4/15/2026 at 2:27:35 PM
It does all start to feel like we'd get fairly close to being able to convincingly emulate a lot of human or at least animal behavior on top of the existing generative stack, by using brain-like orchestration patterns ... if only inference was fast enough to do much more of it.The gauge-reading example here is great, but in reality of course having the system synthesize that Python script, run the CV tasks, come back with the answer etc. is currently quite slow.
Once things go much faster, you can also start to use image generation to have models extrapolate possible futures from photos they take, and then describe them back to themselves and make decisions based on that, loops like this. I think the assumption is that our brains do similar things unconsciously, before we integrate into our conscious conception of mind.
I'm really curious what things we could build if we had 100x or 1000x inference throughput.
by sho_hn
4/15/2026 at 2:57:03 PM
Idk if you've seen this already but Taalas does this interesting thing where they embed the model directly onto the chip, this leads to super-fast speeds (https://chatjimmy.ai) but the model they're using is an old small Llama model so the quality is pretty bad. But they say that it can scale, so if that's really true that'd be pretty insane and unlock the inference you're talking about.by moonu
4/15/2026 at 3:44:21 PM
Robotics/control systems is exactly what came to mind when I saw this release! What struck me is the possibility of look ahead search in real time, a bit like alphazero's mcts.by lachlan_gray
4/16/2026 at 12:58:01 AM
It's a fascinating proposition and no doubt they'll get bigger models in there, and likely be able to cluster multiple models for mega MOE. One thing that would really be great is if they could take the power requirements down -- the chip requires 2.5KW, which is modest in terms of what the big boys use but would be an issue on a battery powered robot.by pstuart
4/16/2026 at 9:58:22 AM
"The chip" no, a whole rack/deployment they offer takes 2.5kW. Not just one chip. Squeezing 2.5kW thru 1 chip would be mental.by fennecfoxy
4/16/2026 at 4:14:20 PM
My bad, thanks for the correction. Skimming FTL.by pstuart
4/15/2026 at 4:13:07 PM
Is emulating human behavior really a valuable end goal though? Humans exist as the evolutionary endpoint of exhaustion hunting large pray and organic tool-making. We've built loads of industrial and residential automation tools in the last 100 years and none of them are humanoid. I'd imagine a household robot butler would be more like R2D2 with lots and lots of arms.by tootie
4/15/2026 at 6:30:49 PM
Every single behavior? For sure not but otherwise we are the result of a very very long evolution and there is nothing else around us as smart and as adjustable.The planing ahead thing through simulation for example seems to be a very good tool in neuronal network based architectures.
by Glemllksdf
4/15/2026 at 5:47:24 PM
It is when the world was made to interface with us. We can't use robots for everything if they aren't emulating us, because we would have to adapt everything for the non-humanlike robots.by hootz
4/15/2026 at 9:37:50 PM
We build our living spaces against the constraints of the human form, but that still doesn't imply the human form is optimal for anything. There's no reason a robot traveling over smooth surface should have legs instead of wheels or treads. There's no reason to have a head. Some kind of arm is a common design feature, but certainly no reason to have two. No reason to be symmetrical. A domestic robot may be constrained in terms of scale (ie see things at counter height) but not shape.by tootie
4/16/2026 at 1:42:34 AM
>We build our living spaces against the constraints of the human form, but that still doesn't imply the human form is optimal for anything.We build just about everything we expect to interact with against the constraints of the human form, not just living spaces. And yes we because we built those spaces for the human body, the human body is by definition the optimal choice.
>There's no reason a robot traveling over smooth surface should have legs instead of wheels or treads.
There's a reason. The robot becomes useless for any surface that isn't smooth. What's it going to do about stairs ? You're not going to make a bespoke solution that generalizes for us better than 'feet that work'. Do you think it's better to built a million different complex robot bodies for every situation ? That defeats the purpose of being general purpose.
by famouswaffles
4/16/2026 at 7:40:30 PM
When we built self-driving cars, did we put a humanoid robot in the driver's seat? No. We put sensors on the car's perimeter and plugged in to the existing electronics. Forget "fits in human spaces" and think about an actual task you'd trust a robot to do for you before it's battery runs out. And who says you need one generalist? I have 5 different automated kitchen machines right now and they are all various types of rectangular prisms. I have a robot floor cleaner and it's a disc on wheels. I'd sooner have a kitchen robot that's on a rail bolted to the ceiling and connected to mains power.This is a terribly contrived demo and not really realistic, but it illustrates my point. It's a bathroom-cleaning robot and it's kinda what I described. R2D2 with arms coming out of it's head. It's roughly human-scaled, but not at all humanoid.
https://www.reddit.com/r/robotics/comments/1q9y5wh/toilet_cl...
by tootie
4/16/2026 at 7:58:25 PM
[dead]by famouswaffles
4/16/2026 at 1:58:47 PM
The human form is not optimal, but it is general. When we want a general AI for all kinds of work, we can look to humans as inspiration, as we can do all the kinds of work we need, even if it is not optimal.Of course, optimal robots will be useful, like ultimate roombas for cleaning floors or something like that, they will work better than humanoid robots for sure.
by hootz
4/15/2026 at 10:06:57 PM
Really, the requirements are for the robot to move in predictable ways (if something looks like an arm, it ought to move like an arm, etc), and to have enough strength to be useful for difficult/tiring tasks while somehow also not being dangerous if something does go wrong.by hgoel
4/15/2026 at 11:38:30 PM
> Humans exist as the evolutionary endpointJust want to pedantically point out that we're not at our evolutionary endpoint yet. Humans are still evolving!
by nozzlegear
4/15/2026 at 3:19:29 PM
Taalas showed that you could make LLMs faster by turning them into ASICs and get 10k+ token generation. It's a matter of time now.by Kostic
4/15/2026 at 4:11:28 PM
Actually pretty interesting to think: in a few years you might buy a raspberry pi style computer board with an extra chip on it with one of these types of embodiment models and you can slap it in a rover or something.by timmg
4/15/2026 at 4:04:25 PM
What if we put slop images into slop machines and got slop^2 back outby LetsGetTechnicl