The constant human supervision is a deal-breaker. I was sold on the idea of an AI robot, not a person in a VR headset doing my chores for me. That's a service, not a product.
A huge step for the future of home robotics. I'm pre-ordering this immediately. The potential for a real, helpful humanoid assistant outweighs the current limitations. This is a first-generation product and I'm excited to be an early adopter.
Cautiously optimistic about the no-go zones. I appreciate they are trying to implement privacy features like face blurring and restricted areas. It shows they are listening to the concerns.
A huge step for the future of home robotics. I'm pre-ordering this immediately. The potential for a real, helpful humanoid assistant outweighs the current limitations. This is a first-generation product and I'm excited to be an early adopter.
The blur feature for privacy is a good compromise. If they can reliably blur out people, it lessens the invasion of privacy, though it doesn't solve the issue of a stranger seeing the rest of my house.
Wait for Tesla Optimus. The $20,000 price tag is insane for a robot that can't fold a sweater without a human helping it via VR. Hard pass until the autonomy improves dramatically.
Gimmick for YouTubers and wealthy people. This isn't aimed at the average household. It's a flashy gadget for early adopters to get content from and for 1X to gather training data from, period.
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TechieGal (Guest) –
The constant human supervision is a deal-breaker. I was sold on the idea of an AI robot, not a person in a VR headset doing my chores for me. That's a service, not a product.
Future Systems Corp (Guest) –
A huge step for the future of home robotics. I'm pre-ordering this immediately. The potential for a real, helpful humanoid assistant outweighs the current limitations. This is a first-generation product and I'm excited to be an early adopter.
SmartHome Review (Guest) –
Cautiously optimistic about the no-go zones. I appreciate they are trying to implement privacy features like face blurring and restricted areas. It shows they are listening to the concerns.
NovaTech Inc. (Guest) –
A huge step for the future of home robotics. I'm pre-ordering this immediately. The potential for a real, helpful humanoid assistant outweighs the current limitations. This is a first-generation product and I'm excited to be an early adopter.
CyberSentinel (Guest) –
The blur feature for privacy is a good compromise. If they can reliably blur out people, it lessens the invasion of privacy, though it doesn't solve the issue of a stranger seeing the rest of my house.
RoboCritique (Guest) –
Wait for Tesla Optimus. The $20,000 price tag is insane for a robot that can't fold a sweater without a human helping it via VR. Hard pass until the autonomy improves dramatically.
Susanna (Guest) –
Gimmick for YouTubers and wealthy people. This isn't aimed at the average household. It's a flashy gadget for early adopters to get content from and for 1X to gather training data from, period.
Brian Brownworth (Guest) –
Amazing, Never thought this would be possible in my lifetime.
Johnson Capital Partners (Guest) –
Is Great
Dave Wallace (Guest) –
Following 1X for a while, they deliver!
Adriel (Guest) –
It works at some things, but not everything
Mayla (Guest) –
Looks too scary
Camper LLC (Guest) –
Love it
Cameron Bush (Guest) –
Good
Brett Foster (Guest) –
Good
Benington Manufacturing (Guest) –
Great at certain thinfs
London Robotics (Guest) –
Renting it out is easy money
Craig Dosckivesky (Guest) –
looks sleek
Daykind Product (Guest) –
overrated
Alex Whitson (Guest) –
Its lighter than I expected