TL;DR: Brett Adcock, the man who builds companies like most people make a cuppa, is here with his latest mechanical marvel, the Figure 02 humanoid. This isn’t your grandma’s vacuum cleaner; this is a full-blown, AI-powered bipedal wonder, ready to tackle the mind-numbing *drudgery* of daily life. Forget an AI bubble, he says – we’re on the cusp of an ‘age of abundance’ where these metal chaps will be doing everything from the dishes to ordering your chicken salad. Glorious!
Right, gather ’round, you lot! Because if you thought the future was all flying cars and self-stirring tea, you were only half right. The other, far more exciting half, involves a proper bit of kit called **Figure 02**, and the utterly brilliant chap behind it, Brett Adcock. This isn’t just a robot; it’s a testament to human ingenuity, a gleaming, electric beacon promising to free us from the shackles of… well, laundry, mainly. Adcock, a man whose CV reads like a list of ‘things I’d build if I had unlimited genius and a few billion quid,’ dropped by Shawn Ryan’s show with his mechanical mate, and the chat was, frankly, electrifying. Some say humanoid robots were a decade away from doing anything useful. But Brett? He says, and I quote, “We somehow pulled like 10 years of the future forward.” *POW!* Just like that. Because, apparently, sitting around waiting isn’t in his programming. Now, what makes Figure 02 so utterly compelling? It’s not some clanking, oil-leaking hydraulic monstrosity designed by a committee of health and safety officers. No, this is an **electric humanoid**, reasonably priced (eventually, one assumes), and, crucially, powered by proper neural nets. This isn’t pre-programmed parlour tricks; this is *thinking* machinery, learning to do the useful, tedious, soul-crushing human work that we’d all rather avoid. Like, say, folding socks. The sheer audacity of it! Of course, some perpetually worried individuals (and a Patreon fan, bless him) immediately fretted about a Terminator-style uprising. “Safeguards! What about bad programming?” they cry. Adcock, with the calm demeanour of a man who knows he’s building the future, admits it’s an “incredibly complex problem.” Boiling pots of water, small children wanting to jump on the thing – these are the real-world conundrums. But they’re not insurmountable. Indeed, he calls his campus a “problem fun house.” And honestly, if you’re building machines that can navigate a house *without* setting fire to the curtains, you’re doing something right. He’s had them in his own home for months, kids and all. They even name them! “They love it,” he says. That, my friends, is genuine emotional attachment to a bit of engineering! Then came the inevitable question: “Is AI in a bubble?” *Pah!* A bubble? This isn’t a speculative trend, you soft-headed optimists. Adcock’s answer was as blunt as a sledgehammer: “Absolutely not.” He confidently predicts the “most transformative events in technology” will happen in the next 36 months. Not in a century, not a decade, but *three years*. We’re not scratching the surface; we’re just hitting the starting line, engines roaring, for a world with “millions, billions, tens of billions” of these synthetic humans, both physical and digital. And what will we do, the actual humans, when these magnificent machines are doing all the “busy work”? Because, let’s face it, no one *wants* to unload the dishwasher, deal with tax bills, or call the car service. Adcock’s vision is simple, profound, and utterly Clarkson-esque: “I want to be like fully free.” He wants his AI to run his “operating system,” handling all the mundane demands of life, leaving him (and us, by extension) “clear-headed” to pursue what we truly love. It’s about delegating all that “manual labour behind computers or in the physical world.” It’s a compression algorithm for life itself! An “age of abundance” where goods and services plummet in price, and we’re free to… well, whatever we want. Probably watch more robots, if we’re being honest. This isn’t just about robots doing jobs; it’s about redefining what it means to be human in a world where the tedious is handled by tirelessly efficient silicon and steel. Brett Adcock is not just building robots; he’s building a future where even ordering a chicken salad can be outsourced. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a future I can absolutely get behind. More **POWER** to him! Source LinkFigure 02: The Robot That’s About to Steal Your Chores (And Frankly, We’re All For It!)
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