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alsodumb | 1 year ago
They do have an RL controller running for the legs, but it's just an intermediate controller and it probably get high level commands from a teleoperator. The upper body is purely teleop.
alsodumb | 1 year ago
They do have an RL controller running for the legs, but it's just an intermediate controller and it probably get high level commands from a teleoperator. The upper body is purely teleop.
Judgmentality|1 year ago
I'm very skeptical, even if this technology worked flawlessly, that this would scale towards a profitable business. I understand that not every robot would require 24x7 human assistance, but still - this is a very optimistic business model.
Robotics has always been in competition with minimum wage labor. How long could you hire a maid before making a return on the cost of the robot? And that's assuming the robot isn't worse, which it is pretty much guaranteed to be.
corysama|1 year ago
But, how to do that safely? First they build a robot with low gear ratios, low weight, pinch points covered. So, if it literally falls on you it’s low risk.
Then they have humans teleoperating it in first-person VR with 1:1 hand control.
The more times humans do any particular task through the robot, the more the robot learns to do that task in real world situations.
It’s the most thoughtful plan for robotics I’ve seen yet by far.
https://youtu.be/2ccPTpDq05A
noduerme|1 year ago
https://www.1x.tech/open-positions/android-operator-mountain...
pzo|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
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jerezzprime|1 year ago