Jamaica Gleaner

Humanoid robot-maker Figure partners with OpenAI, gets backing from Jeff Bezos and tech giants

-

CHATGPT-MAKER OPENAI is looking to fuse its artificial intelligen­ce systems into the bodies of humanoid robots as part of a new deal with robotics start-up Figure.

Sunnyvale, California-based Figure announced the partnershi­p Thursday along with US$675 million in venture capital funding from a group that includes Amazon founder Jeff Bezos as well as Microsoft, chipmaker Nvidia and the start-up funding divisions of Amazon, Intel, and OpenAI.

Figure is less than two years old and doesn’t have a commercial product but is persuading influentia­l tech industry backers to support its vision of shipping billions of human-like robots to the world’s workplaces and homes.

“If we can just get humanoids to do work that humans are not wanting to do because there’s a shortfall of humans, we can sell millions of humanoids, billions maybe,” Figure CEO Brett Adcock told The Associated Press last year.

For OpenAI, which dabbled in robotics research before pivoting to a focus on the AI large language models that power ChatGPT, the partnershi­p will “open up new possibilit­ies for how robots can help in everyday life,” said Peter Welinder, the San Francisco company’s vice president of product and partnershi­ps, in a written statement.

Financial terms of the deal between Figure and OpenAI weren’t disclosed. The collaborat­ion will have OpenAI building specialise­d AI models for Figure’s humanoid robots, likely based on OpenAI’s existing technology such as GPT language models, the image-generator DALL-E and the new video-generator Sora.

That will help “accelerate Figure’s commercial timeline” by enabling its robots to “process and reason from language”, according to Figure’s announceme­nt. The company announced in January an agreement with BMW to put its robots to work at a car plant in Spartanbur­g, South Carolina, but hadn’t yet determined exactly how or when they would be used.

Robotics experts differ on the usefulness of robots shaped in human form. Most robots employed in factory and warehouse tasks might have some animal-like features — a robotic arm, fingerlike grippers or even legs — but aren’t truly humanoid. That’s in part because it’s taken decades for robotics engineers to develop effective robotic legs and arms.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman hinted at a renewed interest in robotics in a podcast hosted by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and released early this year in which Altman said the company was starting to invest in promising robotics hardware platforms after having earlier abandoned its own research.

“We started robots too early, and so we had to put that project on hold,” Altman told Gates, noting that “we were dealing with bad simulators and breaking tendons” that were distractin­g from the company’s other work.

“We realised more and more over time that what we really first needed was intelligen­ce and cognition and then we could figure out how we could adapt it to physicalit­y,” he said.

 ?? AP JAE C. HONG ?? AI engineer Jenna Reher works on humanoid robot Figure 01 at Figure AI’s test facility in Sunnyvale, California, October 3, 2023.
AP JAE C. HONG AI engineer Jenna Reher works on humanoid robot Figure 01 at Figure AI’s test facility in Sunnyvale, California, October 3, 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica