economie

Yes, there were humans controlling Tesla’s bartending robots behind the scenes

Tesla’s Optimus robots walked into the spotlight at the company’s “We, Robot” event. The bots would later serve drinks and mingle with the crowd, with some help from humans behind the scenes.

Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a note on Friday that the robots weren’t fully operating independently and “relied on tele-ops,” or humans controlling them behind the scenes.

“Overall, we did not pick up on anything new/novel about Optimus that clearly showed significant progress,” the analysts wrote. “Including little incremental detail from the company that the market was not previously aware of. “

Videos of guests’ interactions with the Optimus robots posted online underscored that humans were involved.

One attendee posted a video on X, formerly Twitter, asking an Optimus robot operating a beer tap if it was remote-controlled, to which it responded that it was “assisted by a human.”

“I’m not yet fully autonomous,” the voice said, with a human-sounding trip over the word “autonomous.”

Another video showed a guest trying to get the robot to reveal how much of it was actually AI and not a human. “I can’t disclose just how much, that’s something you’ll have to find out later,” the voice said. “I would say, it might be some. I’m not going to confirm, but it might be some.”

Although some commenters felt the human assistance was “obvious,” others said that Tesla’s presentation was misleading.

Tesla influencer Jeremy Judkins wrote on X that he didn’t realize the bots were human-controlled until after the event, saying Tesla “misled millions of people” who watched the livestream.

Josh Wolfe, cofounder of Lux Capital, also seemed to disapprove.

“Totally worthy to celebrate low latency remote control but totally dishonest to demo these as autonomous robots—call it the parlor trick it is,” he wrote.

Tesla did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s request for comment.

Musk said he envisions a future where “Optimus robots will walk among you.” The Tesla CEO expects it to become a household companion, likening it to a personal “Star Wars” R2-D2 or C3-PO that can pick up your groceries and babysit your kids.

Musk, who has said he is “pathologically optimistic,” has also said that Optimus will boost Tesla’s valuation into the trillions.

Tesla has said it’s already deployed two Optimus robots on its factory floor, though it is unclear what tasks they are completing. Tesla has said the humanoid robots will eventually be sold to both companies and consumers.

Musk predicted an eventual price tag of $20,000 to $30,000 price tag — “probably less than a car”— when manufactured at scale, which he said would take some time.

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https://www.businessinsider.com/tesla-optimus-robots-bartending-controlled-by-humans-2024-10