Sold out: Rabbit sells 10,000 pocket AI companions on launch day

Shawn Knight

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Hip, hop, hurray: Rabbit opened pre-orders for its R1 pocket AI companion device earlier this week, and consumers jumped at the opportunity. In a recent post on X, the company recalled that early in the manufacturing process, they said internally they'd be happy to sell just 500 units on launch day. The team absolutely smashed that mark by 20x when it received 10,000 pre-orders on day one.

Rabbit broke cover a couple of days ago as one of the more fascinating products to emerge from CES. The R1 is a AI-powered companion device that's about half the size of an ordinary smartphone. It features an array of input mechanisms like a push-to-talk button, a scroll wheel, a camera, and a microphone that can be used to ask questions or queue up tasks.

The magic that makes R1 tick is a large action model (LAM) that learns how to operate apps and complete tasks, much like a human would. According to its developers, the LAM can learn the interface of any software regardless of the software platform it is running on.

This flexibility vastly expands R1's compatibility as there is no need to hard code commands for each and every app or service you want it to interact with. Think of it like a universal television remote, but for your apps. There's even a mechanism in which you can train the handheld to interact with unfamiliar apps.

As mentioned in our first feature, there are still a lot of unknowns about the inner workings and limitations of the device. For example, could its smarts be rolled into a smartphone app and used on a device you already carry around rather than necessitating a second physical gadget? Perhaps the physical iteration is serving as a proof of concept to gain traction and we'll get an app variant down the road supplemented by smartphone AI hardware.

Those who don't already have a pre-order in will have to wait a while longer to try out R1. The first batch at $199 are now sold out and will arrive between March – April. Round two orders are now open but won't ship until the April – May 2024 window.

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Apple won’t allow one app to interact with others in a way this must require.

But an android app seems possible.

I think it is crazy to give any company the kind of access this thing could have, but most people don’t seem to care.
 
The first real-world example of a functional prototypical P.E.T from the Mega Man NT Warrior franchise? I'm not at all sure that these will ever compete with smartphones, but it's an interesting idea.
 
Apple won’t allow one app to interact with others in a way this must require.

But an android app seems possible.

I think it is crazy to give any company the kind of access this thing could have, but most people don’t seem to care.
Sadly I think most people have given up on the idea of privacy. We can't have it, so why not make our lives convenient? A resigned, but understandable, position.
 
What does it do?
Good question. From the article it sounds as if it records the user input but im unclear how it helps the user. Does it somehow automate tasks that were too complex/manual before and if so, how?

Also if that's the case then would not an app or program be cheaper and better suited for that?
 
Good question. From the article it sounds as if it records the user input but im unclear how it helps the user. Does it somehow automate tasks that were too complex/manual before and if so, how?

Also if that's the case then would not an app or program be cheaper and better suited for that?
Exactly
 
So its more updated a "Assistant" app on my opinion. many apply/ android phones were have something close to this. I dont think there is hardware needed for this at less not on that size :D
smart advertising. I give the company that.
 
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