The robots were just a little too slick.

  • @[email protected]
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    16 hours ago

    A robot isn’t just software: the hardware for humanoid robots has proved quite difficult to build and if these robots have the hardware necessary to walk around and manipulate objects (in the real world, not in a lab where they get multiple “takes”) then they are remarkable even if their every action is directed by a human.

    Also I would have guessed that Hasbro owned the IP for robots named “Optimus”. Maybe Tesla paid them, the way that Verizon paid Lucasfilm for the right to use the word “droid”.

    • @Warl0k3
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      411 hours ago

      While it is impressive, it’s impressive in a “college robotics classes were doing this six years ago” way. The control loop would be interesting with how the human gesticulation interacts with the locomotion algorithm they’re using, but that assumes that the robots can walk and chew bubblegum (or in this case, walk and interact with a crowd via teleoperation) at the same time. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that the robots were entirely software controlled when walking. That seems like the case from what I’m seeing in these vids.

      • @[email protected]
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        38 hours ago

        It has been a while since I went to college but I don’t remember college robotics classes building robots capable of bipedal motion at all.