Unitree's NEW AI AGENT Humanoid ROBOT BEATS Boston DYNAMICS! (Unitree G1 Robot)

Ғылым және технология

Unitree's NEW AI AGENT Humanoid ROBOT Surprises EVERYONE! (Unitree G1 Robot)
How To Not Be Replaced By AGI • Life After AGI How To ...
Stay Up To Date With AI Job Market - / @theaigrideconomics
AI Tutorials - / @theaigridtutorials
🐤 Follow Me on Twitter / theaigrid
🌐 Checkout My website - theaigrid.com/
Links From Todays Video:
Welcome to my channel where i bring you the latest breakthroughs in AI. From deep learning to robotics, i cover it all. My videos offer valuable insights and perspectives that will expand your knowledge and understanding of this rapidly evolving field. Be sure to subscribe and stay updated on my latest videos.
Was there anything i missed?
(For Business Enquiries) contact@theaigrid.com
#LLM #Largelanguagemodel #chatgpt
#AI
#ArtificialIntelligence
#MachineLearning
#DeepLearning
#NeuralNetworks
#Robotics
#DataScience

Пікірлер: 336

  • @Lugmillord
    @Lugmillord25 күн бұрын

    16k price point? Wow, costs are dropping in free fall.

  • @zeiztsam1271

    @zeiztsam1271

    25 күн бұрын

    Not in USA at least as it would be banned as a security threat .

  • @chillguy2758

    @chillguy2758

    25 күн бұрын

    Yet there’s nowhere to buy them

  • @petermanuel5043

    @petermanuel5043

    25 күн бұрын

    It's cheaper than many employees. That's gonna be the incentive to get it into workplaces. I wonder if they'll pay income tax?

  • @JollyJoe135

    @JollyJoe135

    25 күн бұрын

    That’s insane I thought he said 60k and I was like that’s reasonable.

  • @jeffg4686

    @jeffg4686

    25 күн бұрын

    I'm buying one on Monday and dropping it off at work. I'm going to let them know he'll just stay

  • @andreychetvertov5555
    @andreychetvertov555525 күн бұрын

    Few people pay attention, but it weighs so little that you can lift it entirely with your hands.

  • @FXV56

    @FXV56

    25 күн бұрын

    How can it withstand that punch if it is so light? It didn't even braced itself for the impact, it looks like it's 3 times the weight

  • @WinnipegOne177

    @WinnipegOne177

    25 күн бұрын

    @@FXV56 It was trained in simulation on Chi Gong, the art of force bending and manipulation.

  • @Drassk

    @Drassk

    25 күн бұрын

    ​@FXV56 That's the right question. There's high quality control, and there's disobeying physics...if he'd hit anything light enough to just grab and pick up with an actual punch it would have shot across the room.

  • @FXV56

    @FXV56

    25 күн бұрын

    @@WinnipegOne177 might as well make ai avatar robots and bend the sky!

  • @itsallgoodaversa

    @itsallgoodaversa

    25 күн бұрын

    Look closely at the way the man is punching. You can tell he kind of slows down before he actually hits the robot, it’s not a full force punch at all.

  • @langhuang9795
    @langhuang979525 күн бұрын

    crazy,i remember that the unitree robot dog is only cost 1600$,and you can see the dog anywhere in the world.and today the human robot is only 16000$.good product from china,i think unitree company will be the next DJI in china,and dominate the robot market

  • @user-lo4it8rg3r

    @user-lo4it8rg3r

    25 күн бұрын

    А чем он сложнее? Посуте тело тех же размеров , просто стоит на 2 лапах

  • @langhuang9795

    @langhuang9795

    25 күн бұрын

    @@user-lo4it8rg3r Потому что на двух ногах стоять прямо гораздо труднее, чем на четырех, да и конструкция гораздо сложнее.

  • @user-lo4it8rg3r

    @user-lo4it8rg3r

    25 күн бұрын

    @@langhuang9795 и? Стоит же, всё остальное тоже самое

  • @user-lo4it8rg3r

    @user-lo4it8rg3r

    25 күн бұрын

    @@langhuang9795 я тебя удовольствие, югрушки роботы ещё 1990х пробовались, стояли и ходили на 2х ногах

  • @MA-nl6js

    @MA-nl6js

    25 күн бұрын

    @@user-lo4it8rg3r They have more flexibility / degree of freedom than the robot dog one.

  • @TheJamJar90
    @TheJamJar9025 күн бұрын

    Cant wait for my super expensive robot to just spill most of my cola all over the place while opening the bottle...

  • @wonkyfug

    @wonkyfug

    25 күн бұрын

    SUUUUPERRR

  • @karthage3637

    @karthage3637

    24 күн бұрын

    Just want to buy this shit, make it serve my guest and act like everything was perfectly normal when it start smashing the bottle against the table to open it

  • @hidroman1993
    @hidroman199325 күн бұрын

    We are DEFINITELY not in the endgame

  • @tangopapajuliet9469

    @tangopapajuliet9469

    25 күн бұрын

    Q*

  • @wonkyfug

    @wonkyfug

    25 күн бұрын

    @@tangopapajuliet9469 you WILL enjoy THE FOOD!

  • @whatafailedchannel3052

    @whatafailedchannel3052

    25 күн бұрын

    Not publicly commercial any way. If you want a robot to "be there" be prepared to spend multi millions and then some depending how there you want it. They are designing these for general everyday use for the everyday person, it's functionality isn't going to be amazing, expect quality related to its 16k USD price tag. Like playing a game and expecting 200fps without a graphics card, you get what you pay for.

  • @kinnie1758
    @kinnie175825 күн бұрын

    Video about hitting robots, hope no AI will see this

  • @Merializer

    @Merializer

    25 күн бұрын

    AI should be smart enough to understand it's not to hurt the robot, and they have no pain sensors, yet.

  • @user-qv1ie1ci6u

    @user-qv1ie1ci6u

    8 күн бұрын

    @@Merializer YET

  • @alertbri
    @alertbri25 күн бұрын

    Very impressive. I hope the progress will continue to accelerate through 2024.

  • @Fred-yv5vi

    @Fred-yv5vi

    22 күн бұрын

    Neither do I 😢

  • @jeffg4686
    @jeffg468625 күн бұрын

    can't get enough robot videos - keep them coming. I'll buy one of those 16k robots and have him take over my job.

  • @TheMrCougarful

    @TheMrCougarful

    25 күн бұрын

    No. Your boss will buy one to do your job, fire you, and you never have money after that.

  • @jeffg4686

    @jeffg4686

    25 күн бұрын

    @@TheMrCougarful - never needed it in the first place, of course - sheads just make us

  • @entropictoast
    @entropictoast25 күн бұрын

    Once actual deployment comes around these will be 10% of the price of a full time basic labor employee. After a company buys them in bulk.

  • @RickyMontijo
    @RickyMontijo25 күн бұрын

    We are about 3-5 years away from ALOT of jobs being taken

  • @pgc6290
    @pgc629025 күн бұрын

    Robot workers - not a far fetched future anymore. Ps: We are literally living sci fi.

  • @neetfreek9921
    @neetfreek992125 күн бұрын

    I like how short and compact it is. But you're gonna have to start getting those toddler stepping stools for your robots lol

  • @tsrmmercy836

    @tsrmmercy836

    25 күн бұрын

    Freaky robot folding its legs up for you to pick it up 😍😍

  • @o_o9039

    @o_o9039

    25 күн бұрын

    @@tsrmmercy836lmao the clubs gonna be getting real different

  • @jeffreybshuflin6795

    @jeffreybshuflin6795

    25 күн бұрын

    GOGO gadget legs and arms?

  • @JayJay-cl2ot

    @JayJay-cl2ot

    25 күн бұрын

    i bet there are.different sizes

  • @Pabz2030
    @Pabz203025 күн бұрын

    Once these go sub $10k they will be literally everywhere.

  • @grimspyder0001

    @grimspyder0001

    25 күн бұрын

    They will be every where at $20k, maybe not at homes, but every single business that has Even one employee will but this thing. I'll buy one for my house today!!

  • @zeiztsam1271

    @zeiztsam1271

    25 күн бұрын

    Not in USA at least as it would be banned as a security threat .

  • @d_san1985

    @d_san1985

    25 күн бұрын

    Mass production will bring the cost further down and the big corporations gonna order them in bulk

  • @grimspyder0001

    @grimspyder0001

    25 күн бұрын

    @@zeiztsam1271 lol, you are trying to be funny.

  • @thebeezkneez7559

    @thebeezkneez7559

    25 күн бұрын

    Anything that can be used to increase productivity or replace jobs won't be banned in the us because it's good for corporations

  • @RESatellite
    @RESatellite25 күн бұрын

    the tech development cycle is usually 3 times faster than the US, and production cost deployment cost will be cheaper than the States as well, good luck competing with China😅

  • @Pete68T
    @Pete68T25 күн бұрын

    Great a Robot Weilding a Big Stick and Learning Boxing Thats Realy Usefull .

  • @MrNote-lz7lh

    @MrNote-lz7lh

    25 күн бұрын

    Gotta fight off those humans somehow.

  • @dementedgamer8123

    @dementedgamer8123

    25 күн бұрын

    Robot fight club

  • @kingebin9830

    @kingebin9830

    25 күн бұрын

    Edit: I was high off my ass and thought you said 'welding' before I typed out this essay 💀 Think more a warehouse, big dangerous objects requiring precision. Unless you can physically attach a computer equal to a welder's brain onto this thing, it won't be able to perform the task properly. Still, the tools involved are so volatile they are better in human hands.

  • @dot_zithmu
    @dot_zithmu25 күн бұрын

    Virtual world training can make something much much better than today's robot in the future.

  • @LeesReviews69
    @LeesReviews6925 күн бұрын

    Tesla is probably going to rethink the joints of Optimus to make it as flexible as these 2

  • @TheMrCougarful

    @TheMrCougarful

    25 күн бұрын

    It's not flexibility. These things are metal, they have zero flexibility. They have range of motion, which is programming.

  • @soulextinguisher

    @soulextinguisher

    25 күн бұрын

    mobility

  • @stuartwillard6558

    @stuartwillard6558

    25 күн бұрын

    @@TheMrCougarful physical joints have a given range of motion by design you can only use software to exploit the given physical range of any particular joint. Optimus joints are not as yet capable of this range of movement. ‘Flexibility’ has additional meanings by the way not simply elasticity of a material. Flexibility in movement would I think be understood by many here. Another argument might be does a humanoid robot truly require this range of movement in its joints? For some tasks I can see it being useful and that storage/ carrying trick looked impressive. But I do doubt that for 90% of tasks at least that level of flexibility would not be a benefit, but then if you are getting it effectively for free then reliability and other aspects being equal then why not. But a far more important quality would no doubt be its comprehension of commands that would be a seriously advantageous selling point and the finish line for that is undoubtedly still a way off.

  • @blake3606
    @blake360625 күн бұрын

    About 10 more years and we will be dating these things.

  • @honkytonk4465

    @honkytonk4465

    25 күн бұрын

    10 years?

  • @jaredf6205

    @jaredf6205

    25 күн бұрын

    Let's see what kinds of news we get in the next couple hours.

  • @Sinoxqq

    @Sinoxqq

    25 күн бұрын

    @@honkytonk4465 some people just dont want it to be here yet.

  • @wendomramos7647

    @wendomramos7647

    23 күн бұрын

    You can say that again pal

  • @4c30n3
    @4c30n325 күн бұрын

    Boston who? Unitree is already selling these, while boston's is still in alpha phase lol

  • @nesseihtgnay9419

    @nesseihtgnay9419

    25 күн бұрын

    That's probably because China basically copy everything the US does 😂 nothing in china is original after all.

  • @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    25 күн бұрын

    One is a toy, the other is a machine.

  • @nesseihtgnay9419

    @nesseihtgnay9419

    25 күн бұрын

    yea because Boston Dynamics isnt making their robots as toys, plus Boston Dynamics isnt using Nvidia Isacc Sim to boost its speed of development like Unitree, and the new Atlas still move smoother and better.

  • @xsuploader

    @xsuploader

    25 күн бұрын

    @@dr.emilschaffhausen4683 how is this a toy

  • @garylcamp

    @garylcamp

    19 күн бұрын

    Do you have proof they are selling it now for 16000? Please show us.

  • @DamnnnDarius
    @DamnnnDarius25 күн бұрын

    I love the accelerated growth I'm witnessing from all these companies. KEEP GOING

  • @unimposings
    @unimposings25 күн бұрын

    Robot Olympics 2030 ?

  • @eksonag
    @eksonag25 күн бұрын

    showcasing a futuristic robot mainly by kicking, punching, nut busting really tells something about people...

  • @TerryOnTuesday

    @TerryOnTuesday

    24 күн бұрын

    It's ok Roko's Basilisk saw it . :P

  • @dinualexandru2155
    @dinualexandru215525 күн бұрын

    It's just incredible. The moves and dexterity witch he can develope in ar. Just 16000.... We.ll see him on streets from next year think

  • @dot_zithmu
    @dot_zithmu25 күн бұрын

    Nvidia gym is insanely good!

  • @neverendingproductions7171
    @neverendingproductions717125 күн бұрын

    Its going to be extremely interesting to watch these designs progress and what else theyre going to come up with

  • @aienthusiast618
    @aienthusiast61825 күн бұрын

    were actually really starting to see the exponential part of robotics and ai growth

  • @rohingosling
    @rohingosling25 күн бұрын

    One day, ...they're going to hit back. But seriously, aside from how both this and the new BD Atlas both get up off the floor like a creepy Rev-9 from Terminator Dark Fate, aside from that, this is very cool.

  • @SwitchTalkChannel

    @SwitchTalkChannel

    25 күн бұрын

    I find all such super-A.I. and android-like creations to be cool in the same way as a nuke is cool or Nazi Germany. The sheer human destruction and anti-Christ level of creative genius is truly impressive to witness. Then, you have the awful feeling that I recall a high-ranking Nazi had towards the end: 'I pray to God our enemies don't use this [Nazi] power against us in the future.' It's a bit like a toddler with a gun, slowly figuring out how to aim it accurately, only without any innate moral compass or parents. An amoral toddler alone in this world, governed only by the ills of society. What would such a toddler be like in 10, 20, 50 years? If you don't know A.I. and robots are a threat to humanity over the next 60 years, you're either grossly ignorant or actively anti-human. My reasoning for being so harsh and concluding that it's such a closed case is that the creators themselves have come out over and over again and made it very clear that they are the future, not humans. You would have to be a brainwashed WEF/UN drone, no pun intended, to actually believe this stuff. Sure, A.I. tools (i.e. those used within computer programs and such) have been very useful for a decade now, and the line is thin between that and machines themselves, at least since the 1950s. However, that is something very different, in both scale and intention, than what we're seeing today. Having said that, it's worth considering the failures of the digital framework itself and the computer. Lest we forget, the creator himself, Alan Turing, gave the expression that he was inventing a machine to overthrow the human spirit for his own sick purposes (he was a gay depressed man who lost his childhood friend, so built him as a machine to make himself feel better, and he was better at talking with wires and cogs than humans). This is a rocky start to say the least. Throw Mark and WEF and whole governments into the mix, and there's little hope here. In theory, you could make a case for Musk's dream -- or what seems to be his dream -- of opening up the totality of modernity to the people directly. Of course, letting people have gene-editing in their bedrooms strikes me as beyond suicide. Musk must believe in freedom and human sense more than I. But, this does make me question his motives. Maybe he thinks this is the only way to stop tyranny from taking over, like China or North Korea or Dubai. Regardless, as much as I'm a fan of Musk over the WEF overlords and so forth, I am extremely against Musk's general ideas in this area and think he's fatally flawed. I don't trust anybody who claims to be saving humanity itself. That does raise a question: where does it leave us? Well, I can assure you, this question only gets worse the more we move away from a pro-human framework. The only logical answer is to radically limit, control, and/or destroy A.I., robots, and the Internet. I can assure you, our enemies are wielding it in full for their pro-human stances. I hope for not a third way, but an old way -- a balance between flesh and code as we saw in the 1940s and so on, before things radically shifted. Our enemies can afford this under tyranny, as they enforce population growth, cultural stability, and digital control. We cannot go down that road, yet it's difficult today to have both any other way other than individual choice and will power. This tells me that local, not national or inter-national, governing bodies and otherwise must have as much power as possible over such matters. There is no point being free if your local library, town hall, doctors, school, or playground is unable to do anything other than what is dictated by the state, or a collection of states for that matter. Local power at all costs, for all politics is local, as is family and human connection, and real liberty. Not that I'm dense or idealistic enough to suppose geopolitics doesn't exist. It has for at least 5,000 years, according to my general reading of history. But, at the same time, these nations were nationalistic, not anti-self, not self-hating. It's so unnatural and inhumane, we hardly have a proper word for it. Never before in our many-coloured history have we reached such a point. Alas, any state or people that had reached such a point so completely were simply invaded and removed from the gene pool entirely. More common than this is a death of another sort: a cultural death. Maybe not genetic, but in every other sense. Consider the Persians or Celts or pre-Roman Irish, or anybody you wish. Yes, such groups still exist genetically in various groups today, but the culture does not exist in any sense. As we stand, we are seeing the fall of the Roman world in its totality, though Italian peoples still exists. We don't tend to think of this as a lack of change or even a minor change, but a change larger than any other. Though all empires fall and peoples do change over the world and through time, not all cultures are equal, and not all peoples ought to fall without putting up a fight. I fear something far worse coming down the pipeline: a fight for the collective human culture, not a threat to humanity felt since the last Ice Age. If we are not truly lucky and careful, we will find a war for life far worse than WWII or even the great viruses of the last 2,000 years. Not only is it without question that human population is declining, and the EU and UN report that it will begin to crash by 2060 into the new century, but A.I. and robotics has advanced even beyond what was assumed 10 years ago. I understand the difficulty in allowing our enemies such power, and completely re-shifting our society for the first time in decades, but the alterative is the fall of the West, which begs the question: what are we fighting for, what is the point of having such a Mark-Elon world in 100 years if we're simply run over by the Chinese and Islamic? Indeed, I recall Facebook causing a literal genocide in Africa a few years ago due to fake news on there, as the nation was unable to handle such a system being thrown at it (like the West can even handle it). Not only does nobody talk about this, but it's becoming more common, and is not slowing Facebook down. He wants it in every corner of the world by 2030. If we look upon Africa in 50 or 100 years, I believe if we cared to go through the painful process of data-gathering, we would find that the Internet and all it brings was the worst thing to ever hit African land in 200,000 years. Or, do we magically suppose that there won't be a conflict in the future, or else these anti-human, machine systems can solve such cultural, bodily, religious issues? Unless we're building a robot army, I fail to see the usefulness of such systems even 30 years from now. The people working on this are either not thinking at all, or are deluded or self-destructive. Granted, maybe it's not the scientist's job to be moral or care about such issues, but it is the job of the organisations themselves, the thought leaders, the people, and the governments. Believe it or not, things were not always this way -- this is a modern situation. Go back 400 years to the birth of modern science, and there was a far greater interplay between such bodies, and a clear vision that was more in keeping with aiding humanity through nature and science. At some point between Newton and Hawking, we decided that we would aim for complete understanding of the material world, even at the cost of our own lives and well-being. Or, maybe worse, a handful of people decided that they would use science for the purposes of perfecting the human being and condition (not sure when this started, but some time around Darwin and Marx, with the most notable period being WWI through WWII with the likes of Julian Huxley, Hitler, and the other inventors of the birth control pill, social Darwinian structures, planned economy systems, crowd control and other psy-op methods, and so on).

  • @pandereodium2587
    @pandereodium258725 күн бұрын

    Crazy demo

  • @thecorrectoification
    @thecorrectoification25 күн бұрын

    That's Freakin' Awesume! 🤙💪🤘

  • @cemdasou
    @cemdasou25 күн бұрын

    If G1 is really 1.8m than the guy punching him might be 2.6m or more

  • @xsuploader

    @xsuploader

    25 күн бұрын

    its 4 foot 2

  • @nabereon
    @nabereon25 күн бұрын

    You're really quick.

  • @NikhilSingh-de5vj
    @NikhilSingh-de5vj22 күн бұрын

    Good to see that humaniods are designed for more practical purpose instead of just entertaining and technology demonstration. The are now more flexible, stable, precise movements and controls & most important with in the pocket of buyers. In future advancement in robotics AI & Sensors, materials we could get better versions of Humanoids. Hoping in near future Robots stand straight like humans, having sensitive skin, better understanding of human emotions and facial expressions, these some featured demonstrated in GPT 4o & if lucky enough we could se more complex versions of Xenobots in our life time. Stem cell technology, AI, Quantum computing & new generation nuclear technology will play major role in this century.

  • @grimspyder0001
    @grimspyder000125 күн бұрын

    Where do i pre ORDER!!!!!!

  • @elitevet4266
    @elitevet426625 күн бұрын

    your usage of "because..." is mindboggling

  • @Jedicake
    @Jedicake25 күн бұрын

    0:24 me in the morning

  • @OneRudeBoy
    @OneRudeBoy9 күн бұрын

    10:10 You were really really impressed by the way it opened a soda bottle? If mine ever opened a drink like that, I’d be pretty unhappy, lol 😝😆… Hopefully we’ll see some improvement here!

  • @user-zf2se1he5h
    @user-zf2se1he5h25 күн бұрын

    91k € to 16k dólars is amazing Trully impressive, they didn't only increase the robot tech and capabilities, they reduced a lot it's Price as well

  • @zeiztsam1271

    @zeiztsam1271

    25 күн бұрын

    Not in USA at least as it would be banned as a security threat .Americans can marvel at 200K USD Atlas

  • @KhaalixD

    @KhaalixD

    25 күн бұрын

    @@zeiztsam1271 evidence?

  • @user-zf2se1he5h

    @user-zf2se1he5h

    25 күн бұрын

    @@KhaalixD it's what the USA normally does with chinese products, smartphones and EV's, drones etc.. They put a lot of arancels on them to protect their internal market Very ironic if you ask me, the country that boosted the meaning of freedom market acting like a protectionist country

  • @fredericoduvel3092

    @fredericoduvel3092

    25 күн бұрын

    we’d want the future western robot market to be like the current Chinese ev market. The most competitive market in the world, with tons of choices and good prices. Competition is good for the consumers!!! If the US let’s the Chinese bot makers in, it will boost the development progress of all companies. It’s not like the US is behind, like in the ev space and has to protect their companies from bankruptcy. US robot companies are slightly ahead compared to the Chinese. The US shouldn’t be afraid to compete and they shouldn’t force monopolies. It will make their products better!

  • @Aspiiire
    @Aspiiire25 күн бұрын

    Unitree really knows how to push boundaries with their AI Agent Humanoid Robot. The innovative strides they're making definitely give food for thought.

  • @geterpriffin
    @geterpriffin25 күн бұрын

    the walnut is our brain and the coke bottle is our neck. good luck humanity!

  • @dancyano

    @dancyano

    24 күн бұрын

    😂😂

  • @grimspyder0001
    @grimspyder000125 күн бұрын

    That robot turned into carry-on.

  • @TheMrCougarful

    @TheMrCougarful

    25 күн бұрын

    When was the last time you checked the weight of 40Ah of 48 volt LiIon batteries? It's about 40 pounds.

  • @DiceDecides
    @DiceDecides24 күн бұрын

    I was waiting for it to spin the stick at supersonic speed

  • @garywatson3778
    @garywatson377824 күн бұрын

    I'm getting some major JONNY 5 ALIVE vibes here.

  • @stuartwillard6558
    @stuartwillard655825 күн бұрын

    Other experts have logically suggested that a truly useful humanoid robot ideally needs to be in the region of 5.5ft if it is to seamlessly operate in a human world. My partner is 4.11 and seeing the problems she experiences I can certainly understand this argument if a robot is to be able to be truly flexible and capable in wide ranging environments and tasks. So how tall is this robot it looks de idedly small, certainly compared to its predecessor. I guess we will find out if it’s practical at this size or alternative can be equally gymnastic and impressive a foot or so taller.

  • @Metacognition88
    @Metacognition8825 күн бұрын

    When will they be in Costco?

  • @thebeezkneez7559
    @thebeezkneez755925 күн бұрын

    All of these videos look pre rendered to me but also so real at the same time idk

  • @richardnunziata3221
    @richardnunziata322125 күн бұрын

    what I find amazing is that its only 16K because the soccer robot competition robots that are only about 2 feet tall are 10-20K and these robots are limited in grasp and weight they can bear. "In professional-level competitions like the RoboCup Standard Platform League (SPL) , teams use highly advanced humanoid robots with sophisticated sensors, actuators, and control systems. The cost of these robots can easily exceed $10,000 or even reach $20,000 due to the use of specialized components and the significant engineering effort involved."

  • @pratiknaikedu
    @pratiknaikedu25 күн бұрын

    Not fair, my hip flexors can't do that.

  • @carlharrison3637
    @carlharrison363725 күн бұрын

    Bonkers. That is bonkers !

  • @ziwenzhuang
    @ziwenzhuang25 күн бұрын

    One thing to notice.... The height of the robot is about only 1.2m🙃 Researchers have to build a smaller version of environment to deploy and test their embodied AI algorithms😖

  • @Sakja
    @Sakja25 күн бұрын

    Now if the robot hits back, that's the end of robots.

  • @Penaming
    @Penaming25 күн бұрын

    we need a robot olympics

  • @bluetoad2668
    @bluetoad266825 күн бұрын

    Interesting caveats there on the screen at the end. Basically saying that not all features shown are working and prices will vary.

  • @RobShuttleworth
    @RobShuttleworth25 күн бұрын

    I bet it's got a wicked kick.

  • @Redman8086
    @Redman808625 күн бұрын

    We aren't far off from the day we hear news of someone being accidentally killed by one of these robots, or at least seriously injured. It is going to be REALLY tough to get these things out into the market successfully with all the safety concerns. I mean it is a piece of heavy machinery when you think about it. What if you're standing next to it and it quickly spins around to do something and its 100-pound metal torso bangs into you at 50mph? What if you're bent down to pick something up when it happens and it caves your skull in? I can think of a million different scenarios that make the idea of having a heavy metal machine walking around in your home sound like a terrible idea. I do think we'll eventually "get there" but I'm just sort of imagining the early dangers of these things.

  • @cfjlkfsjf

    @cfjlkfsjf

    25 күн бұрын

    What if it steps on your dog/cat? or your baby is crawling and it steps on it. Need lots of sensors to always function properly. I'd personally not trust them...also why do they never show them lift heavy things? like 50-100 pounds? if they are working in say a grocery store, lots of heavy things. Same with the trades jobs.

  • @jlrutube1312

    @jlrutube1312

    25 күн бұрын

    But just think of all the crazy things humans buy that can get them killed so easily. Ever heard of motorcycles? Dangerous. Does that stop me from riding them? No, I ride one every day. Helicopters? Hang gliders? Cars? Guns? Lots of people, if they want something that might get them killed they just buy it anyway and take their chances. Robots may be the same. You probably will just have to sign a release form that says you understand you might face injury or in a rare case, even death. Then the government will make some rules like a robot cannot be a baby sitter etc. Just like how they make rules about cars like you can't drink and drive etc. Cars are dangerous but they are so helpful we have chosen to just put up with tens of thousands of people being killed by them every year. Probably it will be the same with robots. They will be so helpful that humans will just put up with the danger and just try to manage it as best as they can.

  • @thaotaylor6669
    @thaotaylor666923 күн бұрын

    So many humanoid robotic and most of us haven't seen one in shops ,retail ,hotels, restaurants, hospital.

  • @Danoman812
    @Danoman81225 күн бұрын

    One thing i'm curious about is. What kind of data sharing will you have to sigh away to buy it? I ask because, we already know that 'they' need a constant data stream from as many sources as they can get to continue developing everything the company has visioned for itself. That factor alone is what would be the deciding factor of whether i got one or not. Honestly, the data sharing part of your house, life and everything else will no longer be private. I know better than to trust any big corporation these days. I'm sure there are a lot of us out there that still try to care about their privacy. (I know, many will say, we already lost our privacy... i say, we need to keep what little we have left or it's over)

  • @GraavyTraain

    @GraavyTraain

    25 күн бұрын

    It will have cameras and microphones that send everything you’re doing to the Chinese government

  • @UchechukwuOnuoha-cw4cl
    @UchechukwuOnuoha-cw4cl25 күн бұрын

    ❤ love it 😍😍

  • @Anders01
    @Anders0120 күн бұрын

    I have predicted that Unitree would release a humanoid robot at a low price! Because their robot dog Go2 is fairly capable and very inexpensive. And this is just the beginning. Not a "Chat GPT" moment in robotics yet, but that could happen soon, maybe even from a new player in the robotics market.

  • @davidbingley6734
    @davidbingley673423 күн бұрын

    They took our derbs!!!!

  • @arch_285
    @arch_28525 күн бұрын

    why is it aggressive?

  • @Cenindo
    @Cenindo24 күн бұрын

    What would impress me at this point is a humanoid robot that can actually achieve a natural human gait. They are getting better, but one still has to think of a person with very stiff legs and maybe a litle arthritis as well.

  • @Emphasis213
    @Emphasis21325 күн бұрын

    Electronics technician: they wont be able to solder and crimp for decades. We are safe!

  • @assoldier13

    @assoldier13

    25 күн бұрын

    This comment can only be meant ironically, right? I mean come one, have you seen the advances in just one year? With more advanced ai coming even extremely figety tasks will become possible in the next years.

  • @SirHargreeves
    @SirHargreeves25 күн бұрын

    Was any of this autonomous or was it remote operation?

  • @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    25 күн бұрын

    Not autonomous.

  • @DDracee

    @DDracee

    25 күн бұрын

    the balancing, walking and the stick was automated, the rest isn't

  • @xcidgaf
    @xcidgaf25 күн бұрын

    4:00 hello

  • @AnthonyCook78

    @AnthonyCook78

    25 күн бұрын

    Hopefully by the time the divorce comes through it'll have a fritillary. For stacking obviously 😉

  • @WillyJunior

    @WillyJunior

    25 күн бұрын

    😉

  • @parttimehuman

    @parttimehuman

    25 күн бұрын

    I was like, "OH MY GOD!" haha

  • @marksykes8722
    @marksykes872225 күн бұрын

    Henceforth, all robot demo reels must include standing from a supine position.

  • @AGI-Bingo
    @AGI-Bingo25 күн бұрын

    Please don't let OpenAI access to your computer, use opensource, don't get locked in. Compute is worth nothing without Your data. If they're installed on your computer they can pretty much access anything, screen, cams, mic, files, clipboard history, possibly even browsing history.

  • @nelson5953

    @nelson5953

    21 күн бұрын

    Got any legit and trustworthy links to opensource?

  • @joshlay447
    @joshlay44725 күн бұрын

    Robot sparring partner!!!!

  • @thomasglover1327
    @thomasglover132725 күн бұрын

    I would love one of these in my brewery and would do nearly anything but I cant front the cost on tech. I dont understand why this isnt standard to have one with every laborer in 5 years. I can see it being illegal to make a worker lift more than 75 bls or wever in kgs.

  • @Troph2

    @Troph2

    25 күн бұрын

    These will be sold on payment plans just like any other large peice of equipment. Say $400/mo.

  • @thomasglover1327

    @thomasglover1327

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Troph2 So worth it. Imagine once this gets the kinesiology down for all kindsa labor applications. 400 per mo on a 20 dollar labor market is fast math for most people. I can imagine this unboxing itslef on the jobsite and grabbing the tools for the manager as they supervise and monitor multiple units.

  • @waynephillips2613
    @waynephillips261325 күн бұрын

    need showcase ai and voice

  • @leverticeboyd4021
    @leverticeboyd402125 күн бұрын

    But can it fall over like Peter Griffon?

  • @AIroboticOverlord
    @AIroboticOverlord25 күн бұрын

    Its nxt lvl awesomeness but also here like all robot humanoid presentations and promotional conent there is lots of decieving aspects. Like he gives props to the robot taking serious impacts so well. But have a real close look at what seems a hard punch. Its more hollywood wwe type lookalike hard punching. I can see that easily having a closer look. I bet my life on it that if he punched with the intentions to get it floored the machine would fal over or be on its back doing what it shouldnt. Hes not truely punched or influenced with the thing that they portrait to want to do to the robot but fail at getting that done. There was more effort i bet to not push or punch like the few previously that they saw it cannot or couldnt handle but fine tune punching JUST hard enough to what it can JUST handle and stay looking good at it ;)

  • @kenrdavis2266
    @kenrdavis226612 күн бұрын

    Raspberry Pi’s don’t compare with Tesla Autopilot Computers

  • @user-ib1ls5bk2x
    @user-ib1ls5bk2x18 күн бұрын

    The maximum weight that the Unitree G1 can carry is 3 kilograms, which is quite disappointing. I was hoping it could carry at least half its own weight!

  • @SirHargreeves
    @SirHargreeves25 күн бұрын

    Scuffed Atlas.

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorth25 күн бұрын

    Winner Winner! Chicken Dinner! Or at least a very capable humanoid capable of cooking up one in a hurry it looks like... I think we have a new leader in the race to market for these awesome creatures... All the dynamic stability of Atlas with all the flexibility of its reborn son that can also do these Terminator-like/Matrix-like back hang movements... I fully approve! I think all these companies will soon realize the benefits and simplicity of an all-electric set up the same way EV's have become the preferred method of travel for those who can afford them!

  • @paelnever
    @paelnever25 күн бұрын

    Not very clever to teach the robot to use a stab after kicking him that way.

  • @redgeciccone8218
    @redgeciccone821825 күн бұрын

    At this price I will buy one, if I can program it, it will pass the mower

  • @Sakja
    @Sakja25 күн бұрын

    Not quite as agile as Atlas2. I wonder if he will clean my apartment, take out my garbage, cook, make beds and do laundry.

  • @NeonVisual
    @NeonVisual25 күн бұрын

    This one looks dangerous

  • @yzhang9265
    @yzhang926525 күн бұрын

    Nice :)

  • @567oilBeen-rk9km
    @567oilBeen-rk9km24 күн бұрын

    The first terminator

  • @MaxSevan
    @MaxSevan25 күн бұрын

    Cool ROBO

  • @mikey1836
    @mikey183625 күн бұрын

    A punch from a physically weak techie, no test at all for the robot 😂

  • @antoniobutcher

    @antoniobutcher

    25 күн бұрын

    get mike tyson in this bish

  • @UncertainASMR
    @UncertainASMR25 күн бұрын

    💥

  • @theendgamefl888
    @theendgamefl88824 күн бұрын

    "HOW CAN I GET ONE OF THEM FOR A ONE YEAR TEST RUN IN OUR HOUSEHOLD???" LET US KNOW, PLEASE!

  • @leoli8164
    @leoli816425 күн бұрын

    What's the price of Boston Dynamics new Atlas?

  • @lianghao7128

    @lianghao7128

    25 күн бұрын

    50X than this probably

  • @user-tg9yo2vo6u

    @user-tg9yo2vo6u

    25 күн бұрын

    Atlas legs do not bend like this robot

  • @brasileiroloko5375
    @brasileiroloko537525 күн бұрын

    What can it do

  • @user-yc3ep4ig7g
    @user-yc3ep4ig7g25 күн бұрын

    Я уже знаю кто будет колоть мне орехи😂

  • @cjky3421
    @cjky342125 күн бұрын

    No human is falling over from that punch! #nerdpunch

  • @unityman3133

    @unityman3133

    25 күн бұрын

    looks like he is pulling his punches and kicks

  • @wonkyfug

    @wonkyfug

    25 күн бұрын

    @@unityman3133 >strike solid matter with a boxing glove >pull punch to not hurt my hand

  • @wonkyfug

    @wonkyfug

    25 күн бұрын

    #safetyfirstbecausenoexcuses

  • @garylcamp
    @garylcamp19 күн бұрын

    Is this really being sold to the market for $16k? Not just samples? Or prototypes subsidized or at 1 million quantity? I am guessing even if they are, it will be tariffed up to the 150k$ in USA.

  • @DevilDaggersFan
    @DevilDaggersFan25 күн бұрын

    don't bully this lil guy

  • @7of9
    @7of924 күн бұрын

    Isn’t that Unreal Engine tho?? The only real pic was the man picking it up. ..am I wrong?

  • @canibaloxide
    @canibaloxide25 күн бұрын

    Girls are gonna love this robot because it has bo staff skills. Girls love skills

  • @GaryMillyz
    @GaryMillyz25 күн бұрын

    So my used harley costs more than this. Surrrrre.

  • @ArtII2Long
    @ArtII2Long25 күн бұрын

    I wanna see the robot get pissed off and punch back.

  • @alphaomega154
    @alphaomega15423 күн бұрын

    the irobot days is here. but it would be better for thesetype to be autonomous AI and not hooked to an active network hive minds. so you can be sure that they wont be used remotely against you.

  • @Badg0r
    @Badg0r24 күн бұрын

    Please make the hardware open source

  • @audiopirate
    @audiopirate24 күн бұрын

    Hope AI doesn't plot a revenge for this beat down.

  • @navtej1313
    @navtej13135 күн бұрын

    A True Yogi.... Wow!!!

  • @keisharc2817
    @keisharc281724 күн бұрын

    Can it cook?

Келесі