The first consumer humanoid robot is here, and it lets strangers see inside your home

midian182

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What just happened? In what sounds like a diary entry that players might discover in a horror game, the world's first "consumer-ready humanoid robot" designed to help with household tasks is now available for pre-order. It costs $20,000, and buying one also means allowing someone to control the bot remotely for tasks it can't yet perform – and seeing into your home in the process.

Robotics company 1X Technologies (1XT), which secured $100 million in funding from OpenAI, EQT Ventures, and others in 2024, unveiled a bipedal humanoid robot, Neo Beta, last year.

Now, the finished version of the bot is available to pre-order. It's slightly taller than before at 5-foot-6-inches and the amount it can carry has increased to 55 pounds, though Neo still weighs the same 66 pounds as the Beta model. It also seems to have lost its snazzy-looking sweats for what looks like a white turtleneck bodysuit.

1X Technologies writes that owners can give Neo a list of tasks to complete around the house and schedule a time for when they want them completed. It's also able to carry out chores in real-time.

The company names housekeeping tasks such as folding laundry, organizing shelves, watering plants, vacuuming, and tidying as some of its abilities. But it's here where the privacy concerns arise.

When faced with something it hasn't been trained in, a human will remotely take control of Neo using a VR headset, able to see through the bot's cold, dead eyes.

The company writes that Neo's "emotive ear rings" will change color to indicate when an operator is in control, and that owners have full control over when the person can take over and what they can do.

The Washington Times spent some time with Neo and didn't seem enormously impressed. It very slowly retrieved some water from a fridge and loaded a dishwasher, though the reporter never saw the robot do anything autonomously – but it can definitely open doors on its own.

1X Technologies insists, though, that Neo's abilities will improve as the company gathers more training data.

If you can't afford $20,000 for a privacy-invading robot that's seemingly inferior to a human cleaner, there's a $499-per-month subscription offer. US deliveries are expected to start next year before expanding globally in 2027.

We're certainly a long way off Detroit: Become Human-style robots that can perform a multitude of tasks as well as a human, but this could be the first step in a long path toward that goal – and potential human enslavement.

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What is the reason none of these bots seem to stand up straight ? All the ones I have seen seem to have this same slightly bent knee thing going on, I assume it's a balance thing but it looks a little odd at times.
 
If they can actually manage to make a robot that can keep a house clean ad do dishes and laundry, they are going to make ungodly amounts of money. More than half the population will remain single their entire lives and in old age they're ALL going to need help.
What is the reason none of these bots seem to stand up straight ? All the ones I have seen seem to have this same slightly bent knee thing going on, I assume it's a balance thing but it looks a little odd at times.
It's balance. Humans are much more reactive and, surprisingly, have to put in a lot of non conscious effort to maintain a straight up posture.

Not an issue for meatbags, but for robots with limited energy thanks to modern battery tech, expending all that energy to maintain perfect posture would be counterproductive.
 
You could of course employ a real human (😮) to do the laundry / housework for 10 hours a week for a couple of years.
 
I pay $180 for a five-person crew of real humans to clean my entire house, top to bottom. They get an impressive amount done in about an hour. They’re a family that works hard. They have kids and are happy making a modest living.

There are a lot of capable people out there who need and can do this kind of work in a fashion infinitely superior to this garbage tech if you bother to look.

I’m completely unimpressed. This thing is a waste of time, money, and energy—a heartless attempt to replace already affordable, skilled human labor.

Provably, there is no real genuine improvement here, which is supposed to be the whole point of technology.

The creators of this pointlessness can feel free to take a long walk off a short pier any time. Go build something actually useful to PEOPLE you soulless clowns.
 
I pay $180 for a five-person crew of real humans to clean my entire house, top to bottom. They get an impressive amount done in about an hour. They’re a family that works hard. They have kids and are happy making a modest living.

There are a lot of capable people out there who need and can do this kind of work in a fashion infinitely superior to this garbage tech if you bother to look.

I’m completely unimpressed. This thing is a waste of time, money, and energy—a heartless attempt to replace already affordable, skilled human labor.

Provably, there is no real genuine improvement here, which is supposed to be the whole point of technology.

The creators of this pointlessness can feel free to take a long walk off a short pier any time. Go build something actually useful to PEOPLE you soulless clowns.
lolcalmdown
You could of course employ a real human (😮) to do the laundry / housework for 10 hours a week for a couple of years.
Real humans get sick, they dont clean their hands, they steal, they lie. Especially from the elderly, the infirm, or those not entirely there.

It is a CONSTANT problem you hear about in nursing homes and with at home care.

I wouldn't trust someone I dont know to walk into my house and clean, to do it properly, without eyeing something up or forgetting to wash their hands or come in while sick using meds to suppress the symptoms because they want the money.
 
Much of the cost of developing these types of robots is in making them look humanoid which is often creepy anyway. It's time we get over all that Star Wars nonsense and developed machines with various mechanical 'limbs' and levers that can undertake tasks much more effectively. It could then fold itself away into a corner of a room when done.
 
Much of the cost of developing these types of robots is in making them look humanoid which is often creepy anyway. It's time we get over all that Star Wars nonsense and developed machines with various mechanical 'limbs' and levers that can undertake tasks much more effectively. It could then fold itself away into a corner of a room when done.
"star wars nonsense"? Eh?

The human world is built around, you know, humans? Therefore, a robot that interfaces the same way a human does make more sense then an amalgamation of limbs.

Besides, you think humanoid robots are creepy, just wait until you wake up to find some 10 limbed monstrosity wandering around in the dark of your home. That is actual nightmare fuel.
 
Paying twenty grand for a robot that might need a human to remote in and watch me fold laundry feels like the most 2025 version of capitalism imaginable. It’s like hiring a butler who occasionally becomes a Twitch stream.
 
Imagine explaining to your insurance company that the robot broke your fridge while being controlled by someone in a VR headset across the world. The future really is just tech support with extra steps.

 
"star wars nonsense"? Eh?

The human world is built around, you know, humans? Therefore, a robot that interfaces the same way a human does make more sense then an amalgamation of limbs.

Besides, you think humanoid robots are creepy, just wait until you wake up to find some 10 limbed monstrosity wandering around in the dark of your home. That is actual nightmare fuel.
Yep, sounds dandy! 😂🥰
 
lolcalmdown
Real humans get sick, they dont clean their hands, they steal, they lie. Especially from the elderly, the infirm, or those not entirely there.

It is a CONSTANT problem you hear about in nursing homes and with at home care.

I wouldn't trust someone I dont know to walk into my house and clean, to do it properly, without eyeing something up or forgetting to wash their hands or come in while sick using meds to suppress the symptoms because they want the money.
lolgrowup

So don’t. Great. Thanks for the nontrobution rebuttal.

Okey-dokey. Ba-bye now!
 
Good development. Nursing homes always have worker shortages as no one wants to wipe butts and the population distribution is an inverse pyramid in many countries. A ton of elderly also live alone and need an eye kept on them that could inform emergency services.

 
I wouldn't mind the extra eyes if it was a family member trusted to respond, not some whoknowswho from whoknowswhere.
 
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