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Robotics

Chinese Startup Unitree Begins Selling a Headless Robot Dog for $2,700 (ieee.org) 69

Long-time Slashdot reader cusco shares an interesting report from IEEE Spectrum: In 2017, we first wrote about the Chinese startup Unitree Robotics, which had the goal of "making legged robots as popular and affordable as smartphones and drones." Relative to the cost of other quadrupedal robots (like Boston Dynamics' $74,000 Spot), Unitree's quadrupeds are very affordable, with their A1 costing under $10,000 when it became available in 2020. This hasn't quite reached the point of consumer electronics that Unitree is aiming for, but they've just gotten a lot closer: now available is the Unitree Go1, a totally decent looking small size quadruped that can be yours for an astonishingly low $2700.

Speedy, good looking gait, robust, and a nifty combination of autonomous human-following and obstacle avoidance... There are three versions of the Go1: the $2700 base model Go1 Air, the $3500 Go1, and the $8500 Go1 Edu... The top of the line Edu model offers higher end computing, 2kg more payload (up to 5kg), as well as foot-force sensors, lidar, and a hardware extension interface and API access... Battery life is a big question — the video seems to suggest that the Go1 is capable of a three-kilometer, 20-minute jog, and then some grocery shopping and a picnic, all while doing obstacle avoidance and person following and with an occasional payload.

Unitree later provided the reporter more detailed specs:
  • The battery life of the robot while jogging is about 1 hour
  • It weighs 12kg
  • The Super Sensory System includes five wide-angle stereo depth cameras, hypersonic distance sensors, and an integrated processing system
  • It's running at 16 core CPU and a 1.5 tflop GPU

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Chinese Startup Unitree Begins Selling a Headless Robot Dog for $2,700

Comments Filter:
  • Hard pass.
    • it's only $8k for the programmable model with sensors and a 5kg carry capacity. just stuff it with 5kg of hexogen (~$5k, subject to availability lol) and a face-recognition trigger (cheap af).

  • No potty training, no chewing up your stuff, and no picking up puppy waste in the yard. I won't miss the pit bulls.

    How long until the public can upgrade to the Security Dog package? That should be popular with old folks and criminals alike.

    • Will it last seven years, handle dirt and rain and bite/chase the vicar and mailman?
      • Early models likely won't last seven years or handle dirt and rain well; and, since they'll have to be programmed to bite/chase the vicar & mailman, you'll lose plausible deniability.

      • Will it last seven years, handle dirt and rain and bite/chase the vicar and mailman?

        I don't really want mine to bite/chase the mailman.

        • Will it last seven years, handle dirt and rain and bite/chase the vicar and mailman?

          I don't really want mine to bite/chase the mailman.

          Are you even sure you want a dog then?

    • How long until the public can upgrade to the Security Dog package? That should be popular with old folks and criminals alike.

      Or police forces. Let's not imagine the future is quite that benign. Imagine a criminal hacking into the iK9 doggie force and turning them against their owners.

      Doesn't take even animal instinct to see just how bad that idea will likely go, as Security sits at the childs table while the Marketeers chatter endlessly about profits.

      • With write protection on, and "did you flick it off and on" patent pending PC technology would stymie any hacker.

      • Technology and its accompanying double edged sword... mankind's wonderful advancement to robotic care for the elderly, so that we might live autonomously until we're on the other side of the dirt, versus the inevitable corruption of it for nefarious purpose.

        Perhaps this, our very nature, is the final insurmountable hurdle that the great filter presents.

  • Anyone read this? Sounds familiar...

  • I love it!

    It works as advertised, I'd love to have one of these. I always loved "spot" too, but at 75K Usd - he's as expensive as someone's house or luxury car, which means spot isn't for everyone, that makes spot a rich kids toy.

    This one can be afforded by anyone, and seem to work just as well as spot, but if they're successful with this, the Gov. will quickly forbid it or claim that it can be used to spy with or is an security issue for "insert-country-here" and prohibit it's sales and exports to co-opera

    • Illegal? No. Stumble hazard, whizzing oil all over the floor? Yes.

      • Ha yes, I saw Michael Reeve's Beer experiment too :)

        He's a lot funnier than all of the Psyop's hard at work in here ;)

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Lonely person, sad. Need dead animate object in life, to feel better, even sadder.

        Why, just, why?!?

  • Way too many: Can I mount my AR-15 on it?
  • I already have a dog and he came with far more options than this one. He'll also live longer and he actually gives a shit if I'm feeling down or ill.

    People who develop "relationships" with machinery are tetched inna head.
  • Can not carry a cask of beer!

  • What's.. the point of it? It's not for carrying groceries realistically. Why would I want one? I would like a robot that lives in my house, appears curious and can interact in an emotional way with me. I might also want a utility robot that can come with me, and carry heavy stuff should I need to but would obviously be large - like a delivery robot. I don't see this filling a use case at all.
    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      For $2700? Good luck hitting that price point for the next two or three decades.

  • That's an expensive cupholder.. But I like where it's going, with even a bit of modern AI it is going to be a great companion like a real dog (ofcourse with limitations) in many years to come. But even without the 'buddy' AI it could already be a replacement for some seeing eye dogs, as in guiding the blind person around.
  • No grenade holders, claymore bolt-ons or death lasers?

    Or will that be the "educational version" :)

  • Looks cool, but a) I wouldn't spend that much money on a toy with no clear purpose, and b) never buy Version 1.0 of anything.

    It'd be nice if it could roam your property looking for intruders and sound an alarm for any anomalous events like unknown faces, prowling, glass-breaking sounds, etc (although I suspect you could probably program it to do something like that).

    This might be good for a factory, though, where you would have several of them roaming around doing security checks, spotting water leaks, brea

  • How many parts can be missing and it still be called a dog?

  • They sold it, and did not make it CEO.

    Be careful it doesn't stand for president - it might beat Trump!

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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