Elon Musk faces skeptics as Tesla gets ready to unveil 'Optimus' robot
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[September 20, 2022] By
Hyunjoo Jin
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Tesla Chief
Executive Elon Musk blamed overreliance on factory robots for sending
the electric carmaker to "production hell" four years ago, saying humans
were better at certain jobs.
My, how times have changed.
Musk's Texas company now is floating ambitious plans to deploy thousands
of humanoid robots, known as Tesla Bot or Optimus, within its factories,
expanding eventually to millions around the world, according to job
postings. Buzz is building within the company as Tesla is having more
internal meetings on robots, a person familiar with the matter said.
Longer term, Musk said at a TED Talk robots could be used in homes,
making dinner, mowing the lawn and caring for the elderly people, and
even becoming a "buddy" or a "catgirl" sex partner.
The robot business eventually may be worth more than Tesla's car
revenue, according to Musk, who is now touting a vision for the company
that goes well beyond making self-driving electric vehicles.
At its "AI Day" on Sept. 30, Musk said Tesla will unveil a prototype
from its project Optimus, an allusion to the powerful and benevolent
leader of the Autobots in the Transformers series. Production could
start next year, he said.
Tesla faces skepticism that it can show technological advances that
would justify the expense of "general purpose" robots in factories,
homes and elsewhere, according to robotics experts, investors and
analysts interviewed by Reuters.
Tesla already employs hundreds of robots designed for specific jobs for
production of its cars.
Humanoid robots have been in development for decades by Honda Motor Co
and Hyundai Motor Co's Boston Dynamics unit. Like self-driving cars, the
robots have trouble with unpredictable situations.
"Self-driving cars weren't really proved to be as easy as anyone
thought. And it's the same way with humanoid robots to some extent," the
lead of NASA's Dexterous Robotics Team, Shaun Azimi, told Reuters.
"If something unexpected happens, being flexible and robust to those
kinds of changes is very difficult."
At an "Autonomy" event in 2019, Musk promised 1 million robotaxis by
2020 but has yet to deliver such a car.
Musk's robots may be able to demonstrate basic capabilities at the
event, but it would be hard for them to impress public expectations of
robots that are as capable as humans, experts say.
To succeed, Tesla will need to show robots doing multiple, unscripted
actions, said Nancy Cooke, a professor in human systems engineering at
Arizona State University. Such proof could provide a boost to Tesla
stock, which is down 25% from its 2021 peak.
"If he just gets the robot to walk around, or he gets the robots to
dance, that's already been done. That's not that impressive," she said.
Tesla did not respond to Reuters' request for comments, but Musk in the
past proved skeptics wrong, jump-starting the electric car market and
building a rocket company, SpaceX, although some product launches were
behind schedule.
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A humanoid robot developed by Tesla,
known as Tesla Bot or Optimus, is shown in a frame grab from the
live video of Tesla's AI Day streamed on August 20, 2022.
Tesla/Handout via REUTERS
IN-HOUSE EXPERTISE
Initially, Optimus will perform boring or dangerous jobs, including
moving parts around its factories, according to Musk.
Musk acknowledged that humanoid robots do not have enough
intelligence to navigate the real world without being explicitly
instructed.
But he said Tesla can leverage its expertise in AI and key
components to develop and produce smart, yet less expensive,
humanoid robots at scale.
Tesla is on hiring spree for people to work on humanoid bi-pedal
robots, with about 20 job postings on "Tesla Bot" including jobs for
designing key robot parts like "actuators".
"The code you will write will at term run in millions of humanoid
robots across the world, and will therefore be held to high quality
standards," one of the job postings said.
Tesla has over 2 million vehicles on the road.
Jonathan Hurst, chief technology officer at Agility Robotics, a
humanoid robot firm founded in 2015 said the technology "is right
now starting to turn the corner."
"Certainly, an important measure of success is do they make money
from it," he told Reuters, referring to Tesla's humanoid robot
efforts.
HUMAN HELP?
Analysts see more pageant than product. "It's all part of
distracting people and giving them the next shiny object to chase
after," Guidehouse Insights analyst Sam Abuelsamid said.
"Investors are not excited about Optimus," said Gene Munster,
managing partner at venture capital firm Loup Ventures, which holds
Tesla stocks. "It's just such a low probability that it works at
scale," he said, saying it is "infinitely harder than self-driving
cars."
And then there is Musk's own experience with robots in the factory.
During the 2018 production hell, Musk specifically noted the
problems of the "fluff bot," an assembly robot that failed to
perform simple tasks that human hands can do - picking up pieces of
"fluff" and placing them on batteries.
He said the cost of having technicians maintain the complicated
robot far exceeded that of hiring someone to do the assembly.
The fluff bot is "a funny example but drives home the point that
autonomy often doesn't generalize well, and so handling soft fluffy
material that isn't as predictable as a rigid part was causing a
huge problem," Aaron Johnson, a mechanical engineering professor at
Carnegie Mellon University, said.
"Human hands are way better at doing that," Musk said.
(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Peter Henderson, Ben Klayman
and Lisa Shumaker)
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