It's actually a good thing if humans crawl sewers, clean the kitchen and decontaminate Chernobyl while robots are playing chess, dance and mimic cute kittens.
This article comes just in time to silence the heretics who ask what the use of an Optimus is. Promise a factory robot, deliver a Tamagotchi.
The use of Optimus is rather obvious. It's there to replace human labor.
On the factory floor of a car plant, every job that was easy to do with an industrial robot arm bolted down to the floor next to the assembly line and running the same sequence on repeat 24/7? It's already done by an industrial robot arm bolted down to the floor next to the assembly line and running the same sequence on repeat 24/7.
What remains is: the many, many gaps. All the tricky little hard-to-automate tasks that humans can do, but industrial robots would struggle with. Tasks important enough that they have to be done, but small enough and tricky enough that it's not worth redesigning the entire process to make them amenable to automation or building a special snowflake robotic system to do them.
Which is where the general purpose worker robots come in. If the same robot can be trained and retrained for humanlike performance on multiple of those tasks, then it becomes a worthwhile addition to any high automation factory.
Of course, that requires a general purpose worker robot! Which is very much an AI problem. Tesla can build the hardware, but they're banking on being able to back it by software too, and that clearly isn't there yet. Whether it will be remains to be seen - but Tesla isn't the only company banking on being able to solve robot AI.
>The use of Optimus is rather obvious. It's there to replace human labor.
I was with you for the first sentence, then you started diverging. Obviously the purpose is to strike fear into the minds of Tesla factory workers, otherwise they'd have built a completely different robot.
Who do you think is going to buy an Optimus if it's as useless as a Tamagotchi? They're humanoid in shape.
Maybe you've confused generative AI with humanoid robots (powered by similar Machine Learning models to generative AI). And to anyone looking to inundate this thread with edgy nonsense, vague moody negativity stops looking clever to anyone with mental age above 14.
Cocaine fueled unconditional positivity used to be looked down upon, but is the default now in the grifter sphere. So much so, that they now flip the script (which their main skill) and call rational people teenagers. I suggest you follow your grown up Elon Musk on X, where you won't see any "moodiness" or "negativity".
It's actually a good thing if humans crawl sewers, clean the kitchen and decontaminate Chernobyl while robots are playing chess, dance and mimic cute kittens.
This article comes just in time to silence the heretics who ask what the use of an Optimus is. Promise a factory robot, deliver a Tamagotchi.
The use of Optimus is rather obvious. It's there to replace human labor.
On the factory floor of a car plant, every job that was easy to do with an industrial robot arm bolted down to the floor next to the assembly line and running the same sequence on repeat 24/7? It's already done by an industrial robot arm bolted down to the floor next to the assembly line and running the same sequence on repeat 24/7.
What remains is: the many, many gaps. All the tricky little hard-to-automate tasks that humans can do, but industrial robots would struggle with. Tasks important enough that they have to be done, but small enough and tricky enough that it's not worth redesigning the entire process to make them amenable to automation or building a special snowflake robotic system to do them.
Which is where the general purpose worker robots come in. If the same robot can be trained and retrained for humanlike performance on multiple of those tasks, then it becomes a worthwhile addition to any high automation factory.
Of course, that requires a general purpose worker robot! Which is very much an AI problem. Tesla can build the hardware, but they're banking on being able to back it by software too, and that clearly isn't there yet. Whether it will be remains to be seen - but Tesla isn't the only company banking on being able to solve robot AI.
No, "Optimus will eliminate poverty and provide universal high income for all":
https://xcancel.com/elonmusk/status/1990056932888187086#m
Too bad that human labor is the only source of income for most people.
Do robots by robots?
>The use of Optimus is rather obvious. It's there to replace human labor.
I was with you for the first sentence, then you started diverging. Obviously the purpose is to strike fear into the minds of Tesla factory workers, otherwise they'd have built a completely different robot.
Bruh. Do you seriously believe that? There are more efficient ways to intimidate factory workers.
That haven’t already been implemented in car factories?
Who do you think is going to buy an Optimus if it's as useless as a Tamagotchi? They're humanoid in shape.
Maybe you've confused generative AI with humanoid robots (powered by similar Machine Learning models to generative AI). And to anyone looking to inundate this thread with edgy nonsense, vague moody negativity stops looking clever to anyone with mental age above 14.
Cocaine fueled unconditional positivity used to be looked down upon, but is the default now in the grifter sphere. So much so, that they now flip the script (which their main skill) and call rational people teenagers. I suggest you follow your grown up Elon Musk on X, where you won't see any "moodiness" or "negativity".