Unitree Introducing | Unitree G1 Humanoid Agent | AI Avatar | Price from $16K

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2024-05-13に共有
Unlock unlimited sports potential (Extra large joint movement space angle, 23~43 joints)
Force control of dexterous hands, manipulation of all thingsImitation & reinforcement learning driven
Robot world model, let’s create it together
Unitree G1 Price from $16K (Tax and Shipping cost excluded)

More introduction: www.unitree.com/g1
Official Website: www.unitree.com
Sales contact: [email protected]


license code: MB01HMT2HKZYGMB

コメント (21)
  • @onlyuser2
    We’re officially entering “The Age of Robot Contortionists”
  • @elmegapeluco
    -Robot, open a Coke for me. -My goodness, what a mess you've made, clean that up with a cloth. -I'm not programmed to do that.
  • @rootcause-i1v
    $16,000 is very good price. Walking capabilities and balancing are especially very impressive.
  • @ClayMann
    I like the nod to Atlas and it shows just how much potential this robot range has. I've loving the wild speed of progress we're seeing in biped robots.
  • @jhunt5578
    Wow. The upgrades are incredible. It has the Boston Dynamics contortion, the same fast movement, and new hands. And for $16k. Very impressive work. 👏
  • @razcsi
    Everyday i see a new humanoid robot developed by a new robotics company. About 2 years ago there were only Boston Dynamics, and Tesla started doing their robot, and now it's like a TWS Earbuds. Every company has one. Not that it'd be a problem, i love seeing this trend!
  • As a life-long robotics professional, please permit me to put a fine point on the way the H1 is being marketed. Unitree would do well to move away from describing the H1 as “the first general purpose humanoid robot”. Here’s why: I founded White Box Robots in 2000. By 2003 we had functional prototypes. By 2006 we started selling the first production run. What could our 914 PC-BOT do? Technically not much at that early release. Unmapped autonomous navigation and a few other basic functions. We deliberately described it as “a general purpose autonomous robot”. Hoping that people would buy it and figure out useful things to do with it. In retrospect, we couldn’t answer the basic question “What does it do?” History is repeating itself here. That approach did not work for us and I would argue it’s not a great move for Unitree either. Develop a couple legitimately useful tasks the robot can perform (with polish) right out of the box and build on it. Commit to that process like your company’s survival depends on it. Because it does. If that machine doesn’t solve a fist-pounding need pretty quickly, it’s going to be little more than a passing mechanical curiosity.
  • @AR777bomb
    I thought robotics was dying a decade ago, now we're seeing robotics startup companies pop up everywhere. It's an exciting time we're living in currently
  • @pickypuck9486
    Bruh 16000??????? This is the real game changer. Boston dynamics be like god damn it
  • @zerobot_tech
    2023 was the spike emergence of AI, 2024 is the spike emergence of humanoids
  • @chronablitz
    That first shot of it on the ground killed me, looks like someone ran over it 😆
  • @slateisa
    Ooooh holy shit only $16,000!!!! Wow!!!! The new Atlas I think the cost will be $500,000. Because Spot dog cost $74,000. Wow impressive, good job and congratulations Unitree!!!!!💥💥💥🤜🤜
  • @GigaCraft-420
    Bro why they always need to kick/punch the robot, they will take it personal once singularity arrives 💀
  • Man. In a few years these robots will be way more advanced. In time they will become cheaper and more accessible to everyone. They will be huge help in all areas. Just like humans are. They will go places no man has ever gone before.