The linked tweet shows the door of an exosuit opening and a human climbing in. Is there any more context, like video of the door closing, the human/exosuit performing any tasks, or the exosuit surviving harmful environments? xcancel doesn’t show any more context to this thread.
Hey, there was some text that gave a bit of context on the video. And the OG post has a couple more videos of it doing stuff. Attached to the same post talked about the company the name of the suit some of the history I think.
The linked tweet shows the door of an exosuit opening and a human climbing in. Is there any more context, like video of the door closing, the human/exosuit performing any tasks, or the exosuit surviving harmful environments? xcancel doesn’t show any more context to this thread.
Hey, there was some text that gave a bit of context on the video. And the OG post has a couple more videos of it doing stuff. Attached to the same post talked about the company the name of the suit some of the history I think.
Might be relevant: The Method Robot | Quick D (2017) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tmy-lwcsu78
Sensational headline but it just looks like every other trade show demonstrator.
Really cool, but now we need to see it move?
It was moving in the video.
It was moving it's hands. Let's see it walk, run, climb stairs, etc
To be fair, even if it can't do that, it might still be a useful tool for some purposes.
I would be interested to see how strong it is though. If it's all for show and can't lift more than a human then it's pretty pointless.
It might be cool, and even a bit useful, but the hard part is the bipedal part. Arms on tracks work just fine, but they’re not quite as cool.
$3mm toy