Meet Astribot S1: the Next-Gen AI Robot. - AI-powered. Unparalleled agility, dexterity and accuracy. - The future of AI Robot is here, and it's Naturally Yours. ➡ Astribot.com
It will beggin with medium things, like accountants ect who are pretty expensive but not so hard to switch, then the low class jobs, barman, gardener, butcher,... and finally even the ceo s and elites,... We will probably know one day the first AI CEO... its facinating but so scary.
@@_Chad_ThunderCock The bots are going to poison us, to exterminate the "risk" of humans attacking the AI. Would you rather drink a little spit, or poison? Or, crazy thought here... you could be nice to the McDonald's employees who ARE SERVING YOU.
@AEGISAOE I understand it must be torture for you to hear this for 200 years. But today's world is different than what it was then. Then, technology was limited to industry only, but today is entering our homes and interfering in our day to day lives. With this rate, I believe it's not hard to recon that it's obvious if robots are leveling with humans at every step then our existence would soon be obsolete because let's admit it, we're worthed by our work not mere existence
Nah.. we wont even be around when that happens. These demos are fun to watch! But you have no idea how much more it takes to make these things a viable option. The next generation will maybe make a start.. but as a robot arm engineer (the ones they use for car manufacturing and in other companies) I can tell you.. this is still miles and miles away.
What was most impressive for me was at 1:20 when its unscrewing the cap, at first it unscrews using a twisting motion and once it recognizes that the cap is loose enough, it moves its hand back and forth to unscrew the cap, changing how it approaches the task based on the changes in the task itself
I'm personally not that convinced. It's impressive, but it's very common for robotics companies to showcase what their robots have been trained on billions of times. I don't think there's any natural realtime adaptation happening.
It is funny to think that us, humans, do those tasks without thinking about the process of how we did it. But when this robot UNSCREWS a bottle led it is something diabolical, I love it, I hope this turns out to be real, and by real I mean they did not train it to do just those certain tasks, I would love to see a guy at my house doing laundry and thinking it's an achievement, it is tho
We have the option of just not taking the insane risks being forced on the whole world without consent. Join PauseAI and help us stop the madness until we get proof of safety. (Reminder: No one knows how to make a superhuman AI model robustly safe, and almost everyone who's anyone in the space of AI has acknowledged that it is an extinction risk.)
I'm 99% sure they trained the hell out of it just to do these six tasks EXACTLY the way they're demo'ed for the funding round. If you asked it to make a different drink or sandwich, it wouldn't have a clue We'll get there pretty soon but this incarnation isn't it yet
Yeah, certain movements seem too smooth or "animated" for how a real agent should move. (The kind of semi-jittery, real-time adjustment type of movement)
For real, that’s what I’m hoping. I really hope this demo is faked or ridiculously optimized or something. If it’s not … we’re absolutely done for. No jobs will be safe in 10-15 years. And there won’t be anything to replace them.
You see, OP, That's exactly the thing. They have figured this out to where we have a GUI that is simple enough for the layman to understand on how to program in the movements, object detection, as well as the actions to do upon those objects. The only thing stopping people from using this technology is the paywall that the inventors put up. We already have visual models which identify things with pictures that we train it on, all the robot needs to do is be given the task and shown the proper movements and then keep within certain tolerances. Not paying attention to this is no excuse for calling it impossible.
Imagine in 30 years where it becomes financially viable for a large amount of people to have a robot like this as an at home chef etc. without breaking the bank. Absolutely bonkers to think about.
End of days? No. But if you think things are going to go well when suddenly the majority of human labor becomes obsolete over the next decade, you're deluding yourself. Rough times ahead.
What people think will happen: Astribot in every house cooking you delicious meals What will actually happen: Astribots serving you burgers at McDonalds
Depends on the timescale. Both will happen in the fullness of time, but robots serving burgers at McDonalds will definitely come first though, as a restaurant kitchen is a far more predictable and repetitive environment than a family home.
Sounds great to have robots do work instead and us humans have more time for ourselves. Question is will government spread the wealth that is now optimized by robots as base income to citizens or not. It all comes down to good policy that makes human replacement a heaven or hell
If something like this gets hybrid with tesla Optimus gen 2's palms with fingers, it would be absolutely terrific. The new atlas would be ntg compared to something like that. Collaboration in robotics would make things a whole lot better a whole lot faster.
@@AnishRamReddy So true , but the bad side of the story is , humans always keep their secrets and patents keep them safe of technology theft for years ... open source is the only key to develop fast a phenomenal product ! I would love to see tesla working with leading companies to build something really good. A robot like from the Movie : I,Robot That would be awesome !!
It's good to see... I want to see how these robots do 30 years from now. Incredible times to be in.... I would like to give all the dirty work to robots , so I can focus on better things.
I have seen this before. It's called Japanese style. It looks great from the top but ugly on the underside. Look again but this time pay close attention.
*Employees after watching this* : "it was an honour, working with you comrades." 1.1K this is literally the most likes I've ever got on all platforms combined 😥 thank you all sooo much 😘😘😘😘😘
@@ReactivelightI'm not sure you understand how these types of robots work. Neural networks aren't 'programmed'. The human operator teaches it how to do certain things, then it's able to do that specific task, even if the circumstances of the action vary
@@smokeyfish7435 The question is how robust it is. If I move it a bit or give it a different size & color shirt will it work properly? What is the failure rate and how serious those failures are? This is just pure marketing without some more information.
The part that really impresses me is the part where it puts its hand on top of the toybox to make sure it doesn't move when closing the drawer. That's really good and speaks volumes to the model's training.
I wonder if it's actually something the robot would do with containers, intuitively knowing when it needs to be held in place. It's probably a pre-programmed action for this specific container.
@Ruzzky_Bly4t I don't think this is pre-programmed. This is supposed to be an AI robot. AI robots learn new tasks rather than being pre-programmed for each task.
@@ChinaSongsCollection Keyword "it's supposed to be". It's a startup that wants money, and it would be nothing new if it sprinkled in some lies to attract more investors. If it actually understood when a container needs to be held in place and how to open it, that would be incredible.
@@Ruzzky_Bly4t I have to say that's a weird assumption to make. It of course could well be that they are lying. But the logic that because _'I can't make one, and therefore they are lying'_ is hardly convincing.
I kept cracking jokes as it was performing actions, like opening the bottle using a robot voice saying "bottles... up" lol idk it was humorous, I hope it comes with a goofy personality like that
I think the most interesting thing will be when these robots can cook any meal for us from the comfort of our own home with a catalogue of every dish humanly possible. No longer will personal chefs be for the wealthy only. People will reverse engineer McDonald's or "pirate" it's recipes, same with every other restaurant or fast food we love. Humans will win, but It will likely crater the restaurant industry, not completely but kinda like how Movie Theaters are becoming a novelty. Whats already happening in some restaurants is robots are replacing certain jobs like pizza making, bartender, etc. And they make them even better than humans.
Note they haven't mentioned the price. A Spot from BD is $75K and cannot do a tenth of what this can. Expect those to cost mid six figures when they release. They probably won't be cheap in our lifetimes.
Its beyond sad that you mention every dish possible and then jump to reverse engineering McDonalds. If it could make you anything why would anyone ever intentionally choose to eat garbage??? It could make you good healthy food specifically tailored to your metabolism and flavor favorites from all over the world. Way to race to the bottom... :-( SMH
@dsp4392 As a company, You could buy a brand new one of those base models every 2 years for the same price it would cost to hire, insure, and pay taxes on, a human employee. If you're a humankind fatalist, the future is right now.
Wow! That's amazing. If it's not actually being remotely controlled, this represents a huge leap in robotics technology with artificial intelligence. So far, it's the most advanced model.
There is no way the bot just carrassed the t-shirt after folding it, it seems crazy. I expected a fold but the hand moment to smoothen it made me go crazy. Also, who added a sassy settings to the bot? It whirls the wine??? Damn this crazy
We've been telling ourselves this moment was coming in film and literature for a hundred years or so. And I'm still staring at this thing in disbelief. The Cylons, Skynet, I, Robot - _The Jetsons._
I see a lot of comments about teleoperation, it doesn't even matter, you go ahead and operate an excavator to pill skin off a cucumber and tell me how hard it is. With this, even if its teleoperated, it already has crazy value to most of the industry. Especially if you can make it trainable on certain skill sets, a bot can work 24/7 but human can't, not to mention human will require works comp, liability insurance, local tax, state tax, federal tax, health insurance list goes on.
1:13 It has a “unique”way of adding salt to a pan. Made me actually laugh out loud. Yeah, um, I don’t think thats the human way to do it, but yk maybe I’m the odd one
I have seem videos on almost all human based robots including the new Boston Dynamics one. But for some reason this robot really gave me a "WOW" factor over all others. Great job!!!!!
@@FallenBG Nah. Undoubtedly the video is edited to show only the "good" takes, perhaps it is actually tele-operated and they are lying, but no one in the industry would waste their time with pre-programmed actions, it's a herculean waste of time and resources compared to simply using AI learning instead.
These robotics companies are full of shit usually. Boston Dynamics produces videos with a lot of outtakes. Their robots are very good at performing one trick and that's it. What did they achieve? Like, what is the use case for these robots? I would also be skeptical of this video - we don't see it's legs, we don't know how it functions on it's own in a big room, it only stands still in front of a desk, we don't know if these skills transfer to other areas or if he is mostly capable of handling the items showcased in this video. Honestly, I would lower my expectations and wait another 10 years. Then we will most likely be able to see the first robots who are actually USEFUL, and who can SOLVE problems. Not just randomly interact with items in a (most likely) heavily scripted video.
I had a toy like this as a kid --- the "robo hominid" or something like that --- basically did tricks like throwing a crumpled-up piece of paper into a trash can, or yes, flipping a lil plastic pancake with a lil plastic frying pan. It could only do these things if you gave it the stuff it came with and pressed the corresponding button on the remote. That's basically what this is, but at a one-to-one scale and eyes to figure out the very very limited five things it can do when everything goes right. I'm still waiting for Ghost-In-The-Shell androids: A. They look enough like people, but in a stylized enough way to not be incredibly creepy. The company that's making power ranger androids has the right idea. B. They come with like an alexa or siri voice; something default and familiar without emotions. C. On-the-job training. Like, "here's the chore schedule for the week, this is where things usually go, and I'd like you to let us know ahead of time before you start a chore." If you're paying 10,000 up front for a food service or house cleaning worker, it's an absolute rip-off unless it's as good as the human workers.
Not necessarily even if it was half as good as a human and has an active up time of lets say 6 years. You aint hiring someone for 3 years for 10k not even for a year.
@@GaryMillyz same as a car or less, eventually probably it'll get to less than 5000, think that actuators are the only expensive thing on them, if you can drive down the cost of actuators by orders of magnitude, you drive down the cost of robots by orders of magnitude. And people buy cars that cost 50000 dollars so i think there'll be plenty of demand even when it first launches
O primeiro computador era um prédio! Esses são os primeiros robôs, imagina daqui alguns anos ? O prédio virou um celular q cabe na palma da mão e com milhares de recursos superiores! Imagine o dia q esses robôs chegarem a esta evolução?😮
@@keelfly I meant that there was zero western or Chinese media coverage for Astribot S1 or 星尘智能, the company literally just came out of stealth for this bot. We knew about other cutting edge bots from China like Unitree, but this was a total surprise. Very cool to see though.
This is actually a lot more impressive than Figure's robot, it can properly use tools and everything. Granted, we have no idea how cherry-picked these results are, only time will tell on that. Either way, it looks like AI-powered robotics may be joining the workforce sooner rather than later.
Waiting to find out it's controlled by a person, which would still be impressive for how smooth it is. It's a startups so I wouldn't be surprised if they're looking to bait investors.
it says in the video that it's not teleoperated, which means no humans are controlling it. i'm also skeptical because they are such a young company founded in dec 2022 and they have such an impressive bot so fast, hoping it's real! also they're a chinese company the CCP itself funds a lot of robotics and tech companies i doubt they'd need to bait investors.
@@summerbreeze5115technological singularity, meaning the tech will advance so fast we couldn't even predict what would happen after super artifical intelligence being born. Self improving at alarming rate and it will surpass combined human intellect within days(if there's sufficient computing power that is)
To help with the human effect, they need to make its head move. If the camera needs to be fixed as it is, they could use an outer shell for the head that could swivel independent of the fixed cam. Looks like its using a stereoscopic camera for vision, and the robot not moving its body or head, greatly simplifies the math, probably some prediction possibilities with the fixed environment, which could enhance the "smoothness" of it. Calculations can be done faster and get those appendage move commands out quicker. Def cool, will be interesting to see whats next!
Maybe someday we can actually replace all the hard, dangerous work by robots and concentrate on the creative and happy work. Right now it’s more like the other way around with all the generative AI
The defining question of humanity is this: can the economics of this ever fall to where total lifetime costs are cheaper than and as versatile as human labour. The answer to this defines our future. If yes, the speed at which “yes” arrives defines the time in which society has to reconfigure the entire social and economic system, bottom to top.
It is said this robot will be made commercially available as early as this year or next. However, Western consumers most probably won't be able to buy one, because this is made by a Chinese company, and it obviously will be denied access to the US market due to "national security".😄
Yep, I'm glad I got to grow up pre AI age, but I'm also super excited for the AI/Robotic age. We get to live through the most important time for humanity. Just enjoy the ride.
I know a lot of people are probably scared, but holy shit this is cool. this type of technology is only at these baby stages and probably wont be able to do unique, un-programmed tasks for a while (meaning not trained on), but it still shows how far humanity has come in this field. It's impressive.