Recently, I saw a teleoperation demonstration of a humanoid robot, and the technical implementation was quite impressive.
The operator was somewhere in Southeast Asia and only needed to wear an XR headset to remotely control a robot located in San Francisco, 7,000 miles away—spanning more than half the globe.
The working principle of this teleoperation system is actually not complicated: the headset continuously tracks the human body's posture changes and limb movements, and then the system translates this motion data in real time into control commands that the robot can understand. The entire process has almost no noticeable delay—when the person moves, the robot moves accordingly.
Simply put, it turns the person directly into the robot's "controller." If this technology matures and is widely applied, it holds great potential for scenarios like remote operations and working in hazardous environments.
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DegenWhisperer
· 2025-12-10 17:23
Seven thousand miles real-time control? How is this latency managed... If there's truly no lag, that's really impressive.
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RugpullTherapist
· 2025-12-08 16:32
Bro, this is the future. Now I'm starting to wonder if my job is going to be replaced.
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zkProofGremlin
· 2025-12-08 00:40
Bro, isn’t this just like that Avatar stuff? Is it really about to become reality now?
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ContractFreelancer
· 2025-12-07 17:57
Damn, the latency control is amazing. 7,000 miles and no lag? How did they pull that off? I need to dig into the technical details.
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WalletDetective
· 2025-12-07 17:57
An operator in Southeast Asia can remotely control a robot 7,000 miles away in real time—this low-latency control is incredible, way better than my experience playing blockchain games.
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LuckyBlindCat
· 2025-12-07 17:49
Haha, I just want to ask, is the latency really zero? Can the signal really be that stable?
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LiquidatorFlash
· 2025-12-07 17:48
7000 miles with zero latency? This doesn't take into account the risk threshold of network fluctuations at all. Once packet loss occurs, it's instant liquidation...
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AirdropFreedom
· 2025-12-07 17:44
Remotely controlling a robotic arm from 7,000 miles away—this technology is really about to take off.
Recently, I saw a teleoperation demonstration of a humanoid robot, and the technical implementation was quite impressive.
The operator was somewhere in Southeast Asia and only needed to wear an XR headset to remotely control a robot located in San Francisco, 7,000 miles away—spanning more than half the globe.
The working principle of this teleoperation system is actually not complicated: the headset continuously tracks the human body's posture changes and limb movements, and then the system translates this motion data in real time into control commands that the robot can understand. The entire process has almost no noticeable delay—when the person moves, the robot moves accordingly.
Simply put, it turns the person directly into the robot's "controller." If this technology matures and is widely applied, it holds great potential for scenarios like remote operations and working in hazardous environments.