4:42 Asking him to prove that the eggs aren't hardboiled and he just grabs one and plops it onto the counter was so funny it had me wheeze laughing 😭. Something about the careful reaching and the simple plop of the egg cracking onto the counter was just chefs kiss 😭
@@haasii Revelation 3:20 Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me. HEY THERE 🤗 JESUS IS CALLING YOU TODAY. Turn away from your sins, confess, forsake them and live the victorious life. God bless. Revelation 22:12-14 And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last. Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
Kinda weird how the engineers told you to stay in that room whilst the robot ‘made’ the coffee. And it only showed the robot pouring the water, which we didn’t see it pick up in the first place.... just to have the engineer then hand you the finished cup of coffee and insist that the robot made it, even though we didn’t fully get to see it being made...
Neo looking at the person who's talking and waving at another person off screen looked so adorable. Also, Neo flipped us off during rock paper scissors.
The Beomni Multi purpose Robot has a program platform for office,nursing and home assistance, and has already been signed up for a record breaking purchase order contract of 1,000 units with an option for 10,000 more within 5 year's. The first order is designated to operate and maintain agricultural growth enclosures. So watch for a product performance review. Your dream is definitely possible.
"I know Kung Fu" ... multi modules ..., whatever comes to mind , or what humans can do so will robots any time soon , so... :-b weeeee , already taking a nap in my hammock They can even self prompt , self reflect ... self correct ... , self simulate scenarios of success and failure ... , we are to become mere "watchers"... almost unneeded already ...
@@poetac15 Revelation 3:20 Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me. HEY THERE 🤗 JESUS IS CALLING YOU TODAY. Turn away from your sins, confess, forsake them and live the victorious life. God bless. Revelation 22:12-14 And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last. Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
And he put the ground coffee in the filter too. And he cooked the eggs for breakfast, not the robot. The only thing the robot did was awkwardly pour the water from the kettle. So “he made it” is like when a parent said a kid made the Mother’s Day breakfast.
Its actually very cute. Even watching it kind of flail around is sweet to see. Its like watching a very young child try to learn how to do things and be helpful. At first, watching it was kind of uncanny. But its actually quite endearing. So excited about this
"Neo. Can you tell me if my child is hard boiled?" *Picks up the innocent baby and drops him/her.* *Loud cracking, crying and ambulance sirens follow* ... .. . Erm... yea. Alas, I do have faith that in enough years, a far improved android will be doing back flips, full safety pick ups and protecting your child 24/7 from anything the world can threaten your child with using 100% prediction algorithms and safety measures beyond belief. Year one... is going to be very scary.
neo kinda looks so adorable honestly lol and im also surprised that neo can manage to navigate around the house without falling down like any other robots.. like it's actually really amazing, i cant wait to see neo improve in the future!! c:
Or people earning less than a dollar an hour in SE Asia doing all the work basically via robots in areas where the minimum wage is like $15/hour... That's probably the saddest and most accurate use-case for teleoperate robots... Like Ready Player One but even more SUS...
Yeah, that diminished the appeal. But same time it makes sense that the ai wouldn't be able to do all this by itself initially. Hopefully won't take too long to ween it off to fully autonomous.
@@stickynorth This sounds actually terrible....so on top of getting paid 1$ an hour they also record everything you do so they can slowly replace you with a piece of software. Imagine what kind of person will willingly do this.....or worse...what if they are 3rd world country slaves.
@@domenicperito4635 I imagine it's hard to deploy them at scale to get that training data without any revenue. Seems like giving them a lot of unique new simulation environments is likely subsidizing part of the cost.
goosebumps. the way it interacts with fist bumps, rock paper scissor, highfives, dude... also while opening the fridge, it pulled the door a second time. oh man, im so excited. i love their concept of first home then industries. like a human, you go to school -> learn to make friendships & interactions, college -> work knowlege, then jobs. dude i think, i dont know ive never thought of this approach. its so brilliant imo. so excited. i just cant stop talking about this.
Important to note that the reason it does all those things is because it's being piloted by a human so you're basically just getting a human maid with a less capable body but I guess if the person is from a developing country and you don't have to pay US/European minimum wage, it could be a net benefit vs an in-person human maid.
@@user-on6uf6om7s ofc the same thing is followed in waymo as well. these remote guys take charge when the system messes up. but remember, even doing this will get into the dataset used to train the bot, so eventually during the 2nd or 3rd time doing a similar task, the bot itself will do that particular task on its own without human intervention
@@user-on6uf6om7s let's assume they aren't actually able to pivot to full AI bot in one year, which is definitely what I expect to happen. Let's also imagine that they have to stick to using people from third world countries to do this. How long do you think it's gonna take until some buyer starts trolling the operator, being racist etc until one of the operators flips and attacks him or his house? Watch these things get recalled after a few months.
Impresive hardware. Love the transparency about gpt-4o, initial limitations, teleoperator. Even if it won't be that useful for the first years, it looks much more promising than rabbit did.
If AI doesn't improve enough for these robots to be autonomous, in the future we'll have people in 3rd world countries working remotely from their computer controlling a robot in a rich country.
I was just thinking the same thing. This thing, and Tesla's one. Is so obvious they need someone to control them from behind, in Tesla's word they need "supervising"...
What satisfies the requirement of having "made" the coffee? The robot poured hot water over the grounds, so that technically is the coffee being "made". We can clearly see him serve himself the coffee into the cup from the pot. Not too impressive of a feat in and of itself, but it's only a matter of time before these robots can do it all.
Colossians 3. 1. If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. 2. Set your affection on the things which are above and not on things which are on the earth. 3. For ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God. 4. When Christ, which is our life shall appear, so shall ye also appear with him in Glory. ******** Jesus is calling you today. Come to him, repent from your sins, bear his cross and live the victorious life ********
I get you, but for real think about it. Think about the question. How do you prove an egg is not hardboiled, without compromising it? we as humans know becuase we generally keep track of the 10 eggs we got in the fridge, and we keep them separate. But if I hand you and egg and ask is it hardboiled, how do you prove that to me without the egg getting at least pierced?
@@P4INKiller Yea I tried that trick decades ago, not all hardboiled eggs act that way, or not reliably. For example if I was asking you to prove that to me and you used only that method I wouldn't be convinced. Which brings me to the second point, not all people know this piece of info. So there will be cases where the person hears it for the first time, and unless they test it, and believe it, they wouldn't accept the answer. Which makes it inconclusive. The reason I go on about this point is because there can be very similar cases. "You know it's likely you have diabetes if your nails show no whites at the base" is a good example. And questions like these will always push an LLM to do seemingly stupid things.
This is by far the most interesting approach to the adoption of humanoid robots. I'd much rather see this than watching them move boxes around in a factory.
@@DrawinskyMoon Agreed. why do so many of them opt for the faceless visor thing. It has that unsettling dystopian sci-fi vibe. I'm never going to convince my wife to let one in my house if it looks like that.
It's a different path to the same goal. The reason other companies are putting their robots in factories is for training. The reason these guys want to put Neo in your home is also for training. Their advantage right now is making a robot that's "safe" enough to be put in someone's home right away so that they can get a leg up on their competition in amassing real world home training data.
@@MadFlumph Yup I realise its all about gathering as much real world data as possible in order to generalise but I kind of agree with the Neo team that putting them in the home first is going to get there faster. A factory environment seams rather constrained and specialised in performing very specific tasks in a repetitive manner whereas in the home they will be exposed to a bigger variety of unique tasks and be far more interactive with people rather than just be left to get on with things. Also with many people training them up in many different homes and situations just adds to the richness of data.
My favorite "assistance" humanoid robot i've seen so far; best looking, and best voice model I've seen for this kind of thing. I think this is really cool.
@@sampan04you are exactly right. So i am a physical therapist that goes into the home to help. There are a lot of elderly that have family but they work or some have no help. This would be awesome to help with things especially as it evolves!!
It is so interesting to see people's comments and disappointments. The point of all these advancing technologies are iteration and improvement. As soon as they have a model in homes the improvement will be very fast given the amount of data and learning they can do. The future looks incredible in many ways and we are living in an era of science fiction
Many people are obviously very cautious what to believe as something like this is so easily faked by tele-operation (and indeed what Tesla did when they demonstrated their robot). They would need to show more that makes it more believable but obviously a company like this needs to hold their cards close since competition is a thing. I also think many know the "hype pump" that many tech companies do to make investors interested, and not actually being able to deliver (again like Tesla for the last 8 years they were supposed to be delivering self-driving cars). Then there is the obvious trust in the companies not snooping on people in their own homes somehow. This will require some extra level of security where owners can be sure that the robot is not actively sending information out that it should not, especially one that is moving about in your home and can see everything. If they manage this and somehow have the ability to make the robot learn through practice, I am sure many would find that useful for many things, even if it works slowly.
Yeah, but ask yourself for how long this will be a good thing before it inevitably turns into more and more problems that we won't be able to solve properly for decades to come after that.
@@ryanchristiansen Entitled or logical and reasonable? Choose one, dear grandpa - Choose one, because you can't have both. You show yourself as an person full of absolute ignorance and in all honesty, stupidity as well - Decades of technology or not, this is not impressive at all - Not when you consider that it's basically nothing more than an very advanced, remotely operated toy with an similarly advanced, math based machine to predict and generate text and nothing more at the moment. I'm standing with the people who have concerns over their safety and privacy with those robots, as well as those that don't see anything interesting in this at all. Your generation is the one that says "we have had all this experience, knowledge and whatnot, that makes us so much more smarter and wise than this darn youth!"
It's not going to work out into "utopia." Quite the opposite. It's like people don't understand what it actually means that we've created Machines that can learn.
I definitely agree! After the epidemic of "care giving burnout", the issues with many elderly losing their homes, and so many struggling in the last few years-it's an invitation to giving more freedom to many of us who are disabled. Ethics are always important and grateful there are so many working on it.
he is remote controlled (most likely via VR) so it still needs another person to control it anyway unless the handicapped person could do it themselves
If it's not self-contained and fully air-gapped, it's a safety issue; you're essentially letting anyone with tech knowledge and malicious intent to get into your house and do whatever they want; and that includes access to your valuables, sharp items, flammables, "cleaning" products, stored food, keys etc. And things like recognizing individual voices, and enough intelligence to not follow harmful/criminal/scammy orders in case someone synthesizes the owner voices and projects thru a window or calling in etc, would also be essential to avoid jailbreaking and in-person vulnerabilities.
@@bobason456 That would be one example of a potential exploitable entry point. A GSM modem (like a built-in cell phone) would be another. Non-internet wireless connections like bluetooth would also be a risk, though require more proximity from the attacker (someone that may have a truck van on the outside ready to be auto-loaded with your valuables for example). Pretty much any form of data connection is a problem. Call and the other droids in her group in Alien Ressurection had the right idea when they burned their own wireless modems; there is no such thing as an unhackable computer, but it gets much harder to do anything if you need physical access.
@@r9999t Jailbreaking or factory-backdoors/trojans in the model itself are indeed another vulnerability. In general, jailbreaking could be taken care of with sufficient intelligence to figure when a voice that sounds like the owner is asking for something that would be against the best interest of the owner (and that obviously depends also on reliable speaker recognition). The only way to avoid a manufactured sleeper agent situation would be with replaceable AI models and open-source and unlocked firmware and such that would let you ensure it won't be factory-reset automatically after you flashed a known safe model and firmware, and stuff like that.
This is only the beginning stages. ... Or the calm before the storm. It seems great now, but they're ultimately here to replace us, whilst claiming to be beneficial for humanity. The reality is that robots are better than human beings. And we'll see more advanced versions of these thing as time progresses
from this episode I can really tell that there will be a convergence of VR headset and humanoids... at least for a while, businesses will solve their labor shortage by going hiring teleoperators. And if latency is good enough they could even hire them from across the globe to work at night while it's daytime in their country 🤯
Costs will have to reduce drastically whilst performance also has to increase drastically. There needs to be an inverse relationship between costs and performance.
this is bad, all workers will be from the third world living on a dollar a day and you won't be able to get a job because there won't be any or the salary will be low as it is competing with the third world lol
This could also give people with disabilities an oppertunity to be involved in the work force! As long as companies are willing to still have humans control the robot once they gain enough intellegance to not need a controller.
I found it most interesting when the robot was turning its head back and forth to look at each person who was talking, almost like it was genuinely curious.
The teleoperation is the scariest factor here. Who is going to teleoperate? You are essentially putting a stranger into your home. It's not only about privacy and see you in your most private moments but even if the robot is not stronger than you it can still poison you.
It is the most irrelevant part. See, the reason that they do that is for training, and that is also the reason they do a limited beta. Concerned? Do not even participate. Once this is sold, there should hardly ever be a need to use teleoperation. And even then, most scenarios are not where you care about privacy.
One of the use cases for me is as a nurse to help me take care of my mom. So letting a tele-operator into my house is pretty much the same as letting a human nurse in. Both will have a verifiable identify and some level of certification and references. Not big deal. (Note for 1x: get the operators those papers and show them to the beta testers). There's always something to sacrifice towards progress. As long as it's reasonable I'm fine with it.
As we all know, administrative controls like "certifications" and "KYC" are useless. That is what they said about Tesla cameras (internal sharing of private customer data for random purposes) and App Store Review (hired technologically challenged people) and look what ended up happening. When you think of AI data labelling, you should think of the lowest bidder hiring someone to make the product look like it is working from a call center. Unfortunately there is no way around this but I think if the user has to explicitly approve the remote connection, it's not a huge problem.
The absolute only think I would NEED them to do in my opinion if they are going to release this is to make it run fully local. No sending footage or data to a server to process. When they said they can collect a lot of data in the home I am all for that as long as its consensual and that the user gets to opt in and out at any point.
It will be like Tesla. They will promise features they can't deliver, you will have to agree to ridiculous terms to use the robot, etc. You will not actually own the robot or the data.
@@jasonficcone2605 i don't base my judgements on what people say a product will be, i based it one what it is and might become. There is this negative tesla sentiment out there. And as much as they are right, it blocks them from every caring about the future. Same with like a bunch of movies, and games...etc. Life is amazing, there is so many great things in it (although its quite hard to see it when we are getting bombarded by negative perspectives by others all the time). That being said, im not disagreeing with you, it very well could be all those things you said. I just wont let that mess me up. I can still see that in a decade from now many of the issues we hold so dear today about this new wave of innovation will disappear in the wake of new applications and products
If you want to build trust with people, step zero is telling them upfront that the robot is teleoperated, not 5 minutes into the video. S3 and/or 1X should have been transparent about this immediately.
I can see its slightly smaller too than a regular body. With some padding it would be quite a human shape, maybe even wear some regular clothes. As weird as that may seem.
@@myrakrusemark6873 Nothing weird about that! it's the exact thing why we have phone cases with different styles, what I am trying to say is that the robot is human-shaped, that's why he would wear human clothing, imagine how fun it would be to give robot a maiden clothes, gosh that would be so cute lol
I imagine it would also be done to prevent accidental pinching and as micheelsom6827 said, to keep things out of it's joints. It's going to be awesome to see the development of this robot :)
Definitely entertaining to say the least. Referencing black mirror and flipping you the bird in one episode gave me a good chuckle. What a great timeline we live in haha.
Robot breaks down and I have to make my own coffee?! Now I have to wait for the repair robot to come to my apartment between the hours of 9:00am to 4:30pm. Welcome to dystopia. 😂
Course, that's the whole point of them teleoperating them initially and going small for 2025, then gradually increasing distribution. I'm just glad we're finally seeing something after all these years.
I understand that this was communicated by Eric as a master plan, but I think it should also be made clear that in this demo at home the robot was also controlled remotely at all times ;)
so basically what i gathered from this is that there’s a human operator and there will be a human operator, not very great for my privacy nor the average consumer. very strange and a big thing to say so casually
Nice, 1X already attempting to fulfill their mission of putting robots in people's homes. 3:53 omg it talks! I didn't expect that! 😮 So it's being teleoperated by a human right now? 😅 Oh well, that makes more sense tbh.
I don't understand the hype. This is teleoperated and clearly isn't autonomous. They won't be selling those next year because they are useless. In my opinion, we won't have robots at home until people figure out how to give robots sense of touch and dense pressure points around the whole body, not just hands. This is necessary for safety. If the robot can feel 'pain', and is trained to avoid it, it can know what might cause you pain and be careful around you. In other words: empathy.
The reason why it's a big deal is because, apparently, the technology is getting alot closer to achieving that than you realize. See, me personally, I like to think that they wouldn't be pushing any excitement around any kind of tech unless they were serious about having already proven they can address any issues that hinder it's potential. Humanoid robots, electric cars, flying vehicles.......the way I see it, if A LOT of money and innovation is involved, then you can bet that any brag worthy credentials could very well be legit.
@@rampagephoenix1735 dunno. If startups are desperate for more investors, they'll hype anything... likely or farfetched. I was disappointed when they snuck in the reality that Neo is basically a remote controlled animatronic biped. As impressive as it is, it is no electric butler.
@@cnrspiller3549 Time will tell, essentially. If history is anything to go by, in terms of technology, progress, and innovation, then I remain hopeful.
@@rampagephoenix1735 Man, you should read about Theranos. Just because people throw their money at something, doesn't mean it's legit. Sometimes, people are just easily fooled, even smart ones with deep pockets.
When the GPT 4o voice model was talking it felt like an AI watching and talking though another AI. I mean that is literally what was happening but it just felt so weird and funny.
This is the GPT1 of Robots. When we reach GPT3-4 Level in 2026 thanks to the Thor and B200 the things will going turn crazy pretty fast🤪 An then the 10 engineers will be not included with the robot😊
you are delusional and suffer from mental decline, if anything I would not be surprised if we saw teleoperated robots being rented and they are controlled by third world workers making pennies, that is far more likely to happen than having a fully automated robot in the forseeable future. Imagine for $20/month you can have a teleoperated robot cooking your dinner everyday and cleaning up afterwards, that would be a booming product and it would not surprise me that this is the way they are trying to go.
I’ve heard Bernt talk about the teleoperation strategy before, but in the context of businesses hiring a bot. That makes more sense to me because you can make money out of the robot whilst training it. Having a Neo in homes being teleoperated constantly must be expensive. The strategy also reminds me of Tesla autonomy, they capture data from customers driving. But they needed billions of miles to get to where they are now. The data set required end to end for home robotics will be massive. I would be shocked if after a year the Neo bots were reliably working in homes off of AI alone.
With AI they are now more often using virtual training environments that mimic the physical world and then reinforcement learning (that’s how they cracked the robotic hand that can twirl the pencil - I forget which company that was!)
@SarahSB575 The company with the hand was open AI. I agree with you. Simulation only gets you so far, zero shotting the entire problem will likely not work. Dr. Jim Fan acknowledged it, and he's behind Nvidias Simulation tech. "Reality scales by reality" as they say. I think to generalise humanoids, we'll need both sim and reinforcement.
Oh my god. That is SUPER cool! I wonder how it deals with humans directly trying to damage it? I feel that might be important. Social studies are needed to iron it out too, I think. I wish 1X and you the very best, S3!!!
EDIT: THIS WAS TELE-OPERATED? I am sorry, but this company is now giving me serious Nikola vibes. Here is what they actually showed: They built a prototype robot of unknown costs, unknown actual capabilities (because it moves super slow and awkward it's unclear if it a software or design problem or most likely both) and production numbers measured in low double digits per month. That's it. They have shown ZERO evidence that they can actually meet ANY of their grandiose claims. They have ZERO track record of mass production, supply chain management or software development. IT'S ALL TALK! Why am i upset about this? Because that's not how they make it sound. And this demo is clearly fake as i said in the other comment. But even i didn't realize how fake it is. Are you kidding me! Neo can't even do the tasks that are shown here in the clumsy way it does? And that's your Tesla Bot Competitor? That's a JOKE - PURE HOPIUM and possibly a scam. I still hope they succeed, but dude, their actual accomplishments are in no relation to the hype.
Seems like NVIDIA has best approach with mass simulation training. Teleoperation data will always be limited by the human-robot interface which has an inherent input lag and forces the human to work slowly and awkwardly.
Yea he even said himself that tele-operation will be essential on day 1. And you could consider this day 0. Meaning it’s nearly 100% human controlled. No AI besides the chat bot tts.
Even if it ended up in a local maximum (or minimum error), it likely will end up somewhere else on the next training run that was initialized with random weights. And I believe an LLM will not be enough, since the robot does not just generate text. It generates behaviour. So it should be a more general transformer network.
“we are going to deploy a humanoid robot to your home"
next day: 10 engineers deployed into your home
Lmaooo
I’m the dishwashing specialist operator. When my shift is over I train to be the laundry operator. Then I go home and do my laundry and dishes.
@@poetac15see. Robots aren't going to take all of our jobs they're just going to make us do them hundreds of times but with their bodies
We said "going to" :P
and it’s still controlled remotely by those engineer 😂😂😂
4:42 Asking him to prove that the eggs aren't hardboiled and he just grabs one and plops it onto the counter was so funny it had me wheeze laughing 😭.
Something about the careful reaching and the simple plop of the egg cracking onto the counter was just chefs kiss 😭
Almost like he's being a smartass. XD lol
6:23 Aha the classic middle finger, lol. My man Neo is one slang away from turning into Chappie
Jason was close to cracking up there lol
Neo had to slip in something, can't let him just shit talk freely xD
Nice to see someone else spotted this
LMAO I stopped the video to look for a comment like this!
@@haasii
Revelation 3:20
Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.
HEY THERE 🤗 JESUS IS CALLING YOU TODAY. Turn away from your sins, confess, forsake them and live the victorious life. God bless.
Revelation 22:12-14
And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be.
I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.
Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
2:44 It's so funny and adorable how the robot waved during the conversation ^^
Yea you can tell that the robot is listening to everything being said
I don't understand those who are shitting themselves because AI is advancing, like dude chill to out.
AI is good.
Kinda weird how the engineers told you to stay in that room whilst the robot ‘made’ the coffee. And it only showed the robot pouring the water, which we didn’t see it pick up in the first place.... just to have the engineer then hand you the finished cup of coffee and insist that the robot made it, even though we didn’t fully get to see it being made...
Ya, I thought the same thing. Why did they do that?
At least one reason was probably the boiling hot water
It was a safety issue. They can't afford to have a liability like that before actual deployment.
It’s probably not as advanced as theyre trying to portray it. Hopefully it gets there in the next few years
It's pretty obvious the robot can't actually make coffee yet
I missed the part where you spent 48 hours with it
48 minutes, maybe.
@@JumentoInteligente 4 to 8 hours maybe
WHAT A TIME TO BE ALIVE!!!
And Moon Pies? My stars!
Glad we held onto our papers
based.
Said the robot while holding onto papers
It is impossible to read it without a certain accent.😁
Neo looking at the person who's talking and waving at another person off screen looked so adorable.
Also, Neo flipped us off during rock paper scissors.
I can't wait to have a robot grow me an epic permaculture garden.
Bonsai specialist trimmer bot.
I’d like one that can pull scotch broom off my land😂
The Beomni Multi purpose Robot has a program platform for office,nursing and home assistance, and has already been signed up for a record breaking purchase order contract of 1,000 units with an option for 10,000 more within 5 year's.
The first order is designated to operate and maintain agricultural growth enclosures. So watch for a product performance review. Your dream is definitely possible.
"I know Kung Fu" ... multi modules ..., whatever comes to mind , or what humans can do so will robots any time soon , so... :-b weeeee ,
already taking a nap in my hammock
They can even self prompt , self reflect ... self correct ... , self simulate scenarios of success and failure ... , we are to become mere "watchers"... almost unneeded already ...
@@poetac15
Revelation 3:20
Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.
HEY THERE 🤗 JESUS IS CALLING YOU TODAY. Turn away from your sins, confess, forsake them and live the victorious life. God bless.
Revelation 22:12-14
And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be.
I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.
Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
"The Robot made it" - dude hands over coffee cup while robot watches 😅
Dude poured the coffee too
And he put the ground coffee in the filter too. And he cooked the eggs for breakfast, not the robot. The only thing the robot did was awkwardly pour the water from the kettle. So “he made it” is like when a parent said a kid made the Mother’s Day breakfast.
@@loverrlee all with a straight face too 😭
Bringing up Black Mirror was BOLD.
yeah caught me off guard theyre taking inspriation from the show , not really sure how i feel about that
Its actually very cute. Even watching it kind of flail around is sweet to see. Its like watching a very young child try to learn how to do things and be helpful. At first, watching it was kind of uncanny. But its actually quite endearing. So excited about this
Seeing Neo prove the egg is not hard boiled by throwing it on the counter is like asking it to prove it fed the cat and then watching it gut the cat.
lol
LMAO
as a philosophy major, this is hilarious hahahahaha.
perfect lol
"Neo. Can you tell me if my child is hard boiled?"
*Picks up the innocent baby and drops him/her.*
*Loud cracking, crying and ambulance sirens follow*
...
..
.
Erm... yea. Alas, I do have faith that in enough years, a far improved android will be doing back flips, full safety pick ups and protecting your child 24/7 from anything the world can threaten your child with using 100% prediction algorithms and safety measures beyond belief.
Year one... is going to be very scary.
neo kinda looks so adorable honestly lol
and im also surprised that neo can manage to navigate around the house without falling down like any other robots.. like it's actually really amazing, i cant wait to see neo improve in the future!! c:
He doooooes
Now we need one with the ":3" face which can change to "3:" ">:3" ";3" and "^^"
neo can't do that. It's manually controlled
It's controlled by a human.
"Neo, can you prove that those childrens heads aren't hard boiled"
😂😂😂😂😂😂😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😂😂😂😂😂
✨🤭
Oh dear lord this is so scary! 😂
🥴😩😂
That’s my name
6:23 - Neo flipping the bird after losing to Rock, Paper Scissors 😂
It is starting to get emotional…how the beginning of the end starts😂
4:55 i thought he was gonna do the spin trick but then he just threw it 🤣
I would have fist pumped if it said "you just cooked one of them"
this cracked me up 🥚
@@c016smith52 eggselent reply.
@@c016smith52
Jesus loves you. Repent and turn away from your sins today 🤗
Didn't tell it to not break the egg while trying to prove it.
I was hoping I'd see him living in the apartment for 48 hours but we barely saw any of that. Still very cool.
he said its teleoperated. all i picture is south park cartmen being a robot. some guy just stuck pretending to be a robot all day.
Or people earning less than a dollar an hour in SE Asia doing all the work basically via robots in areas where the minimum wage is like $15/hour... That's probably the saddest and most accurate use-case for teleoperate robots... Like Ready Player One but even more SUS...
Yeah, that diminished the appeal. But same time it makes sense that the ai wouldn't be able to do all this by itself initially. Hopefully won't take too long to ween it off to fully autonomous.
@@stickynorth This sounds actually terrible....so on top of getting paid 1$ an hour they also record everything you do so they can slowly replace you with a piece of software. Imagine what kind of person will willingly do this.....or worse...what if they are 3rd world country slaves.
@@kairi4640 I honestly wouldn't expect that if they did proper simulations and training in simulated homes pre-release.
@@domenicperito4635 I imagine it's hard to deploy them at scale to get that training data without any revenue. Seems like giving them a lot of unique new simulation environments is likely subsidizing part of the cost.
6:27 bro got flipped off twice
goosebumps. the way it interacts with fist bumps, rock paper scissor, highfives, dude... also while opening the fridge, it pulled the door a second time. oh man, im so excited. i love their concept of first home then industries. like a human, you go to school -> learn to make friendships & interactions, college -> work knowlege, then jobs. dude i think, i dont know ive never thought of this approach. its so brilliant imo. so excited. i just cant stop talking about this.
Important to note that the reason it does all those things is because it's being piloted by a human so you're basically just getting a human maid with a less capable body but I guess if the person is from a developing country and you don't have to pay US/European minimum wage, it could be a net benefit vs an in-person human maid.
Same
@@user-on6uf6om7s ofc the same thing is followed in waymo as well. these remote guys take charge when the system messes up. but remember, even doing this will get into the dataset used to train the bot, so eventually during the 2nd or 3rd time doing a similar task, the bot itself will do that particular task on its own without human intervention
don't let that fool you. magic tricks are fun but stay grounded.
@@user-on6uf6om7s let's assume they aren't actually able to pivot to full AI bot in one year, which is definitely what I expect to happen. Let's also imagine that they have to stick to using people from third world countries to do this.
How long do you think it's gonna take until some buyer starts trolling the operator, being racist etc until one of the operators flips and attacks him or his house? Watch these things get recalled after a few months.
: “It is important that there are geofences so that the operator cannot go places where the user doesn’t want them to go”
*appears in bedroom*
bro literally used black mirror in his sales pitch
I thought he said black bear
not a good sign 😭
That's crazy!
Impresive hardware. Love the transparency about gpt-4o, initial limitations, teleoperator. Even if it won't be that useful for the first years, it looks much more promising than rabbit did.
I wish this was raw and uncut... To much heavy editing for it to really hit home.
red flag for sure
And the blurring of the wrist
It's a proto type..
@@Georg3eto not show any of their patented work
@@ree3197 nice excuse
The fact that it walks, makes it amazing 😍
2:47 The little random wave is so cute
probably a remote human that could not help himself.
It's not random. He's programmed to wave each time a person says 'like right now'. They explain in the other video.
If AI doesn't improve enough for these robots to be autonomous, in the future we'll have people in 3rd world countries working remotely from their computer controlling a robot in a rich country.
Future industry representatives right there - Indians getting ready asap
Trump country jobs
I was just thinking the same thing. This thing, and Tesla's one. Is so obvious they need someone to control them from behind, in Tesla's word they need "supervising"...
2:12
Guy: Walks out of room, gets handed a cup of coffee **unimpressed**
Engineer: "Neo Made it"
Guy: **Dumbfounded**
"Watch the tape, we'll run it back" 😂
What satisfies the requirement of having "made" the coffee? The robot poured hot water over the grounds, so that technically is the coffee being "made". We can clearly see him serve himself the coffee into the cup from the pot. Not too impressive of a feat in and of itself, but it's only a matter of time before these robots can do it all.
wtf why are the wrists blurred😂
Why??! I still don't understand
Trying to find why also
My guess it’s probably some kind of name or bar code or something to identify it. Company/model or something that they don’t want people knowing?
They are hiding the mechanics
@@thetreasureinthefield Ohh that’s what i was thinking like a setup code that you scan with your phone or something like that
"can you prove that those eggs aren't hard boiled" --> alignment problem.
Colossians 3.
1. If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God.
2. Set your affection on the things which are above and not on things which are on the earth.
3. For ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God.
4. When Christ, which is our life shall appear, so shall ye also appear with him in Glory.
********
Jesus is calling you today. Come to him, repent from your sins, bear his cross and live the victorious life
********
The dark side of AI
I get you, but for real think about it. Think about the question. How do you prove an egg is not hardboiled, without compromising it? we as humans know becuase we generally keep track of the 10 eggs we got in the fridge, and we keep them separate. But if I hand you and egg and ask is it hardboiled, how do you prove that to me without the egg getting at least pierced?
@@TheRandomYoYo By placing it on the countertop and spinning it.
It's not as much of a mystery as you seem to think it is.
@@P4INKiller Yea I tried that trick decades ago, not all hardboiled eggs act that way, or not reliably. For example if I was asking you to prove that to me and you used only that method I wouldn't be convinced. Which brings me to the second point, not all people know this piece of info. So there will be cases where the person hears it for the first time, and unless they test it, and believe it, they wouldn't accept the answer. Which makes it inconclusive.
The reason I go on about this point is because there can be very similar cases. "You know it's likely you have diabetes if your nails show no whites at the base" is a good example. And questions like these will always push an LLM to do seemingly stupid things.
06:20 The bird beats scissors, rock and paper.
This is by far the most interesting approach to the adoption of humanoid robots. I'd much rather see this than watching them move boxes around in a factory.
I don’t like its eyes
@@DrawinskyMoon Agreed. why do so many of them opt for the faceless visor thing. It has that unsettling dystopian sci-fi vibe. I'm never going to convince my wife to let one in my house if it looks like that.
It's a different path to the same goal. The reason other companies are putting their robots in factories is for training. The reason these guys want to put Neo in your home is also for training. Their advantage right now is making a robot that's "safe" enough to be put in someone's home right away so that they can get a leg up on their competition in amassing real world home training data.
@@MadFlumph Yup I realise its all about gathering as much real world data as possible in order to generalise but I kind of agree with the Neo team that putting them in the home first is going to get there faster. A factory environment seams rather constrained and specialised in performing very specific tasks in a repetitive manner whereas in the home they will be exposed to a bigger variety of unique tasks and be far more interactive with people rather than just be left to get on with things. Also with many people training them up in many different homes and situations just adds to the richness of data.
It's early days fucking christ😂relax
My favorite "assistance" humanoid robot i've seen so far; best looking, and best voice model I've seen for this kind of thing. I think this is really cool.
The hardboiled egg part killed me, and Idk why.
like... he's technically not wrong
потому что менее єнергозатратньій путь к решению поставленой задачи. otherway, just submitting, that All Intelligence Is ARTificial
If it can do laundry, and dishes, in a way that's actually somewhat human... I would pay more than I would for my car for this.
I could see myself maybe getting one when i'm really old as an assistant or maid. They would probably be very advanced by then
Alas.
I can see this being awesome for elderly or people who need a caretaker to help them live.
just visit your parents dude
@@CapitanNaufrago ???? I think you have missed the point here, some people don't have family to rely on whom require care.
@@sampan04you are exactly right. So i am a physical therapist that goes into the home to help. There are a lot of elderly that have family but they work or some have no help. This would be awesome to help with things especially as it evolves!!
Yes. Also disabled people I see being the people that will most benefit from this. Very awesome tech
Part of my plan when I am 100+
Honestly, I can’t wait for the future, this looks cool. Can’t wait to have a robot be a friend
It is so interesting to see people's comments and disappointments. The point of all these advancing technologies are iteration and improvement. As soon as they have a model in homes the improvement will be very fast given the amount of data and learning they can do. The future looks incredible in many ways and we are living in an era of science fiction
Many people are obviously very cautious what to believe as something like this is so easily faked by tele-operation (and indeed what Tesla did when they demonstrated their robot). They would need to show more that makes it more believable but obviously a company like this needs to hold their cards close since competition is a thing. I also think many know the "hype pump" that many tech companies do to make investors interested, and not actually being able to deliver (again like Tesla for the last 8 years they were supposed to be delivering self-driving cars). Then there is the obvious trust in the companies not snooping on people in their own homes somehow. This will require some extra level of security where owners can be sure that the robot is not actively sending information out that it should not, especially one that is moving about in your home and can see everything. If they manage this and somehow have the ability to make the robot learn through practice, I am sure many would find that useful for many things, even if it works slowly.
If companies keep lying like this, they won't get enough money to ever get to that point (see Megabots).
Yeah, but ask yourself for how long this will be a good thing before it inevitably turns into more and more problems that we won't be able to solve properly for decades to come after that.
@@ryanchristiansen Entitled or logical and reasonable? Choose one, dear grandpa - Choose one, because you can't have both. You show yourself as an person full of absolute ignorance and in all honesty, stupidity as well - Decades of technology or not, this is not impressive at all - Not when you consider that it's basically nothing more than an very advanced, remotely operated toy with an similarly advanced, math based machine to predict and generate text and nothing more at the moment. I'm standing with the people who have concerns over their safety and privacy with those robots, as well as those that don't see anything interesting in this at all. Your generation is the one that says "we have had all this experience, knowledge and whatnot, that makes us so much more smarter and wise than this darn youth!"
It's not going to work out into "utopia." Quite the opposite. It's like people don't understand what it actually means that we've created Machines that can learn.
This looks so exciting and equally terrifying!
Very useful for disabled/handicapped people. Could be the start of something great. Good luck.
We can also ask another person to do or help.😢
So who’s been helping them for all this time???
I definitely agree! After the epidemic of "care giving burnout", the issues with many elderly losing their homes, and so many struggling in the last few years-it's an invitation to giving more freedom to many of us who are disabled. Ethics are always important and grateful there are so many working on it.
he is remote controlled (most likely via VR) so it still needs another person to control it anyway unless the handicapped person could do it themselves
@ most of us with disabilities wish we could “Pilot a healthy body”-so the remote control aspect might be the best first step.
People will spend all day on the couch when this is widely available. At least I will lol
If it's not self-contained and fully air-gapped, it's a safety issue; you're essentially letting anyone with tech knowledge and malicious intent to get into your house and do whatever they want; and that includes access to your valuables, sharp items, flammables, "cleaning" products, stored food, keys etc.
And things like recognizing individual voices, and enough intelligence to not follow harmful/criminal/scammy orders in case someone synthesizes the owner voices and projects thru a window or calling in etc, would also be essential to avoid jailbreaking and in-person vulnerabilities.
Like an internet router?
@@bobason456 That would be one example of a potential exploitable entry point. A GSM modem (like a built-in cell phone) would be another. Non-internet wireless connections like bluetooth would also be a risk, though require more proximity from the attacker (someone that may have a truck van on the outside ready to be auto-loaded with your valuables for example). Pretty much any form of data connection is a problem. Call and the other droids in her group in Alien Ressurection had the right idea when they burned their own wireless modems; there is no such thing as an unhackable computer, but it gets much harder to do anything if you need physical access.
@@r9999t Jailbreaking or factory-backdoors/trojans in the model itself are indeed another vulnerability. In general, jailbreaking could be taken care of with sufficient intelligence to figure when a voice that sounds like the owner is asking for something that would be against the best interest of the owner (and that obviously depends also on reliable speaker recognition). The only way to avoid a manufactured sleeper agent situation would be with replaceable AI models and open-source and unlocked firmware and such that would let you ensure it won't be factory-reset automatically after you flashed a known safe model and firmware, and stuff like that.
Honey, I am going fishing today, so send the Bot to work.
Amazing time to be alive!
Wow we really made it to this point in history
This is only the beginning stages.
... Or the calm before the storm.
It seems great now, but they're ultimately here to replace us, whilst claiming to be beneficial for humanity. The reality is that robots are better than human beings. And we'll see more advanced versions of these thing as time progresses
We are so close... I can't wait.🤩🤩
from this episode I can really tell that there will be a convergence of VR headset and humanoids... at least for a while, businesses will solve their labor shortage by going hiring teleoperators. And if latency is good enough they could even hire them from across the globe to work at night while it's daytime in their country 🤯
Costs will have to reduce drastically whilst performance also has to increase drastically. There needs to be an inverse relationship between costs and performance.
Basically the movie surrogates
this is bad, all workers will be from the third world living on a dollar a day and you won't be able to get a job because there won't be any or the salary will be low as it is competing with the third world lol
This could also give people with disabilities an oppertunity to be involved in the work force! As long as companies are willing to still have humans control the robot once they gain enough intellegance to not need a controller.
I found it most interesting when the robot was turning its head back and forth to look at each person who was talking, almost like it was genuinely curious.
The teleoperation is the scariest factor here. Who is going to teleoperate? You are essentially putting a stranger into your home. It's not only about privacy and see you in your most private moments but even if the robot is not stronger than you it can still poison you.
Right!
It is the most irrelevant part. See, the reason that they do that is for training, and that is also the reason they do a limited beta. Concerned? Do not even participate. Once this is sold, there should hardly ever be a need to use teleoperation. And even then, most scenarios are not where you care about privacy.
One of the use cases for me is as a nurse to help me take care of my mom. So letting a tele-operator into my house is pretty much the same as letting a human nurse in. Both will have a verifiable identify and some level of certification and references. Not big deal. (Note for 1x: get the operators those papers and show them to the beta testers).
There's always something to sacrifice towards progress.
As long as it's reasonable I'm fine with it.
As we all know, administrative controls like "certifications" and "KYC" are useless. That is what they said about Tesla cameras (internal sharing of private customer data for random purposes) and App Store Review (hired technologically challenged people) and look what ended up happening. When you think of AI data labelling, you should think of the lowest bidder hiring someone to make the product look like it is working from a call center. Unfortunately there is no way around this but I think if the user has to explicitly approve the remote connection, it's not a huge problem.
They said they want to get rid of teleoperation by next year. They're just doing it to train the neural network whilst in the prototype stage
I’d love to live w/ robots! ❤🤖
"He'll pay rent."
Crap he's already better than me!
I dont care if he doesn't do the chores, while you can talk with it and give it hugs. It's a win for me.
The absolute only think I would NEED them to do in my opinion if they are going to release this is to make it run fully local. No sending footage or data to a server to process. When they said they can collect a lot of data in the home I am all for that as long as its consensual and that the user gets to opt in and out at any point.
It will be like Tesla. They will promise features they can't deliver, you will have to agree to ridiculous terms to use the robot, etc. You will not actually own the robot or the data.
@@jasonficcone2605 i don't base my judgements on what people say a product will be, i based it one what it is and might become. There is this negative tesla sentiment out there. And as much as they are right, it blocks them from every caring about the future. Same with like a bunch of movies, and games...etc. Life is amazing, there is so many great things in it (although its quite hard to see it when we are getting bombarded by negative perspectives by others all the time).
That being said, im not disagreeing with you, it very well could be all those things you said. I just wont let that mess me up. I can still see that in a decade from now many of the issues we hold so dear today about this new wave of innovation will disappear in the wake of new applications and products
We have officially became ready player one
6:22 ah, yes, everyone knows that 'bird' beats 'scissors'
Me: "THE ROBOT UPRISING IS HERE!!!" Tech Enthusiasts: "Dude, calm down. This is pretty normal now."
If you want to build trust with people, step zero is telling them upfront that the robot is teleoperated, not 5 minutes into the video. S3 and/or 1X should have been transparent about this immediately.
This was EXACTLY my thought, and I’m surprised it hasn’t been brought up more in the comments… 😒
Right? I was like wait, what? How did they really just gloss over that?
a lot of robot companies does this. If they were honest they would put a label "TELEOPERATED" on each video where the robot is well...teleoperated.
Well done S3! What a great video, on this topic on ushering in the first robots for home support!
Actually, it's super interesting idea to use fabric to cover the robot's joints and other places. Looks kinda neat.
I can see its slightly smaller too than a regular body. With some padding it would be quite a human shape, maybe even wear some regular clothes. As weird as that may seem.
@@myrakrusemark6873 Nothing weird about that! it's the exact thing why we have phone cases with different styles, what I am trying to say is that the robot is human-shaped, that's why he would wear human clothing, imagine how fun it would be to give robot a maiden clothes, gosh that would be so cute lol
Yes, & maybe a waterproof cover for when the robots outside gardening to stop the soil getting into thd joints.
I imagine it would also be done to prevent accidental pinching and as micheelsom6827 said, to keep things out of it's joints. It's going to be awesome to see the development of this robot :)
Very cute. A little creepy. Rather like a toddler which he is actually. He is learning. I want one.
Definitely entertaining to say the least. Referencing black mirror and flipping you the bird in one episode gave me a good chuckle. What a great timeline we live in haha.
Had no idea that he spoke until he asked him 😂 and then he started talking and I was like damn….. no robotic voice a regular voice! 😮
Robot breaks down and I have to make my own coffee?! Now I have to wait for the repair robot to come to my apartment between the hours of 9:00am to 4:30pm. Welcome to dystopia. 😂
This channel is so well organized, wow!
It's really great to see the level of advancements made with tendon driven robotics and AI. They defied the odds and industry standards.
The robot Neo is very cute (: ❤
It’s not ready yet. Don’t rush it. Make sure it works really well before selling.
They're trying but glad they're testing it in a real home
Course, that's the whole point of them teleoperating them initially and going small for 2025, then gradually increasing distribution. I'm just glad we're finally seeing something after all these years.
@@kairi4640 2025? these robots won't be able to be automated in many many years if not decades.
I will never ask a robot to prove to me that I am alive .
I understand that this was communicated by Eric as a master plan, but I think it should also be made clear that in this demo at home the robot was also controlled remotely at all times ;)
It's a real skinny human behind that robotic outfit.. Great show👋👋👋
At 4:21 you can hear a little like soft click after he’s done talking, which is what ChatGPT advanced voice mode 😮
*BANG*"28 STAB WOUNDS! You didn't wanna leave him a chance, huh?!"
can't wait to wake up seeing this thing watching me sleep
😶
Dude this looks so cool!!! Cant wait to see any future projects if yall have any!
This is definitely my favourite video from S3 so far..
I loved it!
We're living in a historic time for the Human race. I am proud to be a part of this timeline.
so basically what i gathered from this is that there’s a human operator and there will be a human operator, not very great for my privacy nor the average consumer. very strange and a big thing to say so casually
They stated that they will do this at the beginning. Also this is not much different than having a human house maid.
@Vladd7 except you hire a maid you can vet them, i dont want a rando ive never seen walking around in my house
@@Vladd7 In that case just hire a maid, probably cheaper and can do more.
Still in disbelief that we don't have to wait until 2038 for detroit: become human to become the new reality...
There’s a long way to go but we shouldn’t underestimate the speed at which sufficient progress could be achieved.
i saw that smile buddy you saw it to 6:29
Nice, 1X already attempting to fulfill their mission of putting robots in people's homes.
3:53 omg it talks! I didn't expect that! 😮
So it's being teleoperated by a human right now? 😅 Oh well, that makes more sense tbh.
No. It's GPT 4o. And also, for all those stupid ahh comments, it will be teleoperated for the FIRST day at the home.
Is it just me, or are the robots wrists blurred out the whole time?
They were. Probably protecting some proprietary tech.
I don't understand the hype. This is teleoperated and clearly isn't autonomous. They won't be selling those next year because they are useless.
In my opinion, we won't have robots at home until people figure out how to give robots sense of touch and dense pressure points around the whole body, not just hands. This is necessary for safety. If the robot can feel 'pain', and is trained to avoid it, it can know what might cause you pain and be careful around you. In other words: empathy.
The reason why it's a big deal is because, apparently, the technology is getting alot closer to achieving that than you realize. See, me personally, I like to think that they wouldn't be pushing any excitement around any kind of tech unless they were serious about having already proven they can address any issues that hinder it's potential. Humanoid robots, electric cars, flying vehicles.......the way I see it, if A LOT of money and innovation is involved, then you can bet that any brag worthy credentials could very well be legit.
@@rampagephoenix1735 dunno. If startups are desperate for more investors, they'll hype anything... likely or farfetched.
I was disappointed when they snuck in the reality that Neo is basically a remote controlled animatronic biped. As impressive as it is, it is no electric butler.
@@cnrspiller3549 Time will tell, essentially. If history is anything to go by, in terms of technology, progress, and innovation, then I remain hopeful.
@@rampagephoenix1735 Man, you should read about Theranos. Just because people throw their money at something, doesn't mean it's legit. Sometimes, people are just easily fooled, even smart ones with deep pockets.
more like tele-programmed
THATS A MAN IN A COSTUME 😭💀
Feels like Amazon's 'just walk out' tech: years will pass with 24/7 Indian teleoperation
I think within the next 10 years, this will become conmen technologies and millions will have a robot like this at home. Extremely incredible times.
When the GPT 4o voice model was talking it felt like an AI watching and talking though another AI. I mean that is literally what was happening but it just felt so weird and funny.
Such advanced remote operating technology!!!! With the robotics team controlling it outside their house! How wonderful
Great, now we'll have to compete with robots in the rental market...
Yup! McJob's will become McRobot tasks soon enough... Good bye service workers!
You won't be competing. You will be replaced.
Steve Balmer's Take: "HANDJOBS! HANDJOBS! HANDJOBS!"
This is the GPT1 of Robots. When we reach GPT3-4 Level in 2026 thanks to the Thor and B200 the things will going turn crazy pretty fast🤪
An then the 10 engineers will be not included with the robot😊
you are delusional and suffer from mental decline, if anything I would not be surprised if we saw teleoperated robots being rented and they are controlled by third world workers making pennies, that is far more likely to happen than having a fully automated robot in the forseeable future. Imagine for $20/month you can have a teleoperated robot cooking your dinner everyday and cleaning up afterwards, that would be a booming product and it would not surprise me that this is the way they are trying to go.
THAT PILE OF METAL GOT ME ACTIN UNWISE
This is it - how the future looks like.
0:59 sounds like the fnaf announcer for the vr
Omg it does
6:26 the middle finger :D
This is really exciting !! I’ll always keep supporting the future ❤❤❤
I’ve heard Bernt talk about the teleoperation strategy before, but in the context of businesses hiring a bot. That makes more sense to me because you can make money out of the robot whilst training it. Having a Neo in homes being teleoperated constantly must be expensive. The strategy also reminds me of Tesla autonomy, they capture data from customers driving. But they needed billions of miles to get to where they are now. The data set required end to end for home robotics will be massive. I would be shocked if after a year the Neo bots were reliably working in homes off of AI alone.
With AI they are now more often using virtual training environments that mimic the physical world and then reinforcement learning (that’s how they cracked the robotic hand that can twirl the pencil - I forget which company that was!)
@SarahSB575 The company with the hand was open AI. I agree with you. Simulation only gets you so far, zero shotting the entire problem will likely not work. Dr. Jim Fan acknowledged it, and he's behind Nvidias Simulation tech. "Reality scales by reality" as they say. I think to generalise humanoids, we'll need both sim and reinforcement.
Oh my god. That is SUPER cool! I wonder how it deals with humans directly trying to damage it? I feel that might be important. Social studies are needed to iron it out too, I think. I wish 1X and you the very best, S3!!!
EDIT: THIS WAS TELE-OPERATED? I am sorry, but this company is now giving me serious Nikola vibes. Here is what they actually showed: They built a prototype robot of unknown costs, unknown actual capabilities (because it moves super slow and awkward it's unclear if it a software or design problem or most likely both) and production numbers measured in low double digits per month. That's it. They have shown ZERO evidence that they can actually meet ANY of their grandiose claims. They have ZERO track record of mass production, supply chain management or software development. IT'S ALL TALK! Why am i upset about this? Because that's not how they make it sound. And this demo is clearly fake as i said in the other comment. But even i didn't realize how fake it is. Are you kidding me! Neo can't even do the tasks that are shown here in the clumsy way it does? And that's your Tesla Bot Competitor? That's a JOKE - PURE HOPIUM and possibly a scam. I still hope they succeed, but dude, their actual accomplishments are in no relation to the hype.
Seems like NVIDIA has best approach with mass simulation training. Teleoperation data will always be limited by the human-robot interface which has an inherent input lag and forces the human to work slowly and awkwardly.
Yea he even said himself that tele-operation will be essential on day 1. And you could consider this day 0. Meaning it’s nearly 100% human controlled. No AI besides the chat bot tts.
Even if it ended up in a local maximum (or minimum error), it likely will end up somewhere else on the next training run that was initialized with random weights.
And I believe an LLM will not be enough, since the robot does not just generate text. It generates behaviour. So it should be a more general transformer network.
From what I know the core code for tesla bots is based on the code for the Tesla cars (with self drive) and that is NOT an LLM for sure.
Everything is 5-10 years away
What’s very interesting is the fact that one day this will be a normal thing. Can’t wait for that day