TeslaBot will be using the same AI chip and system that Tesla's Autopilot uses to understand the vector space of the world around it.
They've already demoed teaching a robot to repeat-mimic the movements that a human dose with its arms-hands-fingers, and so training will be as simple as that. You could 1 single robot who could clean your whole house as well, say during a 10-hour period while you're out, getting every nook and cranny - and where speed isn't really an issue in that situation; other tasks like a delivery comes in, and the bot can immediately take that delivery and put the items in their proper places - whether that's fridge, freezer, cupboard, or left out on counter for cooking a meal later.
What'd it be worth to have 1 extra human worth of productivity at your command for 24/7? How much more value it creates compared to cost will depend on your circumstances of course. Having a small apartment it may not be that useful, but maybe if you have multiple properties and at once property you've cut down a tree for firewood - the bot can move the logs into a splitter and then stack them for you, etc.
Once you realize that a single robot that can switch between very different tasks in a chain of tasks is possible, the size of production required to reach the same efficiencies of economies of scale will be far lower than currently required for mass production ,e.g. where maybe the equipment needed beforehand required needing to be able to produce say at least 100,000 of something per month but now maybe only 10,000 of those units need to be created for the same margins; which makes the environment more competitive, the barriers to entry lower, derisking and distributing power-profits by allowing more decentralization, a reduction in how much large industrial complexes can capture production and sales.
The battle will be on 2-3 fronts: 1) making sure industrial complexes and bad actors don't try to try to prevent the general population from having access to these technologies, and 2) making sure bad actors don't try to capture and corrupt-takeover these systems to then weaponize them against society, and a possible 3) preventing the companies that produce these technologies, perhaps including AI, from trying to extra value from what "their" bots are capable of doing. E.g. they start trying to take a % off of every business type, depending on the added value the bots create for them, so instead of those values and gains being distributed to all of society - they try to capture and hoard as much of that value creation for themselves, reminding me of the rent-seeking behaviour of what I call the Landlord-Rental industrial complex; "leasing" the technology rather than selling it.
How about addressing and countering any of my specific points, ideally each one in sequence so you can't cherrypick to avoid the ones where I'm certainly correct - rather than what's essentially ad hominem as your response?
How many variations out driving across the US and the world do you think there are compared to a relatively static environment that a Bot can be trained in-tailored for?
They've already demoed teaching a robot to repeat-mimic the movements that a human dose with its arms-hands-fingers, and so training will be as simple as that. You could 1 single robot who could clean your whole house as well, say during a 10-hour period while you're out, getting every nook and cranny - and where speed isn't really an issue in that situation; other tasks like a delivery comes in, and the bot can immediately take that delivery and put the items in their proper places - whether that's fridge, freezer, cupboard, or left out on counter for cooking a meal later.
What'd it be worth to have 1 extra human worth of productivity at your command for 24/7? How much more value it creates compared to cost will depend on your circumstances of course. Having a small apartment it may not be that useful, but maybe if you have multiple properties and at once property you've cut down a tree for firewood - the bot can move the logs into a splitter and then stack them for you, etc.
Once you realize that a single robot that can switch between very different tasks in a chain of tasks is possible, the size of production required to reach the same efficiencies of economies of scale will be far lower than currently required for mass production ,e.g. where maybe the equipment needed beforehand required needing to be able to produce say at least 100,000 of something per month but now maybe only 10,000 of those units need to be created for the same margins; which makes the environment more competitive, the barriers to entry lower, derisking and distributing power-profits by allowing more decentralization, a reduction in how much large industrial complexes can capture production and sales.
The battle will be on 2-3 fronts: 1) making sure industrial complexes and bad actors don't try to try to prevent the general population from having access to these technologies, and 2) making sure bad actors don't try to capture and corrupt-takeover these systems to then weaponize them against society, and a possible 3) preventing the companies that produce these technologies, perhaps including AI, from trying to extra value from what "their" bots are capable of doing. E.g. they start trying to take a % off of every business type, depending on the added value the bots create for them, so instead of those values and gains being distributed to all of society - they try to capture and hoard as much of that value creation for themselves, reminding me of the rent-seeking behaviour of what I call the Landlord-Rental industrial complex; "leasing" the technology rather than selling it.