Elon Musk unveils his Tesla robot, and it's at least a robot

Two years after the Boston Dynamics dancing robots ad, Tesla brings you...this.
 By   and 
Chance Townsend
 on 
Teslabot in foreground and black background
Can a guy in a suit stare into your soul like Teslabot can? Credit: Tesla

Elon Musk unveiled prototype versions of Tesla's Optimus robot at Tesla's AI Day 2022 event on Friday. They were, well, definitely robots.

At the top of his speech, he offered this disclaimer: "I do want to set some expectations with respect to our Optimus robot. As you know, last year it was just a person in a robot suit. But, we've come a long way, and it's...compared to that, it's going to be very impressive."

And were the things the sixth most valuable company in the world revealed impressive compared to a person in a robot suit? You be the judge!


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Over the course of a three-hour event held on a Friday afternoon, Musk and some of his Tesla employees updated the public not just on the robots themselves, but on Tesla's entire robot operation, and its AI development process. As he showed off his stiff, stumbling robots Musk was in a sort of self-deprecating goofball mode, rather than in full blustery visionary mode, offering constant appeals for the audience's good faith and reasonable expectations.

After all, Musk explained, "We just didn’t want it to fall on its face."

The live demonstration featured a wire-laden skeletal Optimus robot that can walk on its own, along with a much less agile, but somewhat less off-putting Optimus with its wires concealed under a streamlined casing. That more streamlined version, however, requires a whole team of people around it to keep it from toppling over. If the content of a video presentation played on a screen during the live demo is to be believed, the wire-laden version can, if tethered to an apparatus attached to the ceiling, water plants with a big, plastic watering can, and move long, slender metal objects around in any sort of context where someone might need a robot to do that type of thing.

And for a predicted price of "probably less than $20,000," you too might be able to have this perfectly normal human machine in your house. Maybe. Musk and his companies have a long history of imaginative ideas that still haven't seen the light of day. Like the robotic snake chargers or Hyperloop, which Musk admitted was a ploy to get California to cancel high-speed rail in the state.

Discussing hurdles to building the robot, the Tesla team revealed that the prototype on stage was developed in the past six months. The hope is to get a working design within the "next few months...or years." Demonstrations during the preview focused on how data was processed for each segment of the robot's body: the arms, feet, joints, and even the "Biologically Inspired Design" of its human-like hands.

But Musk said one reason the event was happening in the first place was as a sort of high-budget help wanted ad. He said Tesla wanted to "convince some of the most talented people in the world to come to Tesla and help bring this to fruition."

The Optimus bot is powered by the same autopilot hardware in Tesla's cars. The AI was then re-tooled for its new environment, motion capturing real-world tasks like lifting a box. Clearly, Optimus can't do any of those things reliably, but Musk claimed the Teslabot to be "the most important product development we're doing this year."

As many robotics experts have noted, many companies are getting further along in developing robots that can not only walk, but run, and jump. But even those robots won't be watering our houseplants anytime soon, and in any case, Musk has more promises than actual delivery on those promises.

Musk was also eager to point out that Tesla isn't entirely under his control, and that it is instead, "a publicly-traded company with one class of stock," a status that means, Musk claimed, "the public controls Tesla" — an idiosyncratic contention that seems to conflate public trading of stock with public ownership. In any case, Musk pointed out, "if I go crazy, you can fire me — this is important. Maybe I’m not crazy."

Given that similar robot development operations at other companies, like Honda and Toyota, have been going on uncontroversially for decades, there's no reason to think the development of robot hardware and software is suddenly going to give rise to fresh claims that Musk is crazy. And anyway so far, our takeaway from Musk's prototype build is that Optimus is a robot that is bipedal and can walk.

Headshot of a Black man
Chance Townsend
Assistant Editor, General Assignments

Chance Townsend is the General Assignments Editor at Mashable, covering tech, video games, dating apps, digital culture, and whatever else comes his way. He has a Master's in Journalism from the University of North Texas and is a proud orange cat father. His writing has also appeared in PC Mag and Mother Jones.

In his free time, he cooks, loves to sleep, and greatly enjoys Detroit sports. If you have any tips or want to talk shop about the Lions, you can reach out to him on Bluesky @offbrandchance.bsky.social or by email at [email protected].

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