What’s next for robots

MIT Technology Review’

With tests of humanoid bots and new developments in military applications, the year ahead will intrigue even the skeptics.

Humanoids are put to the test
The race to build humanoid robots is motivated by the idea that the world is set up for the human form, and that automating that form could mean a seismic shift for robotics. It is led by some particularly outspoken and optimistic entrepreneurs, including Brett Adcock, the founder of Figure AI, a company making such robots that’s valued at more than $2.6 billion (it’s begun testing its robots with BMW). Adcock recently told Time, “Eventually, physical labor will be optional.” Elon Musk, whose company Tesla is building a version called Optimus, has said humanoid robots will create “a future where there is no poverty.” A robotics company called Eliza Wakes Up is taking preorders for a $420,000 humanoid called, yes, Eliza.

A smarter brain gets a smarter body
Plenty of progress in robotics has to do with improving the way a robot senses and plans what to do—its “brain,” in other words. Those advancements can often happen faster than those that improve a robot’s “body,” which determine how well a robot can move through the physical world, especially in environments that are more chaotic and unpredictable than controlled assembly lines.

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