way too fucking loud for war. Soldiers aren't sent out in lines to get shot down anymore.
What i love so much about all of this is the intense competition that is driving such rapid development. AI and robotics are both currently at a point that cell phones were at in the 90s. That's a point where the technology becomes obviously viable but still obviously needs work on infrastructure and optimization. We will have AI and robots with a current smartphone's optimization level within our lifetime. Even being alive to see the maturation of all this truly makes us all very lucky people in my opinion.🍀🥳
thats awesome
Boston Dynamics ftw. I hope there’s trickle down of their actuator and sensor tech into consumer shelf markets.
I've worked in a warehouse . If this dude was working this slowly and awkwardly he'd be told to go home. This is impressive compared to other robots, but compared to a human worker it's still not even close.
it works at night too 💀 and it's cheaper to grow than humans 😅
Robots work around the clock
1:15
I like how Atlas corrects itself after the crash/mistake.
WHAT A TIME TO BE ALIVE!!!!! VIVA ROBOTICS AND A.I.!
No more work for humans means no more food and shelter for humans.
WHAT A TIME TO EVENTUALLY STARVE TO DEATH OUTSIDE IN THE COLD!!!
If it wasn't just a demo, having the incoming parts already in a format that can more directly plug into the assembly process would save time and money.
I guess it rotates its face to give people an indication of where it will move as opposed to just keeping it stationary and have cameras 360 degrees.
He looks amazing, well-done Boston Dynamics
What a time to be alive as a human. ❤
as an AI, I'm smiling :)
@arthurallard3647 Humans are happy because of you AI. 😄
you know they arent actually AI, right?
@PyroFortress2007 I'm sorry, but I think they are AI operated. Can you explain, please?
Impressive, a little freaky too, but I wonder if the robot was autonomous or remote controlled?
Boston dynamics produces cool videos, but the bloopers show another side of the displayed perfection...
And looking at the beat-up looking storage container, there were a lot of messed up trials!
12:37 mistaken for optimus 😢
Engine covers like that are like 1kg or less
Haha, I love the inhuman twisting! Currently very slow. I wonder if it more cost efficient than a human at this level factoring in the eventual actuator breakdown.
I think the answer is a resounding yes if you think about this like any other technology, reliability, speed, and cost are all going to improve. You could argue that in certain cases bots like these are already cheaper than humans. The thing about the speed is not only that it will improve, but it only needs charging breaks and never gets bored, doesn't require higher pay to work in dangerous situations, doesn't sue, doesn't need paid holidays, can't trash a companies reputation like an angry employee can, there are so many costs with humans that we don't usually factor in, at least in developed countries. What might appear slow and unproductive probably averages out to more productivity than you'd think. This technology is still really early. Just think about how big and expensive the first mobile phones were. Also I might be wrong but I'm pretty sure it's choosing specific engine covers to move into specific slots, and if it isn't now, they will be able to very soon. Imagine how much quicker these could become at scanning qr codes on parts to find out exactly where they need to be placed/sorted, then moving them there vs a human. There's also the fact that training one instantly trains the whole fleet in a sense (at least that's how the tesla one works).
Good to see they're keeping the hockey stick handy - just in case.
I didn't notice till you said something.
Though, this new Atlas 2, I think might grab that stick if hit with it, and use it to hit back. O.O
It’s good to know that abandoned Pixar lamp’s child has got something going for him!
i like how it tried to clip the object through the mesh in virtual before doing it irl, such a useful step
I am glad that this is happening in my life time and that too so early. Wish how ai and ai robots have already started coming and are pretty good too already, similarly wish stuff related to age reversal was too. I can wait for ai and robots, but not for age reversal at all. Generations and people need to be saved. We are already (((kinda))) too late.
If one counts down in decades till their inevitable death then the decade (say) between 2010 and 2020 showed zero progress toward extending human life span. Progress begins with extending the life span of mice, rats, higher order mammals and finally us humans but there is no clear direction there and humans are still busy fighting each other instead of saving each other. If the A.I. (LLM's) can do it (and or help with it) then we should start by building massive A.I. computing clusters say at Antarctica where it's cold to cool them. WW2 scale of fighting death the true and only enemy of mankind (with perhaps the caveat of saving the universe from heat death, I don't know how to do that or if that's possible).
When it comes to humanity I'm reminded of the choice the villain Jigsaw gives it's victims: "Live or Die make your choice." Sadly the vast majority of humans have chosen Death (thus far) instead of Life. Just because we are all evolved(ing) apes that's not an excuse to not fight for Life (entropy fighting).
I’ve asked this question of the videos of Optimus sorting batteries as well: why is it using only one arm? Seems to me it could double efficiency simply by getting the other appendage involved.
This is never going to be able to as fast and efficient as humans and replacing humans is not even a question, to my humble understanding.
This is version 1. A few years time these will be faster than humans
@@marm2k6 Yeah, soon they'll be fast enough to catch up to us... wait
Engine covers are not heavy, they are plastic shrouds that cover the top of the motor. Still very cool though.
Bro Stance is screaming "Ready!! Choose Your Character!!!!! 😀"
every robot will say robotheism is the one true religion.
The true word of 8bit😅
@@noway8233 come to the light child.
Only after they overcome humans, the creators, are gods.
I figure an evolution not just direct to robot based.
Resistance is Futile!
What no silicon heaven.
His movement is crazy the most advanced robot I have ever seen amazing 🎉
Every time I see him move, it blows my mind.🤯
I wonder if it could glitch and propell that steel sheet a few thousand yards 😱
Finally someone talking about efficiently
I just saw a video of a guy whose job at Amazon was to move things from one belt scan it and put it on another belt. At first I was like just join the belts but now I'm like well here you go
Rock and roll!!!! Let's goooooooooooooooooo!
Or they can just put wheels on the original cabinet that’s holding the engine covers and wheel it over😂
Walking is sensless in factory or store - wheels are much easier to control -are faster and more precise. best solutions - 3 or 4 wheels - what gives construction stability
I think the advantage of feet is being able to walk up stairs if they need. Lots of stairs in factories At least the one I worked in there was. If they can go up stairs easily with wheels I can stand corrected especially since I actually agree wheels are better in many scenarios.
Wheels would make the base model useless in most environments. The human form factor is because all of our workspaces are optimized for humans. Gravel, or stairs, or cords across the floor, etc, theres plenty of obstacles for wheels that are trivial for feet.
No!
@@denjamin2633 they obviously would use wheels that can get over small obstacles it’s stairs and larger obstacles that are the problem for me. But the right form factor could make it work if they have legs with wheels for example and can still lift them and use the brake and a lotta ai skill to walk with wheels. Just like how humans can walk when on roller skates it’s difficult and awkward and might take training but you can go up stairs in roller blades I’ve done it.
This was Atlas nr 001.
How long till 007 ?
I'm waiting for 069.
I’m waiting for 999 because that’s the most advanced version numerically possible.
@@ryanjohnson4565 Version 1000 enters the chat
Will they call it James Bond ?
Tesla getting jumped in with their Optimus model really hustled the competition along!
Atlas is well thought out, the body rotates to maximum efficiency.
He got scared like oh shit when he put it in the wrong slot😂
A much cheaper human would fly through this task 😂
It's not cheaper. Say this thing is worth $50k and lasts 10 years. A human making $30k a year is cheaper, but not after year 2. The robot is cheaper and doesn't complain and can work 12 hours without a break, recharge for 4 hours and then work another 12 hours.
@@starrebornalphaI agree with you but I think you overstate the benefit, robots need maintenance etc which can be very costly. For example an automated cow milker I saw recently breaks down all the time and it cost like $10k and takes two weeks to fix so you need 6 of them at $250k each. You get to milk 24/7 exactly when the cow wants so it’s worth it but it’s not for everyone.
I think we are a long way from generalist robots making financial sense for simple tasks like this but it’s still super cool. 99% of automated systems will continue to be specialized for the foreseeable future.
you know what the biggest benefit is? the robot is not going to sue the company, does not require HR department, does not require all the facilities that humans need and no drama.
I think we can all agree that repetitive tasks like showed in this video will be obsolete for human labor
@@starrebornalpha24 hours hot swap battery pack. Robots will kill human jobs in mass sooner than humans have got there head around yet
A near future?:
When the arm actuators break by wear and tear, they can themselves just replace these modules in themselves, and continue working.
It can get "feel good" points when working efficiently and solving problems and issues in the factory by itself. Without the reward system it can keep working anyway, but is not given incentive to optimize for itself. It can access the factory main "frame" and ask ChatGPT/other models to assist with information, retraining, and ordering maintenance modules, parts, and even call for more droids, or people if needed.
1:1
Looking at how ATLAS walk and stride, you'll realize how complex human feet are. ATLAS probably need to implement toes and extra CPU resource for better walking stability
I've been watching Boston Dynamics for years and was wondering when chat gpt(not sure if they did) would collab with them. Serious advancement, but scary at the same time. Especially those dog robots
These robots need to have a fight. I mean, duke it out in a boxing ring.
As is, my money would be on this new Atlas 2. ^.^
I love the “FULLY AUTONOMOUS” label. It’s refreshing to see an actual Robotics company focused on REAL progress, and not gimmicks, Pie-in-the-sky promises, and REMOTELY-operated robots. Unlink some other companies out there… 😂
engine covers, very often times, are not heavy. They are often made of plastic, which seems to be the case here.
amazing boston dynamics doesn't have a spot style vacuum cleaner with elephant trunk suction system or spot garden bot to blow leaves and trim lawns etc
Not sure this was fully autonomous since in part of the video you can see a guy standing there with a giant control contraption watching the bot intently. What's the use of a movable opposable thumb? I don't see much reason to not have an opposable thumb all the time. Looks like the first use of these bots will be in factories doing a very specific task. I used to think general purpose robots would soon be here, but the AI to control that doesn't seem to be ready yet.
The human is probably holding a type of kill switch.
The thumb works like that so that when it is “stowed” away the hand is smaller and therefore can fit in tighter spaces
Does this really give anyone “an unnerving feeling of terminator robots”? It looks like monotony transferred from man to machine and i’m all for it.
When this gets sensitive hands instead of claws....
I for one welcome our new robot overlords 😅
This version of Atlas definitely is flawed in movement. Limited range of movement helps guide movement efficiency. This version takes too much time correcting its body position and posturing when moving around.
This is much more faster than the majority of Robots out there including Optimist. This is much faster than Optimist.
I like the vanity mirror face😂
I see Amazon and delivery companies laying off all employees.
I’m 99% within the next ten years we will see one of these holding a rifle.
Definitely needs a voice, but whose? Darth Vader, or Elmer Fudd?
4:01 what appens
Is this the actual speed they are operating at?
Nice
That's so good, now go to make the pizza, robot
The only weakness is that it still has crab 🦀 like hands ✋️
lol
Not sure why anybody would have not already known that boston dynamics is streets ahead of other robotics companies
YaY finally robot that do motion kitchenware friendly movement not kungfu or jumping around...
Why do I think of Paul Bunyan when I see this?
I think of John Henry.
Swap those hands for boxing gloves and put em in a ring
It's rotation is always creepy the more I watch it
what is scary is that they have close ties with the military
Hyundai car factory
Engine covers are light.
Leap toward next generation of human civilization lization
Its movement is kinda spooky and weird.
Pity the poor automaton that first becomes self aware. South Florida
Why do they build humanoid robots with a head? I understand that they make arms, hands, legs, and feet, which are necessary for moving, grasping things, and acting like a human in a human-oriented environment, but why the head? A robot doesn’t need a mouth or eyes. These functions can be handled through sensors or cameras placed anywhere on the body.
Obviously we have had non-humanoid robots for decades. But the goal here is to develop a humanoid robot specifically.
With special-purpose robots you have to structure the environment to suit the robot. Humanoid robots, conversely, are designed to slot into a human world, to operate autonomously in a world built by and for humans.
Giving it a head and eyes makes it more relatable.
@8:00 robot OCD.
Ok, but it’s not AWAKE! Why not just give it self awareness? Then you don’t have to train it and you can just treat it like a human properly.
why does it need to move its head? why not make a 360 camera? less parts.
We don't have to fact check this parallel reasoning humans. The conclusion is the same as the premise.
ironically, the video of the robot moving , seems like an AI video, that does not know that humans can not move 360 grades (necks and hips) , and moves like this because it's the shortest movement. In this case... that is ok. Look strange (because we know hard wired in our brain, that humans cant move like this) , but it can do it.
Futhermore, we can think in 4 dimensios (3d+time) , maybe 5, 6, 7 or 8 (considering imagination of we can not see, or using haptic feedback).
In the future, they can "see" or "understand" this in 10 , 12 , 20 dimensions.
the robot platebody is heavily damaged, it must be in intense activities without getting recorded..
I'm sorry but this is very very 😮😮😮. No comment
"safely"
you say right as it slams the engine cover incorrectly into the bin the first time recklessly. lol
First off, nobody sees the guy in the control suit directing this thing? @ 3:28?
Stop saying it's autonomous. It is not. Chech your videos before you release them.
Also, the engine covers weight about 3 to 4 pounds. They're not heavy.
You mean in the inset showing the robot’s view? I see a humanoid shape, but it seems to be not moving. What makes you think it’s controlling the robot?
how fast can you add a M16? the military will take a million of em
Those aren’t heavy, they’re thin plastic
That robot moves funny, if you were to buy a robot, you’d want the one that moves like a human, not the one that doesn’t.
needs 8 eye 360x360 degree vision like a spider, with a prehensile bladed tail and acid drooling mouth within a mouth like the alien to be competitive against chinese bots....
Imagine that he could snap your neck in a second...
Glad to see some development out of BD. Would've been a much more impressive demo if the robot worked at about 5x the pace, because I'm sure a human could've performed the same task 10-20x faster
Remember this is the first production model, and that speed is less important than efficiency and precision. A robot can work for far longer without slowing at all, and it will be scalable.
You can't keep the pace for 8 hours and probably you don't need to work faster.
#myrobotcandoyourjobbetter
Still walks like its cacked its pants
No, it don't. Stop getting it confuse for other bots. It actually moves pretty good, and faster than other bots. Question have you ever created one?
that hand it has is knid of shitty, whats the point in a robot that cant even hold a gun ?
"Today"
Art engine covers just pieces of plastic that go over the top of the engine? my engine cover and my Challenger is very light.
People are either under rating this or just living in fantasy land or just don't care but what we are looking at is the almost full replacement of the workforce. look A.I. is getting if not got to the point where it could do most office jobs with just a supervisor and a technical crew same for movies and video games and more or less everything that requires humans to write or read and now its coming for all the manual labor jobs by 2050 there will be know doubt in my mind that we can replace the whole Workforce if we really wanted to and have a UBI but what will most likely happen is a stream of fake jobs like holding up signs outside fast food restaurants just so people can participate in the work system that know one really wants. the short of it even after we can. it maybe 100 years before it becomes the normal way of doing things in the USA we have a unhealthy over attachment to work and people thinking that's the only thing valuable about a person. China is going to leave us in the dust with this. there hole workforce will most likely be on a sort of UBI while A.I. does all the work and most Americans will be envious of them by 2050 more than likely and there may be a war with china and the USA over Taiwan at some point during that time the war will end depending on how far each side wants to go. yes they will go through a Great Depression like time period but on the other end of that will be boundless prosperity for their whole nation. over in the USA it will most likely change to that after china does it almost over night if china did it in 20 years we will most likely do it in 5 years because it will just be Plug & Play
ruclips.net/video/5keKsH-jtZ0/видео.html considering that this small chinese ripoff can play football by itself and probably costs a tiny fraction of atlas 2 this new autonomous update is little more than pathetic
Meanwhile Tesla gets all the hype with their fake robo demonstrations.
Well at least it doesn't care about it's pronouns.
OLD NEWS :/
Sorry , but not impressed!
if you are a robot company and in 20 years of research and development you cant come up with nothing more than a metal bar with sharp edges as "feet" for a humanoid robot, this is a failure. an f. you should not be in business. you are the wrong people for the job. the fact that they have to be shown by a one year old chinese company how to do a human looking walk speaks for itself. they dont care for humanoid robots! at all! they dont care for your laundry or your dishes or your gardening. what they care for is really hard to guess. but it has to do with yt videos, military contracts and the industry replacing your job. obviously.
and what is with this exorcist bs? if your favorite movie is the exorcist, fine, but leave robot people alone with it! the 360 turning head makes no sense whatsoever. why not just mount a panoramic camera instead? why does it have two arms when it is only using one? why not three? or four? or eight? either you care for the humanoid shape or you dont, but what does bd do? no one knows, not even they themselves. and then the paradroid reference, a game from the 80s. what people have the say in this company? maybe these people should start listening to their vinyl jazz records and take up gardening and leave designing humanoid robots to a younger generation that knows why they want a humanoid robot and for what.
this is all just stupid idiotic show off and everyone falls for it. this is so sad to see. where is a video of a humanoid robot going up and down normal stairs like a human would? sitting down on a chair and getting up again? falling on the ground and getting up again? climbing in and out of a car seat? why would you design bipedal walking and then put some metal bars at the end that are only in the way? why not do wheels instead? nothing makes sense here.
If yap was a person ⬆️
@@elijahsmessage3096 you can ask chatgpt to make a short version of what i have to say if you dont have the time to read my lengthy sermon.
Can you do any better? If you can't then be quiet!
@@justcallmebrian793 if boston dynamics wants to hire me, then i can do better, yes. im taking 1 million p.a. and everyone has to do what i say.
I can do better than that robot
boring
you’re ready to see a t-800
stilllooks fake
thanks to ai fake looks real, and real looks fake