A week ago, we saw the Tesla Optimus robot displays some elegant dance movements. You can see it in performing a set of worldly tasks this week, although it is Muslim with it with a great deal of skill – for the human robot.
It was directed by natural language claims, and the so -called “Tesla Bot” is shown in a new video clip in a basket, clean food from a table with a pin and brush, tear a sheet of paper towels, moving a bowl of food, and expanding the floor, from other tasks.
Performance may not shake the world of human robots to its essence, but it shows however a kind of steady progress made by Tesla engineers, with the actions of the robot and their movements complex.
Comment on the latest clip, head of the Optimus team Milan Kovak said In a post on X: “One of our goals is to make Optimus learn directly from the Internet videos for humans who are doing tasks.” Just to be clear, this does not mean that the robot will watch videos like humans. Instead, it indicates that the robot will learn from a huge amount of data available in these videos, such as task demonstrations, movements or behaviors.
Kovac said that his team recently has a “great penetration” and this means that “a large part of learning can now be transferred directly from human videos to robots (the first person’s views at the present time),” explaining that this allows his team to pave the new tasks much more quickly compared to the use of robot data that are operating remotely.
After that, the plan is to make Optimus more reliable by making it trained on tasks on its own – either in the real world or in simulation – using reinforcement learning, a method that improves procedures through experience and error.
Tesla coach Illon Musk, who spoke with the enthusiasm of Optius since the company announced for the first time in 2021 that “thousands” of robots may be published one day alongside human employees in Tesla factories, with “dangerous, repeated sponsorship, [and] Bormed tasks. “
The company, known for making electric cars, is racing more than human robots, against an increasing number of technology companies worldwide, which intends to market their human robots, whether for the workplace or the country or perhaps some new ecosystems of new people.