apptronik
Is the new Apollo humanoid the end of jobs as we know it?
Kurt "The Cyberguy" Knutsson explains how the new Apollo humanoid can potentially be the end of jobs as we know it. Are we living in the future? Are the robots taking over? No โฆ but for Austin-based startup Apptronik, robots are being developed and are here to stay. Meet Apollo: Apptronik's latest "general purpose humanoid robot" powered by artificial intelligence (AI).
Apptronik's Apollo is the latest humanoid robot to beat Tesla to market
Apptronik unveiled a new workforce robot today. Named Apollo, the machine is designed to "work in environments designed for, and directly alongside, humans." The android is initially intended to move and carry cases and totes in logistics and manufacturing settings. But the Austin-based Apptronik sees Apollo expanding into "construction, oil and gas, electronics production, retail, home delivery, elder care" and more. Apollo follows Xiaomi's reveal of the CyberOne robot last year, which looked remarkably similar to the still-unreleased Tesla Bot.
The Humanoid Robot NASA Is Helping Build - CNET
We've seen impressive developments in humanoid robots over the last few years. Elon Musk and Tesla introduced the Optimus robot last year, and every few months Boston Dynamics teaches its Atlas robot a few new tricks. Next month at South by Southwest, a Texas-based startup will reveal to a small group its take on a general-purpose robot. Apptronik calls its newest robot Apollo, in part because it partnered with NASA on commercializing the robot. Though there aren't plans to send Apollo to space, the space agency wants to encourage the development of humanoid robots that could one day lead to a robotic space-explorer.