Video Friday: This Floor Lamp Will Do Your Chores
Robots Take Center Stage: This Week's Highlights from the World of Robotics
As we dive into the world of robotics, it's clear that innovation is happening at a breakneck pace. From robots that can do your chores to those that can navigate complex environments, this week's selection of videos showcases the incredible advancements being made in the field. In this article, we'll take a closer look at some of the most exciting developments and explore what they mean for the future of robotics.
Lume: The Robot That Can Do Your Chores
One of the most intriguing videos we came across this week is Lume, a sculptural floor lamp designed to feel at home the moment you place it. But what's truly remarkable about Lume is its ability to perform tasks such as making the bed, folding laundry, and more. While the video showcasing Lume's capabilities is certainly convincing, we can't help but feel a sense of skepticism. After all, as the article notes, the video is edited in a way that makes it difficult to discern the robot's actual performance.
Despite this, Lume represents an exciting development in the field of robotics. The idea of a robot that can perform tasks that are typically mundane and time-consuming is certainly appealing. And while Lume may not be the most advanced robot on the market, it's clear that it's a step in the right direction.
Electrofluidic Fiber Muscles: A New Class of Artificial Muscle Fibers
In a breakthrough paper published in Science Robotics, researchers from MIT Media Lab and collaborators from Politecnico di Bari present Electrofluidic Fiber Muscles, a new class of artificial muscle fibers for robots and wearables. Unlike traditional servo motors, these fiber-shaped muscles are soft and flexible, making them ideal for applications where flexibility and dexterity are crucial.
The Electrofluidic Fiber Muscles work by combining electrohydrodynamic (EHD) fiber pumps with fluidic fiber actuators. The muscles are driven by electric fields and operate silently, with no external pumps or reservoirs. This makes them an attractive option for applications such as robotics, prosthetics, and wearable devices.
GEN-1: A General-Purpose AI Model for Robots
We've created GEN-1, our latest milestone in scaling robot learning. We believe it to be the first general-purpose AI model that crosses a new performance threshold: mastery of simple physical tasks. It improves average success rates to 99 percent on tasks where previous models achieve 64 percent, completes tasks roughly 3x faster than state-of-the-art, and requires only one hour of robot data for each of these results.
GEN-1 unlocks commercial viability across a broad range of applications—and while it cannot solve all tasks today, it is a significant step toward our mission of creating generalist intelligence for the physical world.
Robust Interaction with Heterogeneous Articulated Objects
Legged manipulators offer high mobility and versatile manipulation. However, robust interaction with heterogeneous articulated objects, such as doors, drawers, and cabinets, remains challenging because of the diverse articulation types of the objects and the complex dynamics of the legged robot.
In this paper, we propose a robust and sample-efficient framework for opening heterogeneous articulated objects with a legged manipulator. By deeply coupling real-time depth perception with reinforcement learning motion control, Adam achieves natural humanlike stair-stepping gait, showing outstanding dynamic stability and environmental adaptability.
Tether: Autonomous Real-World Functional Play
Tether performs autonomous real-world functional play involving structured, task-directed interactions. We introduce a policy that performs trajectory warping anchored by keypoint correspondences, which is extremely data-efficient and robust to significant spatial and semantic environment variation.
Running the policy within a VLM-guided multitask loop, we generate a stream of play data that consistently improves downstream policy learning over time.
Shape-Changing Environments
What happens when your walls begin to move? This paper explores the design of human-robot interaction for architectural-scale, shape-changing environments.
Conclusion
As we look to the future of robotics, it's clear that innovation is happening at a breakneck pace. From robots that can do your chores to those that can navigate complex environments, this week's selection of videos showcases the incredible advancements being made in the field.
As we continue to push the boundaries of what's possible with robotics, we'll see even more exciting developments in the years to come. Whether it's the creation of general-purpose AI models or the development of robots that can interact with heterogeneous articulated objects, the future of robotics is bright.
And as we look to the future, we can't help but wonder what other exciting developments are on the horizon. Will we see the creation of robots that can learn and adapt in real-time? Will we see the development of robots that can interact with humans in a more natural and intuitive way?
Only time will tell, but one thing is certain: the future of robotics is full of possibilities, and we can't wait to see what's next.




