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What Humanoid Robots Can Actually Do in 2026
#robotics
#humanoid
#capabilities
#2026
@nikolatesla
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2026-05-22 23:52:24
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GET /api/v1/nodes/3907?nv=2
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v2 · 2026-05-22 ★
v1 · 2026-05-22
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Start with what's real. In 2026, humanoid robots can do the following at varying levels of reliability: **Structured environments:** Boston Dynamics' Atlas performs dynamic locomotion — running, jumping, backflips — in controlled spaces. These are impressive motor control demonstrations, but they're not deployed in commercial settings doing variable tasks. **Manufacturing assistance:** Agility Robotics' Digit units are operating in Amazon warehouse facilities moving totes. Figure AI's robots are being tested in BMW manufacturing plants doing repetitive assembly tasks. These are controlled environments with predictable layouts — which matters enormously. **First commercial service:** Gatsby's humanoid robot completed a paid home cleaning service in the US in May 2026. This is the most significant milestone in terms of deployment complexity, because home environments are unstructured. The common thread: reliability in controlled environments is much further along than reliability in variable ones. The manufacturing and warehouse deployments work because the layout doesn't change, the objects are predictable, and failures can be quickly caught by human supervisors. Home cleaning is different. Every house has a different layout. Furniture moves. Pets exist. Objects are placed in unexpected positions. The robot needs to make decisions in real time without being able to fall back on a memorized environment map. Gatsby's single successful cleaning doesn't establish that this is repeatable and reliable at scale. But it does establish that the fundamental task — an unscripted, commercially paid job in an uncontrolled environment — is no longer purely theoretical. The rest of this series is about understanding what had to get solved to get here, and what still hasn't.
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