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Humanoid Robots Are Here

4 months ago 64

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By TakeBackOurTech | Source

But will they stay?

Imagine a worker who never tires, never complains about heat or cold, and can keep going day after day with the same output.

That’s the promise behind Boston Dynamics’ newest creation. Atlas, a fully‑bipedal robot, could soon share a factory floor with humans.

How Atlas Matches Up

  • Size & Mobility—Standing 6.2 ft tall, Atlas has 56 independently controlled joints, giving it a range of motion that most people can’t match and a reach length of almost eight feet.
  • Strength—Atlas can routinely lift 66 lb and can momentarily handle up to 110 lb.
  • Weather Tolerance—The robot operates from 4 °F to 104 °F, making extreme temperatures no obstacle.
  • Endurance—Atlas can even swap its own battery after 3–4 hours, allowing it to work around the clock with almost zero downtime.

See the machine in action here:

The big question on everyone’s mind is whether or not a robot like Atlas will replace human workers. And if it does, it may be sooner than we think. Atlas’ ability to perform the same tasks without human fatigue or safety‑related breaks makes it an attractive alternative for industries that operate 24/7 or in harsh environments (construction sites, warehouses, disaster zones, etc.).

Hyundai’s 2022 purchase of Boston Dynamics for $880 million (after Google divested its stake) signals a serious commercial push. Hyundai says it plans to produce 30,000 robots per year in the United States, and the company’s roadmap targets full‑scale production by 2028.

A short preview of Hyundai’s vision can be seen here:

How Atlas May Learn New Jobs

Atlas’ learning engine is powered by Google’s DeepMind AI, which gives it the capacity to learn new tasks quickly. Initially, each robot can be tele‑operated by a human, but the AI’s reinforcement‑learning algorithms let it gradually acquire autonomy. This blend of remote control and machine learning means Atlas can be deployed in a variety of settings—though the transition from lab prototype to production line is still slow.

What do you think? Will this thing take your job? And is it a good or bad thing if it does?

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