I really just don't understand the hype over humanoids, I understand the assumption that humanoids can do the same tasks as humans do but at this level of technology it's just too soon to have them do anything useful.
We yet have to achieve proper autonomy for simple tasks using robotic arms like picking items. I still have to prevent my roomba from avoiding socks. Those are machines built specifically for that single purpose and yet they are failing at it.
I just don't see how humanoids can be of any use at this stage apart from generating hype for Tesla or for some sci-fi enthusiast.
> I just don't see how humanoids can be of any use at this stage
Today, outside research environments, they are useless. We are still worried about them falling on their face, much less take the dog for a walk and cook you a couple of eggs. Generally useful humanoids are probably decades away.
Considering the amount of money you pay to have it, "it works" is not even the bare minimum. Lot of things work.
The problem with Jira is the total disregard for UX. Very simple tasks like moving tickets out of a story take way too many steps when it should take one click.
They don't seem to want to improve it because of legacy customer or reasons....
We yet have to achieve proper autonomy for simple tasks using robotic arms like picking items. I still have to prevent my roomba from avoiding socks. Those are machines built specifically for that single purpose and yet they are failing at it.
I just don't see how humanoids can be of any use at this stage apart from generating hype for Tesla or for some sci-fi enthusiast.