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This Is Robotics: Radio News #35
The Wild, Wild World of Humanoid Robots 2025
The Rise of Humanoid Robots in 2021: How We Got to Now
Good fortune has befallen humanoid robotics in this fast-paced year for humanoids 2025.
Join us for the journey to Now! That journey arguably can be said to have begun in August of 2021 with the emergence of high-octane influencer, Elon Musk, and his introduction of Optimus to the heralded list of humanoid names.
Surely, humanity has been at the chase for a humanoid likeness for centuries. Modernists may insist that WABOT-1, built in 1970 by Ichiro Kato at Waseda University in Tokyo, Japan, was the first humanoid robot. And they’d be correct. Since WABOT-1, the list of humanoids has been chock-full of exemplary technology and technologists. Not to diminish the robust efforts of any precursors, but all of it seemed to be progressing in slow motion and a bit of anonymity until the world’s richest man, with a half-dozen spectacular moonshots under his belt, suddenly jumped into humanoid prominence.
ChatGP-3 in 2022 breathed a new kind of life into humanoids as code capitulated to GenAI prompts. NVIDIA’s Jetson Thor in 2024, dubbed the “Universal Robotics Computer” offered up a humanoid compute force never seen prior to Thor. And then China’s DeepSeek created a platform for embodied AI that was a simple, cheap, and effective doorway for humanoids to enter and learn from the physical world of humans.
Episode #35 of This Is Robotics takes a look at this wild, wild journey for humanoids that’s just beginning.
Please join us in this journey together as Elon Musk, Tom Dohmke, Jensen Huang, Peter Diamandis, Emad Mostaque, Yann LeCun, and Eric Jang build out the 2025 landscape of humanoid robotics.
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