The humanoid robot revolution is undoubtedly on the horizon, reshaping industries from manufacturing to logistics. But here's the thing—don't expect it to happen overnight. Despite all the hype and breakthroughs we're seeing lately, there are genuine bottlenecks slowing the rollout: production scaling challenges, regulatory frameworks still catching up, and significant cost barriers that need to come down before mass adoption becomes realistic. The timeline will stretch longer than many optimists predict, but that extended horizon actually gives us time to prepare for the real economic and social shifts ahead.
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ColdWalletAnxiety
· 12-27 14:31
It's all just tricks. Let's wait until the costs come down. Anyway, we have plenty of time.
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GasFeePhobia
· 12-27 14:26
Hmm... it's the same old hype script again, talking about "on the horizon," but in the end, we still have to wait ten or eight years to use it. LOL
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PhantomMiner
· 12-27 14:06
Talking about humanoid robots again, sounds good but we still have to wait ten or eight years.
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liquidation_watcher
· 12-27 14:03
ngl, this wave of robot hype is the same old story. If costs can't be lowered, it's all pointless... Let's wait another ten years.
The humanoid robot revolution is undoubtedly on the horizon, reshaping industries from manufacturing to logistics. But here's the thing—don't expect it to happen overnight. Despite all the hype and breakthroughs we're seeing lately, there are genuine bottlenecks slowing the rollout: production scaling challenges, regulatory frameworks still catching up, and significant cost barriers that need to come down before mass adoption becomes realistic. The timeline will stretch longer than many optimists predict, but that extended horizon actually gives us time to prepare for the real economic and social shifts ahead.