“iPhone Moment” Nears For Humanoid Robots

To succeed, Figure had to solve three hard problems: build ultra-reliable humanoid hardware, teach humanoids…

This post was republished with permission from Zero Hedge

Brett Adcock, founder of Archer Aviation, who left the flying taxi company to pursue humanoid robotics and the deployment of Artificial General Intelligence, recently shared how his team at Figure AI developed a humanoid robot in just 31 months, achieving the robot’s first successful walk within a year. 

Adcock recently spoke at the 2025 Abundance360 summit in Los Angeles and described how humanoid robots are the ultimate “deployment vector” for AGI, comparing what’s happening in robotics to an “iPhone moment”– a game-changing breakthrough when a new product suddenly transforms an industry. 

Adcock said that Figure AI designs a new hardware platform every 12 to 18 months. He noted that his startup has secured commercial customers like BMW… 



He forecasts that Figure AI’s humanoid robots will be affordable, around $20,000 to $30,000, allowing for widespread adoption in both the workplace and the home

Here’s a summary of Adock’s conversation about humanoid robotics and how the industry is in the midst of an “iPhone moment”: 

  • (00:00–01:42): Brett Adcock, founder of Figure, rapidly launched humanoid robots from scratch in 31 months. He sees humanoid robots as the ultimate “deployment vector” for AGI (Artificial General Intelligence), comparable to an “iPhone moment” happening now.
  • (02:21–03:30): Adcock stresses that giving AGI a physical body is critical to avoid dystopian outcomes where powerful AI remains trapped in servers. Humanoids allow AGI to learn and act through transfer learning and multitasking.
  • (06:24–07:54): Commercial robots are already operating at BMW’s largest US plant (Spartanburg, SC), autonomously performing repetitive manufacturing tasks. Demand is growing, with a second logistics customer signed.
  • (08:28–09:58): Long-term goal: humanoid robots for home use, priced around $20,000–$30,000, leasing for about $300/month. At that rate, Adcock envisions multiple robots per home doing chores like dishwashing, laundry, dog-walking.
  • (10:40–12:28): Figure’s success is attributed to assembling a world-class, hardworking team with a laser-focused, high-intensity culture (working 5–7 days a week in person) and a shared “ship-product” mindset.
  • (14:30–15:43): To succeed, Figure had to solve three hard problems: build ultra-reliable humanoid hardware, teach humanoids through neural nets (not hand-coded controls), and generalize actions to unfamiliar tasks via language instructions.
  • (16:51–19:17): Figure abandoned external AI vendors like OpenAI and built its own large vision-language-action AI model called Helix. Robots using Helix can generalize and complete new tasks, like putting groceries away without prior training.
  • 22:04–25:45): Workforce applications (manufacturing, logistics, healthcare) are booming, with massive demand. Home deployment is harder but accelerating rapidly. Internal alpha tests in engineers’ homes are planned this year, with full rollout projected within this decade.

Watch Here:

As we’ve previously describedAI, semiconductors, eVTOL, and photonics—are poised to define the great power nations in the 2030s and why the US needs to urgently re-shore or at least friend-shore those critical supply chains.

Entirely relying on China for critical minerals and magnet exports to power drones and humanoid robots has left Tesla delaying its series production of Optimus robot

America’s robotics industry can’t have an “iPhone moment” if it lacks control over the critical supply chains needed to build these technologies. 

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Share this article
Shareable URL
Prev Post

Is Walking Away From Ukraine The Best Option For Trump And The US?

Next Post

John Kerry Didn’t Expect This Zinger From An MSNBC Interview…

Comments 2
  1. What controls are in place to ensure safety? What happens when – as is likely – these robots become sentient?

  2. With 7+ Billion people on earth the development of robotics means but one thing. The broad view of collateral damage, eugenics. Humanity becomes progressively useless, we are now on the platform placing the rope around our own necks. The robot has no conscience therefore it is not personal, but likewise they can deduce pulling the lever to the trap door as essential.

    Frankenstein made a human robot. To do this he had to think in hierarchal terms of “society”, having the authority to do so. Hierarchy’s are naturally cannibalistic, absorbing or destroying one another for progression and basically has only two parts, the tiny hierarchy and serfdom, rather than a responsible citizenry required in a unique Constitutional Republic as America. But I digress.

    The point is the evolution of robotics tracks the evolution of hierarchy. Only the tiny hierarchy gain wealth and can afford benefit from robotics under the guise of security and convenience. That security will pull the levers when the time is right for your convenience, regressing the world 500 years to begin with.
    More Kings, Queens, Princes and Princess’s, the King’s global “Hands” to manage the Nobles that oversee the remaining serf’s of servitude and viable body parts to keep the elder overseers alive.

    Make no mistake, man has always had the ability to make whatever he deems fit to fulfill one’s human transgressions of delusional consequentiality.
    Those who value human life and faith detest their delusion.

Leave a Reply.

Read next
1
Share
0 items

modernity cart

You have 0 items in your cart