Alberto Rodriguez

8 posts

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Alberto Rodriguez

Alberto Rodriguez

@_albertorod_

Director, AI & Robot Behavior, Atlas @BostonDynamics Previous life: Faculty @MIT, PhD @CMU_Robotics

เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2026
43 กำลังติดตาม505 ผู้ติดตาม
Alberto Rodriguez
Alberto Rodriguez@_albertorod_·
I agree @AlexRoseJo. And this applies both to models and hardware. It is incedibly hard to design and manufacture a robot at low cost and at very high reliability. If we build a generalist body, and invest in mass scaling, it will bring big reduccions in cost and increases in reliability, and it will be very difficult to compete with it. At some point the question will turn from “why humanoid?” to “do we really need to use something different?” In most cases the answer will be no.
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Alexander Johansen
Alexander Johansen@AlexRoseJo·
@_albertorod_ Same reason general purpose LLM won out over specialized systems! It’s easier to concentrate all efforts on one shared base and eventually it will outperform even specialists tools.
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Alberto Rodriguez
Alberto Rodriguez@_albertorod_·
Here is my take on one of the questions that I’ve heard most often recently: why humanoid? The thing that drives the current bet on humanoids is the perceived potential value of a generalist solution to physical work. Outside of some applications that have very large and very stable volumes, for all other physical work, automation becomes unfeasibly expensive if we have to specialize hardware, or models or deployment strategies.
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Alberto Rodriguez
Alberto Rodriguez@_albertorod_·
Another key departure from human morphology is the infinite rotation of the actuators by removing all cables across joints. Eliminating all cables across joints gets rid of one of the key hardware failures and gives Atlas its unique superhuman mobility. Atlas can move backwards simply by inverting its legs and flipping its torso, rather than wasting steps and time turning around. One of my favorite things is seeing Atlas stand up. It makes it clear we have not built Atlas to be a human replica. To me it looks like it belongs in the Star Wars or Transformers universes. Meant to be intentional, effective, and useful.
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Alberto Rodriguez
Alberto Rodriguez@_albertorod_·
Something core to humanoid platforms today are also the strategic departures from the human form factor. For example, we’ve moved entirely to rotary actuators, leaving behind linear actuators that more closely mimic the form factor of our musculo-skeletal system, because rotary actuators are more efficient and have a smaller sim2real gap. This has negative implications, for example for distal mass at the ankles and wrists, but the benefits from focusing on designing just two highly efficient actuator types have brought important gains. The actuator efficiency allows us to rely on implicit proprioception to adapt to unexpected loads, without any force/torque sensors. And the increased reliability and smaller sim2real gap has increased our development speed. (you'll see at the end of the video an unexpected load doubling the weight of the fridge)
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Alberto Rodriguez
Alberto Rodriguez@_albertorod_·
Good observation :) It took a couple iterations to get the domain randomization in simulation to be good enough for the behavior to work reliably on hardware. During that week of practice, the fridge and Atlas had a complicated “relationship”, from falling on each other, leading to dents. We thought that using the fridge that Atlas practiced with in the video was more compelling. The dents tell a more complete story.
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Pro Leon
Pro Leon@ProLeon777·
@GrutconTechno @_albertorod_ @BostonDynamics Look at the grip marks... how many tries do you think it took before they got it right. Still great work but it certainly took some trial and error and some metal twisting lol!
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Alberto Rodriguez
Alberto Rodriguez@_albertorod_·
You can’t lift a fridge with just your hands. Your whole body needs to conform to its shape, and bear the load between your arms and torso. Here, @BostonDynamics' Atlas uses proprioception to manage the whole-body interaction and adapt to a shifting 100+ lb load. Enabling this type of high performance manipulation is exactly why we walked away from what was arguably the world’s best implementation of MPC for humanoids, and shifted entirely to RL without looking back. This level of whole-body controls is a fundamental building block of physical intelligence and key to the value proposition of humanoids. More technical details in: Blog: bostondynamics.com/blog/training-… Behind the scenes video: youtu.be/xKK5ze3FukQ
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