Magzter GOLDで無制限に

Magzter GOLDで無制限に

10,000以上の雑誌、新聞、プレミアム記事に無制限にアクセスできます。

$149.99
 
$74.99/年

試す - 無料

THE ROBOT IN YOUR KITCHEN

Time

|

October 27, 2025

A DOZEN OR SO YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN, EYES obscured by VR headsets, shuffle around a faux kitchen in a tech company's Silicon Valley headquarters. Their arms are bent at the elbows, palms facing down.

- DILYS NG

THE ROBOT IN YOUR KITCHEN

One stops to pick up a bottle of hot sauce from a counter, making sure to keep her hands in view of the camera on her headset at all times. Like her colleagues, she wears a T-shirt emblazoned with the word HUMAN.

Meters away, two humanoid robots, with bulbous joints and expressionless plastic domes for faces, stand at a desk. In front of each is a crumpled towel; to its right, a basket. In slow movements, each robot grabs a towel by its corners, flattens it out, folds it twice, and deposits it into the basket. More often than not, the towel catches on the edge of the basket and the robot freezes. Then an engineer steps in and returns the towel to a crumpled heap, and the sequence begins again.

This was the scene at the Silicon Valley headquarters of Figure AI on an August morning. The three-year-old startup was in a sprint ahead of the October announcement of its next robot, the Figure 03, which was undergoing top-secret training when TIME visited. The robots folding towels were the company's previous model, the Figure 02, operating the same software that the Figure 03 will use, and which, along with the headsetted human “pilots,” were collecting data to train the new robot. Figure hopes the Figure 03 will soon become the first robot suitable for carrying out domestic chores in the home, as well as all kinds of manual labor. They hope it will be their first mass-producible humanoid, eventually even working on its own production line. The launch is a critical moment for this startup of 360 people, which in September announced it had secured $1 billion in investment at a valuation of $39 billion, and which counts Nvidia, Jeff Bezos, OpenAI, and Microsoft among its investors. (Salesforce, whose CEO and co-founder Marc Benioff owns TIME, was also announced as an investor in September.)

Time からのその他のストーリー

Time

Time

CRISTIANO AMON

Qualcomm's CEO on gladiators, where AI will live, and taking on Nvidia

time to read

3 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

Menopausal women in revolt

In the early 1990s, young women raised on second-wave feminism but marginalized within the punk scene revolted. Dubbed riot grrrls, bands like Bikini Kill and Bratmobile aimed wrathful lyrics and gallows humor at a culture of misogyny as it manifested in their own lives, from condescending male musicians to abusive fathers. Now, those artists are in their 50s. And while sexism persists, it touches older women in different ways.

time to read

1 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

5 PREDICTIONS FOR AI IN 2026

The technology is poised for integration into everyday experience

time to read

2 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

AFRICA'S MINERAL MAKEOVER

Soaring demand for resources is reshaping Africa's ambitions— and place in the global order

time to read

13 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

WHY AREN'T WE USING AI TO ADVANCE JUSTICE?

Giving overlooked victims access to lawyers and courts

time to read

3 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

DECODING THE OVARY

SCIENTISTS ARE TARGETING THE ORGAN TO TRY TO SLOW DOWN AGING. WILL IT WORK?

time to read

12 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

KRISTALINA GEORGIEVA

The IMF managing director on the future of trade and AI

time to read

3 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

THE NEW OLD AGE

THE \"GOLDEN YEARS\" ARE GETTING AN UPGRADE

time to read

10 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

A Korean master dampens the power of a corporate thriller

THERE'S NO BETTER TIME FOR AN ADAPTATION of Donald E. Westlake's unsparing 1997 novel The Ax, which treats downsizing as a form of dehumanization. The bad news is that No Other Choice, the Ax adaptation Korean master Park Chan-wook has long wanted to make, isn't the picture Westlake's cold shiv of a novel deserves. As fine a filmmaker as Park is—his 2003 Oldboy is a chilly, operatic masterpiece—No Other Choice is too dully observed and too slapsticky to hit its mark. It's a missed opportunity dressed up with proficient filmmaking.

time to read

2 mins

January 16, 2026

Time

Time

THE DREAM DEMANDS MORE

Have AI answer Dr. King's call for economic justice

time to read

2 mins

January 16, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size