duskwuff 3 days ago

A teleoperated robot is little more than a human worker with extra steps. (And an expensive, clumsy human worker at that.) I can't imagine many situations where that would make sense instead of having a human do the work in person.

  • OkayPhysicist 3 days ago

    I could see teleoperated help catching on. Americans are weird about staff. When I visit my old-world family, it's seen as perfectly normal to have someone living in an attached apartment, handling the cooking the cleaning, etc. There are well-established etiquette rules, understood both by the staff and the family, which help navigate the rather complicated, radically unequal relationship between the two.

    Americans by and large don't do that. We software developers have not that different of an income gap between us and minimum wage workers compared to my family overseas and their staff. Yet, it would be considered weird, extravagant even, for a $300-500k/yr developer to have dedicated help. We're far more comfortable with people we don't need to interact with directly, like housecleaners, landscapers, etc.

    Teleoperated robots sidestep that discomfort, somewhat, by obscuring the the humanity of the staff. It's probably not a particularly ethical basis for a product, but when has that ever stopped us.

  • dmurray 3 days ago

    Maybe you can scale to have one operator operate ten or a hundred household robots at a time.

    An autonomous robot that has 99% reliability, getting stuck once an hour, is useless to me. A semi-autonomous robot that gets stuck once an hour but can be rescued by the remote operator is tempting.

    Expect security and privacy in the marketing for these things, too, but I don't think that's a real differentiator. Rich and middle class people alike are currently OK with letting barely-vetted strangers in their houses for cleaning the world over.

    • duskwuff 3 days ago

      > Expect security and privacy in the marketing for these things, too

      Pitching "security and privacy" as features of a device that's remotely operated and monitored is going to be a very hard sell.

  • foobarian 3 days ago

    There could be some compelling reasons for one.

    - Services like maids or cleaners are usually scheduled, maybe you have to wait and open the door etc. Maybe they can't make it that day because of snow storm etc.

    - Services are normally limited to certain hours. With a remote operator, the robot could do laundry all night ran by someone in a different time zone.

    - If needed could be operated in shifts.

    - Other new use cases could arise, e.g. wellness check on elderly, help if fallen or locked out etc.

  • TylerE 3 days ago

    Low duty cycle. If one human can drive 20 robots, because most of them are sitting still most of The time, it starts to make sense. Vs a maid or butler that can obviously only really work one home at a time.

  • api 3 days ago

    The only places it does is where humans can't easily go: space, underwater, hazardous industrial sites, etc.

    It can occasionally make sense for high skill stuff where the shortage is people who can even do it, like remote surgery.

    In your house? That's silly. It'd be 100X more expensive and complicated than just hiring a housekeeper so you could... hire a remote housekeeper?

    • TylerE 3 days ago

      Except the remote house keeper can be in some super locl 3rd world country where the prevailing wage is a few bucks a day.

      • duskwuff 3 days ago

        That's a pretty profoundly dystopian concept. If the only way this technology is viable is as a way to exploit labor at a distance - count me out.

  • vel0city 3 days ago

    Yeah but with a teleoperated worker you can have them work remote from a place with poor labor regulations and extremely low pay.

    The future with this as a reality is a really dark place, where the uber wealthy live entirely disconnected from the working class except through telepresent machines half a planet away. That way the wealthy don't have to be inconvenienced by the humanity of the poors.

    • NetMageSCW 3 days ago

      Suddenly I think Musk is trying to turn Earth into Solaria.