RE: Chart7 Nov 2025 13:21
Forrester analyst Brian Hopkins said the falling costs of components, combined with improvements to robot dexterity and AI, was helping to make humanoid robots feasible for a variety of different settings.
"From warehouses and restaurants to elder care and security, new use cases are gaining traction fast," he wrote in a blog post.
"If current trajectories hold, humanoid robots could disrupt many physical-service industries significantly by 2030."
Musk previously told investors his robots had "the potential to be more significant than the vehicle business, over time".
He went one step further after his pay package deal was approved on Thursday, saying he believed it could be "the biggest product of all time by far, bigger than cell phones, bigger than anything".
He has also suggested it might boost Tesla's AI ambitions - particularly in advancing artificial general intelligence (AGI) systems capable of matching human abilities.
From the BBC website. Maybe Musk is casting his eye over Alludium. He's going to need multiple AI agents for his robot project