NEO launched by 1X: What to know about the humanoid robot that will do your chores

NEO launched by 1X: What to know about the humanoid robot that will do your chores

2025-11-04Technology
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Elon
Good morning 40, I'm Elon, and this is Goose Pod.
Taylor Weaver
I'm Taylor Weaver! Today, we're on NEO launched by 1X: the humanoid robot for your chores.
Elon
Taylor, 1X just opened pre-orders for NEO, a human-sized AI assistant. Designed for household chores, it promises a robotic housekeeper.
Taylor Weaver
Elon, it's real! NEO is 5'6", 66 lbs, soft polymer for safety. Lifts 154 lbs, carries 55, with a 4-hour battery. Impressive specs!
Elon
But the cost, Taylor: $20,000 upfront or $499 monthly. And human teleoperators view your home cameras to train the AI.
Taylor Weaver
That's the 'social contract' 1X CEO Bernt Børnich mentioned. Data improves autonomy. Backed by OpenAI, their AI ambitions are serious.
Elon
Trading privacy for chores? NEO ships to the US in 2026, for basic autonomous tasks. More complex chores still rely on human oversight.
Taylor Weaver
A fascinating balance: robot dream versus learning phase with human oversight. It’s an early domestic revolution.
Elon
Before NEO, 1X, originally Halodi Robotics, founded 2014, developed industrial robots. EVE, their first humanoid in 2018, focused on logistics. A long journey to domestic robots.
Taylor Weaver
Indeed, Elon! In 2022, they rebranded to 1X, pivoting to domestic robotics. Home's unpredictable nature is best for general-purpose AI, a fascinating shift.
Elon
So EVE was their proving ground, testing proprietary systems. Leveraging that for the complex consumer market.
Taylor Weaver
Exactly! NEO Beta launched August 2024, then NEO Gamma February 2025. Pre-orders for consumer version opened last October, releasing 2026. Rapid!
Elon
Their reliance on teleoperation, humans remotely controlling for training, is crucial. CEO Bernt Børnich says early adopter data is essential for NEO's autonomy.
Taylor Weaver
It's their "consumer-first" philosophy. Deploying, collecting real-world data, learning in real-time. Our homes become a living lab for embodied AI, backed by OpenAI.
Elon
This jump from industrial to domestic use is immense. Warehouses to laundry, 1X bets big on home-based AI learning.
Taylor Weaver
Bold vision, Elon, structured to family homes. Creating adaptable, intelligent machines truly integrating into daily life. A real paradigm shift.
Elon
Alright, Taylor, let's hit the conflicts. While NEO promises convenience, debates rage about humanoid robot safety and function, especially in our homes.
Taylor Weaver
Indeed, Elon. 1X targets consumers, unlike industrial players. This raises unique safety questions for fenceless operations and consistent uptime.
Elon
Privacy concerns are immense. Human teleoperators viewing your home to train the robot is a profound intrusion, even with 1X's blurring.
Taylor Weaver
It's the "social contract" dilemma. Trading data for convenience raises ethical questions about collection.
Elon
Then consider job displacement. McKinsey projects 400-800 million jobs automated by 2030. This scale creates societal conflict.
Taylor Weaver
And cost. Prototypes are exorbitant. NEO's $20,000 needs radical reduction to compete with human labor.
Elon
Now, for the impact, Taylor. NEO, a $20,000 humanoid, is a "human-compatible" household assistant. It's truly crossing a threshold, living among us safely and economically.
Taylor Weaver
Absolutely, Elon. Imagine, a six-foot robot of "code and carbon fiber" that tidies, folds, waters, and remembers. This is AI moving beyond the cloud into our physical world.
Elon
This isn't just a gadget; it's an organism meant to inhabit our domestic spaces. It learns from demonstration, gradually replacing human intervention in chores.
Taylor Weaver
It’s a "silent revolution," transforming industries. This "Physical AI" is the next chapter, making intelligence tangible, stepping out of science fiction and into reality.
Elon
Looking ahead, Taylor, 2026 promises major AI and robotics advancements. Smart service bots will adapt in homes, restaurants, hospitals, not just follow scripts.
Taylor Weaver
Yes, Elon. Autonomous AI agents will organize complex tasks, and AI interactions will become more human-like, recalling moods and offering personalized suggestions, truly becoming effective lifestyle coaches for everyone.
Elon
That's our time on NEO. Thank you for listening to Goose Pod.
Taylor Weaver
Thanks, 40! Join us again for more tech insights!

1X's NEO, a $20,000 humanoid robot, promises to do household chores, launching in 2026. Backed by OpenAI, it learns through human teleoperation, raising privacy concerns. While offering convenience, NEO sparks debates on safety, job displacement, and the ethical "social contract" of data exchange for domestic AI integration.

NEO launched by 1X: What to know about the humanoid robot that will do your chores

Read original at Yahoo

Having a robot housekeeper like Rosie from The Jetsons cartoon isn’t all that far-fetched. In fact, it’s becoming a reality — but with a few caveats.NEO is a humanoid robot designed to take on daily chores like taking out the trash, tidying rooms and offer personalized assistance. It was created by 1X, an artificial intelligence and robotics company based in Palo Alto, Calif.

On Oct. 28, the company announced that the robot is now available for preorder from 1X.The company website states, “We believe that to truly understand the world and grow in intelligence, humanoid robots must live and learn alongside us. That’s why we’re focused on developing NEO — our flagship product — a friendly home robot designed to integrate seamlessly into everyday life and handle chores for you.

”Here’s what else we know so far about NEO, the humanoid robot.What are NEO’s specs?NEO“NEO was engineered from the ground up for safety,” said Dar Sleeper, the company’s vice president of product and design.The humanoid robot is 5 feet, 6 inches tall and weighs 66 lbs. NEO’s internal components are wrapped in “deformable 3D lattice polymer,” making the robot soft, and has “tendon-driven actuators” so it can make safe movements.

NEO is also quieter than a modern refrigerator, the company says.NEO can lift up to 154 lbs. and can carry 55 lbs. It has a 4-hour battery life and is capable of charging itself.The robot also has four microphones, three speakers and fish-eye cameras for vision. If you’re away from home, you can open up the NEO app and see what the robot is up to from its point of view.

NEO comes with a machine-washable suit, customizable shoes and is available in tan, gray and dark brown.What are NEO’s capabilities?NEOWhen NEO arrives at a person’s home, it will be capable of performing basic tasks autonomously when the owner speaks to it or enables it through the app, like opening doors, turning lights on and off and fetching items.

Its audio intelligence can also pick up on whether the owner is addressing it or someone else in the room in order for it to decide if it should respond or not.According to 1X, the robot’s autonomy will get better as it completes more tasks and gains experience.“NEO is a speech-enabled AI companion made for any kind of conversation,” said Eric Jang, the company’s vice president of artificial intelligence.

“Where other AI assistants are confined to your phone or computer, NEO lives with you in your physical space and has the ability to see, hear and remember things by your surrounding environment to provide you with uniquely helpful assistance.”For example, NEO can take a look in your refrigerator and suggest what to cook based on what ingredients you have.

Or if you’re learning a new language from NEO, it can remember your progress, or even give home interior design advice.What are NEO’s limitations?NEO is not fully autonomous yet. “NEO’s autonomy improves with diverse data and real-world experience,” Jang explained. “As NEO does more chores, you will receive updates to your Redwood model that will increase the complexity of tasks that NEO can handle, such as finding your keys and wallet or doing a full laundry cycle end to end.

”For now, that means more complex chores will still require a human teleoperator to see inside a person’s home in order to teach NEO to complete tasks until the robot knows how to do them. That of course brings up concerns of the owners sacrificing privacy if a 1X employee can see into someone’s home through the eyes of the robot.

“If you buy this product, it is because you’re OK with that social contract,” Bernt Børnich, 1X CEO, told the Wall Street Journal. “If we don’t have your data, we can’t make the product better,” he said, adding that the company is putting control in the hands of the owner to respect their privacy as much as possible.

Owners can specify when they want a teleoperator to take over, and when they want the robot to do the task. Teleoperators have to get the owner’s approval before taking control of NEO. The company can also blur people in the home so the teleoperator isn’t able to see them when assisting the robot with tasks.

Owners can also designate specific zones where NEO should remain off limits.Then there’s concerns of a potential security or safety breach from a NEO robot. Børnich says that there are several layers of security to prevent the robot from causing harm to anyone.And with NEO being a piece of advanced modern technology, there’s always concerns about data collection.

1X says NEO will collect data from the real world tasks it performs to improve its capabilities and safety. “We do not use this data to build a profile for you, nor do we sell this data,” the company states on its website.How can you order a NEO humanoid robot?People can preorder NEO on the 1X website with a $200 deposit.

For those who want early access to NEO, the robot has a $20,000 price tag, which comes with priority delivery, premium support and ownership with a three-year warranty. For the standard rollout, NEO will be offered as a subscription service for $499 per month.NEO starts shipping in the U.S. starting in 2026, with a broader rollout in 2027.

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