Optimus can now sort objects autonomously 🤖 . Its neural network is trained fully end-to-end: video in, controls out. Join us to help develop Optimus (& improve its yoga routine 🧘) → tesla.com/AI
When the Neural network realizes that humans are the problem … the Robot will slap the shit out of government authorities blocking the Starship launch.
The electrical impulse is 2500.000 times faster than biological animal nervous sensitive impulse and 5 million times faster than the motor impulse (120m/s and 60m/s vs 300 million m/s) so the recognition process and the speed of reaction with artificial neural networks works and occurs indeed better and faster than in their biological counterpart.
yeah i think the most impressive thing here is its leaning over and constantly balancing while sorting those blocks, very human esque, previous most bots just kinda planted their body in a place and only moved their arms and maybe rotated their torso.
@@reyashvishwa The argument (not sure I am completely sold on it) is that the world is made to fit a human form factor, so by making it humanoid it will at least physically be able to do all the jobs humans do. It might not be the best shape, but as so often with standards, they are hard to change, and humans have looked like humans a long time. Of course plenty of robots with different bodies already exist and are highly efficient at ther specialized task. Since they are specialized it is easier to change the environment to fit them. A generalist would need to go everywhere a human can.
Even though for us activities like these looks mundane but it actually is a major thing for AI development. It's crazy how it can balance itself perfectly and have the ability to detect things.
self balancing robots have been a thing for a long time now, it used to be normal algorithms but im pretty sure atlas (boston dynamics) also uses onboard AI to balance itself its still very impressive how optimus can sort things by itself automatically, when the only instruction told was "sort this", who knows what it can do in 6 months
@@ImpaledBerryDoesn’t matter what technology used to be possible. There were cars before Ford, but Ford changed the world. It’s the fact that big companies with mass production and retail consumer robots in mind that will drive change in the world. Kinda scary, but it’s coming either way.
@@ImpaledBerry How do you know that the only instruction was "sort this"? How do you know that the robot was not controlled by a human? Tesla and Musk have a long history of faking stuff like this, like the full self driving demo, which was admitted to be fake.
After what now, 8years, millions of miles and hours driven, autopilot still shits itself the moment it gets into slightly weird unknown territory. Real life is by far more complex than holding a box within a line and avoiding occasional obstacles. I dont see real life capability apart from pre learned specific industrial tasks, but spot already does that and still lacks widespread adoption
Will require better ai. Visua processing, and the other sensesl combine with some sort of artificial intelligence consciousness so they can mimick human behavior when interacting with their environment. A sense of self and self awareness as well.
Yeah too bad it takes 25,000 Nvidia A100 GPUs just to do efficient AI training. AI is here but the amount of power and efficiency it takes to work like a human brain is off the charts. I would immagine these robots AI Models will more then likely be remote, not onboard.
What's more impressive than these new abilities is the rate of progress the Optimus Bot team is making. Remember the first announcement of the bot was 2 years ago and the first prototype was first shown publicly less than 1 year ago.
Another CRUCIAL thing is the robot is trained end-to-end, meaning it’s given video as input, and it performs the actions as an output. There is explicit programming done here!
While true, we need to see progress on mass market tasks like cleaning bathrooms or doing laundry in sight unseen novel environments. Even if they fail spectacularly at present, we need to see work on practical tasks instead of literal toys.
@@jsalsman I'm sure it'll be doing practical tasks in environments that it is well familiar with soon and for several years before "we" will be purchasing it to do our laundry. It is much more valuable as a shift worker in a plant/warehouse than being a maid.
@@PhD_PepperThis is still just an algorithm... a bunch of computational math that amounts to a smart walking toaster. There are ways to create "AI" that doesnt cross the threshold into sentience.
@@PhD_PepperNah it's not that big of a deal. It's impressive from a kinematic and structural perspective, and I am very impressed with the pace of software development, but the compute systems on board are just not advanced enough to have a terminator moment. If there ever is a terminator moment, it will happen in a data center, not in a humanoid robot designed to do factory labor. Remember in the movies it was the computer that designed the robots, not humans. Trust me when I tell you that there isn't a battery in the world that could power a fully sentient robot for more than a few hours. There is no feasible scenario where this project goes horribly wrong in the way you're thinking.
remember when they first showed it on stage, and they were terrified at showing it off, because it was it's first time being untethered. Now it's doing yoga poses on 1 foot?!?!?
Incredible stuff, the arm and hand movements are incredibly life like! Also Tesla is doing really well with legs movements 👏🏾, my jaw nearly reached the floor when I spotted this a couple of days ago. More info please, keep it coming.
@@Perceptencetheyre not programmed to move fast or slow, this one uses a neural network which learns to control its motor movement to achieve a particular end and the reason why it moves so slow is because the current architectures, software, and hardware just cant process fast enough when doing something very complex like this
No you are smart. The amount of fools putting thumbs up for this is innumerable. When these rich manipulators improves technology then it suppresses the poorer class. Etc like no jobs!!!! I need a hammer to smash it. 🇯🇲🦁🥊🪔😡
Looking forward to a robot that's actually useful (unlike the boston dynamics ones)! How they've been working on this for ~40 years and still have no consumer or mass market applications I have no idea, but can't wait to have one of these cooking me 3 amazing meals a day
@@someonetosomeone Nope, the fake ones were the Tesla bots. They literally had a dude dressed in a condom dancing like he was a robot. Then they had a few technicians helping some of the robots from failing on live demo day. And the manufactured demo video (helping in an office with a few tables and screens) was shown to be a scam, as in, the video is intended to make you think it's a normal sequence with different angles, but objects around are changing position, it was heavily edited. Who knows how many times the robot failed. Kinda like the self driving "demoes" that were actually hardcoded and they edited out the accidents and interventions along the way
this is how much progress would be made by most r&d teams given the same time frame and funding actually it is probably a little less given the blocker of Elon Musk...
@@RM-xr8lq "this is how much progress would be made by most r&d teams given the same time frame and funding". That's the point. Tesla commits to this level of funding & risk when no one else has. The Tesla bot team also has access to the fabrication tech & facilities Tesla has developed over its years of vertical integration plus access to Tesla's materials science knowledge and battery science.
@@XShollajWell yeah and it's also better for the future if we start developing AI faster, as in 10 years, the impact of AI will be overwhelmebly huge. I love elon as he always directs the world to the right way.
This is not AI. This is a tech demo after they hired some interns from Boston Dynamics and had them replicate something they remembered from their internship there.
@@alexanders.1359Optimus is not instructed to move, it moves based on video inputs which are passed through ML and then turned into required motions to make the outcome happen. Way different than programming motion in.
@@stampedetrail2003it isn’t CGI. Real industry experts, including Boston Dynamics, say it is real. If Teslas literal competitors agree that it is real, why do you think you know it’s fake.
@@LeonardTavast а эти роботы будут заменять не промышленные манипуляторы а людей, которые обслуживают эти промышленные манипуляторы, и людей на всех остальных работах
Those movements look much more human! There's a lot of fluidity even in the finer movements of the fingers and hand. Would love to see its balance while being pushed around like Atlas!
What’s the bet they are running an advanced AI to make that happen. Google need to step up Boston dynamic’s access to good AI before they get left in the dust
For those that might not know, babies and children learn to visually coordinate their movements in space the same way, while also dealing with instant dynamic changes, to build their own “on board neural net”. Very interesting that Tesla is using this approach to create more organic machine learning, while supplementing with cloud computing. Very excited to one day have these machines be part of our everyday lives.
Unfortunately, Optimus did not learn to manipulate objects like a child. That involves edge case learning. Optimus does not have an edge case solving neural architecture. Optimus can be taught at the supercomputer level. Now, Optimus appears to be able to put together simple sequential solutions to specific tasks. That is truely remarkable two years into this project. True edge case solving has yet to arrive. When it does, FSD will be fully solved at the robot/vehicle level.
This is right but incomplete. Humans also have proprioception, which means that even if you are completely unable to see your limbs you can still roughly figure out their position in space. That's important, because whether you're a robot or a human, it is unrealistic to keep visual track of your entire body at all times, even though obviously it helps for some task (remember hand-eye coordination in PE?).
@@darwinboor1300 It may be two years into this project but Tesla was working with vision baded neural networks for quite some time now. Ofc they will be pretty fast at figuring that out.
That can find us anywhere with Starlink. Could self assemble in a underground base and pop up anywhere unseen with Tesla and Boring company. That's only if mind control fails with X and Neuralink😄
Not so surprised, anybody can achieve the same objetcs recognition performance inside the garage with experimental A.I with a Jetson Nano of 150$ of 0.45Tops, a Jetson Xavier NX of 400$ and 21Teraflops or the beast Jetson AGX Orin of 270Tops (the level of processing power of a primitive mammal) of 2000$ from Nvidia. The most expensive is the hardware, motors, battery and sensors. But the A.I boards are already on the market for everyone who like robotics since 2015. Here in RU-vid, there are videos of people, fans, and profesionals of electronics making robots who recognize their faces and follow it at animal reaction speeds, moreover with the Jetson Nano and Xavier A.I boards. Dangerous technology if you put this intelligence on a dron, for example. However, the genius already is out of the bottle, and the knowledge is dominated by at least 1 million people around the world.
@@azhuransmx126 There's not a single robotics company who makes such humanoid fluid movements as Tesla, no matter what neural network components they use. They havent even done anything close to Tesla bot's fluid movements.
This is actually very beautiful. When it went to turn over the one block, because it wasn't situated properly, watch it's pinky and ring fingers bend, so to not touch the block as it flips - it's just incredible. I am so excited for the future, and would love to work on this team...
10 years from now we will look back at this like "Did we really ever believe Elon would actually ever release a product or finish a project???" I guess robots will become a part of daily life. But not this... and not by ElonMusk. There are serious companys out there developing it.
Such innovation! Much technology! Boston Dynamics must really be losing sleep now, given that you're only 15+ years behind them at this point. Amazing work! Tesla promises AND delivers yet again. Can't wait for the video where the robot makes a summersault. Maybe in 5 years? Again, awesome work!
Boston Dynamics might have proven technology but Eloo Mosk has STAINLESS STEEL EXOSKELETON WallEs. It's the same steel as the nerf-gun-proof Cybatruck, so fuck BD.
This hand tech on Boston Dynamics' Atlas robot would be insane. I also wanna see this hand tech on one of the spot robots too, one of the ones with the arm. Theres just something funny about a quadriped robot with an incredibly human looking arm/hand
It's a particularly nice touch that you're showing a robot with remarkable potential and a fast pace of improvement, and then you put the music from Ex Machina. Thanks, I've got the hint. :)
Yeah. I'm surprised it wasn't using both hands at once to sort/unsort the blocks. I guess it was trained by one-handed sorters. Two handed sorting would show off its calibration as well as hint at the multitasking capabilities.
Wow great job tesla ! But the robot needs to work more quick, you did little speed in the video. And the end the "NAMASTE" was great !! Proud to be an INDIAN and proud to have "THE VISHWA GURU MODI JI " as our prime minister !!!🙏
Looks very good. I think right now we should focus on improving the servo/motor technology to increase power and sort out wonky weight disteibution. Looks like motor size is dictating a lot of design decisions limiting overall ability.
Absolutely incredible! The dexterity of the hands, and the intelligence to reach to the blocks being moved in real time is remarkable!! Great job Tesla Optimus Team!!
It is incredible how far this has gone and all the new abilities. I can't wait to see more progress updates in the future. It would be cool to be able to play games with it.
@@MaxCaud honestly the bottleneck right now is on the software side. I doubt that boston dynamics will be able to keep up with Tesla when it comes to that because of the insane compute clusters tesla has to train neural nets.
Next year it's probably going to be able to do these tasks (in the vid) in real time (rn it's speed up footage, so it looks smooth). Still very impressive where they got after cca 2 years - in 2-3 more years it could change everything!
@@foxtrotunit1269 yep exactly, I'd like to know how much it's sped up by... if you watch at 50% it looks like the motion isnt nearly as fluid. That also means they're skipping frames as it's not in 60hz to make it it look more fluid. Impressive, but the usual Tesla smoke and mirrors to make it appear more impressive than it really is.
I could see a few years down the road these being used on future unmanned missions to the moon and mars to set up bases and explore harsh terrain. Obviously not as capable as, for example, a rover, but it's limbs and similar height to humans could definitely help!
That’s impressive it can balance on one leg now can’t wait to see further progress in the next update. Not going to lie I wanted to see more but that’s just me being excited all good things come in time.
This is actually really cool with the self calibration. I’ve noticed in the past how many robots and things have issues with positioning and how precise their movements need to be.
0:36 how he changes his motion whil the objekt is displaced, that just blows me! Sutch an incredible work you guys do. You just build dreams, you guys just do it! Really i would like to help in some way or form, to be part.
Me too! Ball park we need about 10 robot per human. So that is about 80 billion robots. That would provide 100% coverage all over the world and provide enough labor and care for everyone.
@@kameljoe21 I kinda disagree, for the old, sickly, and disabled sure but one of the worst punishments I'd say for a person is to make their life so convenient and comfortable. They did this as an actual punishment in Alcatraz I heard, they'd feed the guy full and just put him in his cell, devoid of much activity they'd start to get real lethargic. I feel like leaving everything convenient and comfortable is how the idiocracy situation actually comes, because people don't need to think much... And you can't really rely on just being smart and willful at that point.
I think they will be change healthcare for old people. They will be helpers for ild folks and servents in restaraunts, i can imagine that being the first 2 primary roles, then probably cleaners and construction next
@@obsidianjane4413 why would you think this is CGI? Should we just assume everything is fake? We could litterally tavel there and see stuff like this for ourselves. We can go and watch the space ships launch. We can litterally go ride trains traveling across magnets and ask AI chat bots anything and they'll respond uniquely! Why are you just going to think this is CGI? Do you think we do not have the technology for this?
I think this is more than just a nice touch, bipedal robots struggle a lot with this kind of balancing action. So its truly a show of adaptability and finessing balance in ways robots generally haven't done before.
After these things have been in the wild at scale for 5 years , new versions are going to be crazy. Just alone based on the training data and what they learn .Not even including custom mods and hacks people will byuld and safty controls people will cercumvent, its going to be amazing and scary
Common for the über-rich, maybe in 50 years… the material and labor costs to produce the thing would have to go down so, so, so much- and its utility would need to see a similar increase- for it to be commercially viable even in a straightforward factory/job-site setting. Let alone a complex environment like a home. It would need to have a huge repertoire of abilities. I know, it’s easy to be a naysayer, but just look at all the failed promises of emerging technologies from the past 2 decades. Some of it is related to regulatory roadblocks and safety issues, but still… fleets of self-driving cars? not happening. drone delivery? nope. totally niche tech with limited applications, and they’ll remain that way for the foreseeable future.
@@bc5588 Common for the uber rich is correct... but not for the reason you are thinking. Businesses (the rich) will want these to replace / enhance workers. The demand will outstrip supply for many years to come, so prices will remain high until production increases.