Robots Around the World Are Massively Trained in Human Movements
Thousands of people around the world are literally 'training the future' with their own hands. They film themselves performing simple actions: holding objects, cooking, folding items, moving around the room.
Cameras on hands, bodies, and glasses capture every movement, and corporations are actively using this content to train humanoid robots.
While discussions focus on which jobs AI will replace in cognition, robots are already being taught the physical world. And right now, a generation of machines is being formed that will be able to replace human labor not in numbers, but in reality 🤯
Read also
Ford Admits Mistake: AI Couldn't Handle It — Engineers Had to Be Brought Back
Ford admitted that relying too heavily on AI in car development led to problems: vehicle quality deteriorated and recalls hit record levels. As a result, the automaker brought back, promoted, and rehired over 350 experienced engineers to fix the mistakes...
AI has already made 7 out of 10 office workers more productive, but there is a catch
New research shows that nearly 90% of office workers already use AI in their work — for writing texts, searching for information, analyzing data, and other tasks. 🤖 More than half admitted they work faster, and one in four said AI has completely changed their…
San Francisco hotels start replacing staff with virtual employees
A video from a hotel in San Francisco went viral, showing a screen with a Booking.com employee from the Philippines greeting guests instead of a receptionist. The girl helps with check-in online: checks passports, processes payment, and provides room access. Essentially, the entire process happens…
AI helped read a scroll thought lost for almost 2000 years
Scientists were able to decipher an ancient scroll that turned into a charred piece of papyrus after the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD. 🌋 For centuries it was thought that the text inside was lost forever, since any attempt to unroll the scroll literally destroyed it. But now researchers have...