Reports: Tesla’s prototype Optimus robots were controlled by humans
But the prototypes used “artificial intelligence” to control their walking.
After Elon Musk provided his “long-term” vision for autonomous, humanoid robots at last week’s “We, Robot” event, we expressed some skepticism about the autonomy of the Optimus prototypes sent out for a post-event mingle with the assembled, partying humans. Now, there’s been a raft of confirmation that human teleoperators were indeed puppeting the robot prototypes for much of the night.
Bloomberg cites unnamed “people familiar with the matter” in reporting that Tesla “used humans to remotely control some capabilities” of the prototype robots at the event. The report doesn’t specify which demonstrated capabilities needed that human assistance, but it points out that the robots “were able to walk without external control using artificial intelligence” (the lack of a similar AI call-out for any other robot actions that night seems telling).
That lines up with reporting from tech blogger Robert Scoble, who posted on social media that he had “talked with an engineer” who confirmed that “when it walked, that is AI running Optimus.” For other tasks—like pouring drinks from a tap, playing Rock Paper Scissors, or chatting with nearby attendees—Scoble noted that “a human is remote assisting.”