To add to that, a good friend of mine is a welder and machinist (and still using Linux on the desktop years after I set him up). A robot 'helper' that just moves things around and maybe does basic machine work (cutting pipe and threading the ends, for example) would put his productivity through the roof. Same story with a guy who specializes in kitchen remodeling.
It's hard to find decent general purpose help these days and they would pay good money for a halfway useful helper.
Once it's able to weld... That's going to be a massive game changer, and I can see that coming 'round the corner right quickly.
There are couple UR5 single arm cobots on eBay at $5.5k each right at this moment. The truth is that the value of humanoid is in it form, the novelty, the sense of accomplishment, not features.
because they already are. an industrial arm from ABB is frequently over $100k. add in the cost to fit it with specialty equipment like vacuum suction for handling boxes, made by a small to medium size business, they'd probably charge another $50k. and if it breaks you need specialty mechanics and parts.
in a world with 500 million humanoid robots, parts are plentiful, theyre easier to work on due to not weighing 5000 pounds, and like the other person said, economies of scale
xky|4 months ago
aerostable_slug|4 months ago
It's hard to find decent general purpose help these days and they would pay good money for a halfway useful helper.
Once it's able to weld... That's going to be a massive game changer, and I can see that coming 'round the corner right quickly.
numpad0|4 months ago
93po|4 months ago
in a world with 500 million humanoid robots, parts are plentiful, theyre easier to work on due to not weighing 5000 pounds, and like the other person said, economies of scale