RetroTechie 2 hours ago

As much as I like the concept, 3D printing everything is not the way to lower cost.

Mass-produced (stamped / extruded / whatever) mechanical parts + hackable 'brains' is.

Robots do lend themselves well w/ respect to that last part. Worst case is rip out its control electronics wholesale & replace with your own motor drivers etc.

  • abeindoria 2 hours ago

    Hm, perhaps not - but maybe give the users an option to print such parts, and warn that they may affect longevity of said parts if they do decide to go full manufacturing route.

    My potential concern is the "Apple" gatekeeping of parts.

bjackman 3 hours ago

I think this is a great idea. It seems like we are entering the phase where the core hardware problems are solved and we now need to:

A) bring down cost and expand the design space for the hardware and

B) minimise the barriers to working on the "software" problems where there still seem to be huge areas of mostly unaddressed challenges.

An open source platform seems like a good thing for both.

frainfreeze 10 hours ago

the cost-effectiveness/performance factor benchmark is interesting, but it feels slightly misleading - I just don't see how "average peak torque of all actuated DoFs, normalized by the robot's size" is related to measuring "accessibility and customizability" of the robot.

  • abdullahkhalids 10 hours ago

    What is interesting is that on their own metric, the Berkley Humanoid is only twice as expensive as the Berkley Humanoid Lite but has more than twice the "performance factor" (0.36 vs 0.14).

    It shows they threw away too much while creating the lite version.

    • 4ndrewl 4 hours ago

      Depends on the relative market size for performance factor though. If 90 percent of the market is captured by a 0.14 performance factor then that extra in price could be put towards solving another problem.

    • kaonwarb 9 hours ago

      Rather, I think we can say based on those datapoints that for their design, performance scales superlinearly with cost. Not surprising given fixed costs!

gitroom 2 hours ago

been cool watching robots go open source like this, always gets me thinking how much i could hack together something dumb just to see if it works

em0sh 8 hours ago

The performance factor vs. torque vs. DOFs is the most silly thing as a licensed mechanical engineer I have ever seen. And I was around for Kony 2012.

  • djaychela 7 hours ago

    Can you explain why to the layman?

    • asah 2 hours ago

      https://chatgpt.com/share/680cb5ae-10d8-8007-a580-b7c3266138...

      The comment criticizes a chart or metric comparing "performance factor" to torque and degrees of freedom (DOFs) in robotics, calling it "the most silly thing" the commenter, a licensed mechanical engineer, has seen. By referencing "Kony 2012"—a widely mocked internet campaign—they emphasize their point about the chart's perceived absurdity. ([The performance factor vs. torque vs. DOFs is the most silly thing as ...](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43801052&utm_source=cha...))

      The critique likely stems from the idea that combining performance factor, torque, and DOFs into a single comparison oversimplifies complex engineering concepts. Torque and DOFs are distinct mechanical properties, and "performance factor" is a vague term without a clear definition. Such a chart might misleadingly suggest direct correlations where none exist, leading to confusion or misinterpretation.

      In essence, the commenter is expressing frustration over what they see as a technically flawed and potentially misleading representation of robotic performance metrics.

      • rout39574 an hour ago

        Why do you think this excessively verbose bit of LLM vomit contributes to the conversation?

bk496 4 hours ago

A left handed robot!

demaga 6 hours ago

Very cool! Open source robotics is something I always imagined to be a part of the future. Hope the idea catches on.