I have said it numerous times in the past 3-4 years. I believe robotics ( not just humanoids ) will be a bigger thing / threat than AI. And currently China is at least 5 years ahead of rest of the world.
I think we'll soon see a robot arm that costs $2,000-5,00 and will be trainable/deployable in a single day. THIS is what will crush most labor around the world.
Agreed, the hard part about robots is the controller.
We have been able to build robot bodies for decades, but we still don't really know how to build a robot mind. You need better AI than we currently have for that.
To be fair, reusable rockets and electric cars people wanted to drive were not in much supply prior to those companies. Then again, the boring company is probably only at a parity at best with other miners.
I’m still not quite sure why we want humanoid robots and not something more useful or purpose-built.
Think of this like a car company having a racing program — building stuff like this will pay dividends elsewhere in the company; from product design to production chain. Example - boy, does that gait look uncomfortable to sit through. I can imagine wanting to spend more time on smoothness, careful foot planting, gait variations, etc. after having my R&D guys ride around in it. And with that done, I can imagine better wear cycles and faster, better looking small robots benefiting.
I’ll also note that cockpit has been padded. I’d love to see the crash outtake videos.
Yes, ouch. But, also, surely someone is working on getting cantering, galloping, etc implemented? To your point the biggest innovation might be better seating.
Is there a video where the CEO is riding the robot? Because the video that is embedded in the X post doesn't show that at all. He is taking a seat there but it's clear that there is a puppet sitting in it (with a helmet on) when it's moving.
What would you use it for that other machines are unsuitable for? Carrying stuff? Helping with somewhat heavy construction tasks? The torso seems a bit too in the way of the hands to be useful for anything. I mean, it looks cool but might be kinda useless.
It might fit a niche between a forklift and a crane. Pick up large things and move them, with some of the versatility of the crane and mobility of a forklift. While being too big to fit in most places, and probably having a fraction of the load capacity of either
I think the article nails it:
> Early buyers are likely theme parks, industrial operators, or deep-pocketed enthusiasts
It looks cool, and unless you have a very specific niche that will be its main feature
There's no way this thing is stable enough or heavy enough to be even remotely useful for that application. They state 500kg including operator. No outriggers, all the weight is up high... that dog don't hunt.
>What would you use it for that other machines are unsuitable for?
The thing I love about the tech culture in China is that they never really seem to ask themselves this question. They just do cool things because they seem cool. See their EV market for more of this. A car with a movie projector for headlights? Why not? Wish we had more of that in the US.
This robot is 4 times lighter and probably 15-30 times slower than the car I drive (a regular compact suv). But will this be allowed where cars aren't allowed? inside the malls? or general footpaths? I am not thrilled by it but it also feels cool at the same time. If it's something I get to play with in a theme park, I will definitely try it but for public spaces - this should be a absolute no-no.
We've got the whole paradigm shift of using AI before GTA6. There's a fat chance there's not going to be anyone around to play when they're finally done.
I like the almost lego arm attachment, I enjoy the thought that in future, some kid is bolting 4 junk yard arms to a scrap roll cage to build a quadruped menace.
That we're all looking at a bipedal walking robot you can sit in and ride around and no one here seems remotely impressed by this is a sure sign we're in the future.
Everything get heavy when machines get this big. I wonder what the optimal height is for a bipedal robot? With humans there are limits to height as the heart has more work to do in order to reach a brain that is higher up than it needs to be, plus things like backs give out.
A lot of these humanoid robots are a tad diminutive, it will be interesting to see if that is the size that is settled on. Clearly there are constraints such as door sizes and what humans will accept, however, it will be a lot less clutter if the typical home has smaller rather than larger humanoid robots.
I have every confidence I will have Optimus by next year, running with neuralink and able to tidy my sock drawer for me. But what size will he/she be?
You switch your position, the back becomes a seat and vice versa. Gotta be hard to execute in a limited space, so probably you're not even supposed to do that while being inside.
I have said it numerous times in the past 3-4 years. I believe robotics ( not just humanoids ) will be a bigger thing / threat than AI. And currently China is at least 5 years ahead of rest of the world.
I make the same argument.
I think we'll soon see a robot arm that costs $2,000-5,00 and will be trainable/deployable in a single day. THIS is what will crush most labor around the world.
I would say specifically I think robotic applications of Ai will end up being the most economically valuable / impactful use case of Ai
Robotics and AI are not separate things
Agreed, the hard part about robots is the controller.
We have been able to build robot bodies for decades, but we still don't really know how to build a robot mind. You need better AI than we currently have for that.
Robotics with ai is going to make automating office work seem like the warm up act.
Yes, they are, robots have been driving modern manufacturing for over 50 years AI is newfangled technology
Worry not, Elon Musk has promised us that Tesla/XAI/SpaceX is is becoming a robotics firm and we will be saved by him. He is obviously to be truste.
To be fair, reusable rockets and electric cars people wanted to drive were not in much supply prior to those companies. Then again, the boring company is probably only at a parity at best with other miners.
I’m still not quite sure why we want humanoid robots and not something more useful or purpose-built.
Think of this like a car company having a racing program — building stuff like this will pay dividends elsewhere in the company; from product design to production chain. Example - boy, does that gait look uncomfortable to sit through. I can imagine wanting to spend more time on smoothness, careful foot planting, gait variations, etc. after having my R&D guys ride around in it. And with that done, I can imagine better wear cycles and faster, better looking small robots benefiting.
I’ll also note that cockpit has been padded. I’d love to see the crash outtake videos.
> Example - boy, does that gait look uncomfortable to sit through.
Oof yea, now that I think about it, it's not like a horse trot that you can post through, since you're strapped in to the seat.
Yes, ouch. But, also, surely someone is working on getting cantering, galloping, etc implemented? To your point the biggest innovation might be better seating.
Ocean racing speedboats and small fast naval vessels have the kind of seats for this
US Navy boat crews have suffered frequent injuries from the constant hammering.
https://news.usni.org/2026/04/15/navy-must-do-more-to-protec...
and active suspension, now attach wheels.
Just a matter of time until they add wheels to its feet, and the legs will act as active suspension. See also https://youtube.com/watch?v=srPz8TRpZ_8 and https://youtube.com/watch?v=iI8UUu9g8iI (at around 1:36 a human rides that Unitree quadruped)
They would need to build it say 50% better for the US market than the Chinese market.
The median weight of a 25 year old guy in the USA is about 30% heavier than in China.
Is there a video where the CEO is riding the robot? Because the video that is embedded in the X post doesn't show that at all. He is taking a seat there but it's clear that there is a puppet sitting in it (with a helmet on) when it's moving.
The cage leaves a lot to be desired - imagine that thing falling on a fire hydrant. The helmet will not help you then. No thanks!
Sure, just saying because gagadet.com mentions in the article:
> Unitree CEO Wang Xingxing piloted the unit himself during the May 12 reveal on Weibo — a pointed way of demonstrating confidence in a 500kg machine.
What would you use it for that other machines are unsuitable for? Carrying stuff? Helping with somewhat heavy construction tasks? The torso seems a bit too in the way of the hands to be useful for anything. I mean, it looks cool but might be kinda useless.
It's for throwing the alien queen off the spaceship, obviously.
(It looks uncannily like the loader Ripley drives in Aliens)
Or destroying AI controlled attackers swarming from the ceiling
(It's also close to the APUs in Matrix Revolutions).
The only thing I have seen that bipedal and quad robots have over wheels is the ability to traverse more terrain types.
For the boss to walk around the factory and strike fear and laughter deep into the hearts of employees.
It might fit a niche between a forklift and a crane. Pick up large things and move them, with some of the versatility of the crane and mobility of a forklift. While being too big to fit in most places, and probably having a fraction of the load capacity of either
I think the article nails it:
> Early buyers are likely theme parks, industrial operators, or deep-pocketed enthusiasts
It looks cool, and unless you have a very specific niche that will be its main feature
There's no way this thing is stable enough or heavy enough to be even remotely useful for that application. They state 500kg including operator. No outriggers, all the weight is up high... that dog don't hunt.
Not to mention that there is no way it even has enough onboard power to operate long enough to do useful work.
I could see some applications for it. But they are selling it as a mode of transportation?
>What would you use it for that other machines are unsuitable for?
The thing I love about the tech culture in China is that they never really seem to ask themselves this question. They just do cool things because they seem cool. See their EV market for more of this. A car with a movie projector for headlights? Why not? Wish we had more of that in the US.
Meta ray bans and evtol drone taxis and waymos... we've got plenty of cool stuff in the US that's cool and question.
It's about as useful as an F1 car if you see it as a development platform.
>The torso seems a bit too in the way of the hands to be useful for anything.
The wide torso/cage is what's protecting the human operator should the robot fall over.
Tyeah, the ones from Avatar look cooler, but imagine you fall on your face in it, you'd get turned into mush.
A forklift would be more useful and you'd have like $600k+ left over
boost the valuation of your company.
highly recommend watching the Benn Jordan video which interestingly enough dropped yesterday, "Robot Dogs Are A Security Nightmare"[0].
potential backdoors, weak security and other concerns.
[0]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lA8WuXDXfcI
This robot is 4 times lighter and probably 15-30 times slower than the car I drive (a regular compact suv). But will this be allowed where cars aren't allowed? inside the malls? or general footpaths? I am not thrilled by it but it also feels cool at the same time. If it's something I get to play with in a theme park, I will definitely try it but for public spaces - this should be a absolute no-no.
Wow it can even break a mortarless brick wall, impressive!
Dam china making gundams, before GTA 6.
We've got the whole paradigm shift of using AI before GTA6. There's a fat chance there's not going to be anyone around to play when they're finally done.
I like the almost lego arm attachment, I enjoy the thought that in future, some kid is bolting 4 junk yard arms to a scrap roll cage to build a quadruped menace.
I remember years ago there was giant robot duel
looong youtube video, a lot of unnecessary hyping - all to end in 5 second after one robot drove into the other and it just fell
looks like someone made a supercut of all the fights, and it is still too long and has uncomfortable hyping from narrator https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTkVrRkziDI
That we're all looking at a bipedal walking robot you can sit in and ride around and no one here seems remotely impressed by this is a sure sign we're in the future.
We got the first real-life Spiderman villain before GTA VI
I want to watch Cybertruck vs GD01
Why the Cybertruck? What does it bring to the table other than a futuristic name and a polarizing design? Why not a Ford Raptor or F-150 Lightning?
Wonder if the security posture is as good as the robot dog Benn Jordan tested.
Neat, I wonder just how far these things can be scaled.
those are some massive actuators on those joints
The design is very human
Sup homies.
Everything get heavy when machines get this big. I wonder what the optimal height is for a bipedal robot? With humans there are limits to height as the heart has more work to do in order to reach a brain that is higher up than it needs to be, plus things like backs give out.
A lot of these humanoid robots are a tad diminutive, it will be interesting to see if that is the size that is settled on. Clearly there are constraints such as door sizes and what humans will accept, however, it will be a lot less clutter if the typical home has smaller rather than larger humanoid robots.
I have every confidence I will have Optimus by next year, running with neuralink and able to tidy my sock drawer for me. But what size will he/she be?
I’ve bought at least three Unitree products and they are great
I just wish they would to hire people from the US cause I’d love to work there
If anybody knows how to get a job there, I’ve talked with a bunch of people from the company, and they basically say “yeah we’re not hiring ever”
toy
It indeed looks like a toy for rich people. Ideal for when you want to break a loosely stacked brick wall.
so when it's on all fours you're just on your back looking skyward?
You switch your position, the back becomes a seat and vice versa. Gotta be hard to execute in a limited space, so probably you're not even supposed to do that while being inside.
looks ugly.