home.social

Search

11 results for “robotseverywhere”

  1. We're looking for market partners for a desktop zero-noise grower we developed in 2021. We do not have the resources to crowdfund or bootstrap new retail initiatives this year, and would love to team up with an organization to put more vegetables on people's tables. The prototypes have been running for 18 months, stuff's ready to go.

    We like the idea of opening up the design so people can build their own, too, like with CellSol and L-Cheapo. Thoughts?

  2. users: we have just gotten our first public release draft of a new MavLink to X-Plane (10, 11, 12) bridge done. It has been mave available on GitHub under GPLv3.

    This is pretty alpha, so please help us improve it!

    github.com/RbtsEvrwhr-Riley/ma

  3. 🚦👨‍⚖️ Florida judge declares red-light cameras #unconstitutional, causing mass hysteria among ticket-issuing robots everywhere. Meanwhile, the article is so disordered that it seems like it was hit by a red-light runner itself. 😜📰
    cbs12.com/news/local/florida-n #FloridaJudge #RedLightCameras #TicketHysteria #LegalNews #HackerNews #ngated

  4. 🇨🇳 #China's success in ramping up production may give it an edge when it comes to #robotics. The depth of China's supply chain means companies can develop and manufacture #robots at a significant #cost advantage compared to other regions. #UBTech expects production costs to drop 20% to 30% each year 📉. Product costs need to come down to between $20,000 to $50,000 per unit to compete with human labor cnbc.com/2025/12/30/elon-musk-

    #Unitree #AgiBot #Xpeng #humanoid #robot

  5. 🇨🇳 #China's success in ramping up production may give it an edge when it comes to #robotics. The depth of China's supply chain means companies can develop and manufacture #robots at a significant #cost advantage compared to other regions. #UBTech expects production costs to drop 20% to 30% each year 📉. Product costs need to come down to between $20,000 to $50,000 per unit to compete with human labor cnbc.com/2025/12/30/elon-musk-

    #Unitree #AgiBot #Xpeng #humanoid #robot

  6. 🇨🇳 #China's success in ramping up production may give it an edge when it comes to #robotics. The depth of China's supply chain means companies can develop and manufacture #robots at a significant #cost advantage compared to other regions. #UBTech expects production costs to drop 20% to 30% each year 📉. Product costs need to come down to between $20,000 to $50,000 per unit to compete with human labor cnbc.com/2025/12/30/elon-musk-

    #Unitree #AgiBot #Xpeng #humanoid #robot

  7. 🇨🇳 #China's success in ramping up production may give it an edge when it comes to #robotics. The depth of China's supply chain means companies can develop and manufacture #robots at a significant #cost advantage compared to other regions. #UBTech expects production costs to drop 20% to 30% each year 📉. Product costs need to come down to between $20,000 to $50,000 per unit to compete with human labor cnbc.com/2025/12/30/elon-musk-

    #Unitree #AgiBot #Xpeng #humanoid #robot

  8. 🇨🇳 #China's success in ramping up production may give it an edge when it comes to #robotics. The depth of China's supply chain means companies can develop and manufacture #robots at a significant #cost advantage compared to other regions. #UBTech expects production costs to drop 20% to 30% each year 📉. Product costs need to come down to between $20,000 to $50,000 per unit to compete with human labor cnbc.com/2025/12/30/elon-musk-

    #Unitree #AgiBot #Xpeng #humanoid #robot

  9. Sketching the impressive #Ludens statue in the entrance lobby of #KojimaProductions in Tokyo. We love the futuristic side of Japan: skyscrapers and robots everywhere! And it’s cool to use a technique as old as watercolor to draw these ultramodern landscapes.
    #MastoArt #watercolor #Tokyo #Japan #videogame #illustration

  10. On our route towards #AGI in this #TechnologicalSingularity trajectory we are accelerating on the most burning question is what the tomorrow looks like.

    It is becoming more and more difficult to forecast shorter and shorter futures, but now we still have some visibility. What I believe will happen:
    - We will experience a huge growth in appetite for #compute, specifically #chips, #data and conveniently encoded #knowledge.
    - While we can introduce #AI to our existing industries, businesses and militaries, we will experience the bottleneck where we cannot quite do what we'd like to do as we have too few robots everywhere. We'll probably start building robots like there's no tomorrow, and renting them to be controlled by AIs to construct new factories, logistical centers, military bases and all sorts of things more streamlined for an AI-based society.
    - Many people will cede control of their lives and any decisions within their power to AIs. Those who do might do well or less well, but definitely better and better over time as the systems become more powerful. Delegating day-to-day control to machines means that there is less reason for humans to even be informed of the day-to-day operational details.
    - Some companies will get boosted by not having to hire so much labor in the first place. I think this will be a stronger dynamic than layoffs, and it will eventually causally drive layoffs as companies with more traditional structures will lose in competition to these new challengers.
    - Prices of lots of things will fall, but at least initially, everything that bottlenecks further AI adoption will become scarce. Digital design becomes practically free which means our world will fill up with beauty and purpose.