The Rundown AI: Exclusive interview with Demis Hassabis on AGI

Exclusive interview with Demis Hassabis on AGI

Image source: The Rundown

The Rundown: We sat down with Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis for an exclusive interview discussing when he expects AGI, AI’s role in drug discovery, which diseases are likely to get cured first, and what he thinks is still going unnoticed.

The details:

  • Hassabis said AGI is on track for 2030, plus or minus a year, but a few things remain unsolved: world physics, memory, consistency, and continual learning.
  • Timelines have hardened on drug discovery, too, with focus on oncology and immunology first and eventually an engine that could help cure any disease.
  • After AGI, Hassabis said he’d turn to understanding the nature of reality using AI and study more philosophical topics, like what it means to be human.
  • He said he can’t wait to see what students will build with advanced AI, adding that taste, original thinking, and emotional connection will be more valuable.

Why it matters: This interview with Hassabis paints a picture that AGI is going to be here soon, provided we fix the gaps. It will be an interesting age with kids growing up with advanced AI in their hands, and we can surely expect some big discoveries. The question is: will the adults be able to adapt to this new reality as quickly?

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Axios: Trump’s Cuba war games

 Scoop: Trump’s Cuba war games
 
Photo illustration of a collage featuring Donald Trump over a map focusing on Cuba, and red triangles and blue, red, and yellow stripes.
Photo illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios. Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images
 
The Trump administration is bracing for the potential collapse of Cuba’s totalitarian government as early as this summer, and has war-gamed military response plans in case the island descends into chaos, U.S. officials tell Axios’ Marc Caputo.

Why it matters: President Trump hasn’t authorized an invasion and prefers a peaceful transition to a free Cuba. So the administration will keep pushing economic sanctions to try to strangle the regime in Havana in a slow-motion constriction.

“The best way to describe it is ‘accelerationism,'” a senior administration official said, referring to hastening societal collapse.
“But we don’t want to kill off the regime just yet. There’s a method to this. It’s in stages.”

🔎 Zoom in: This methodical squeezing of Cuba’s communist regime aims to buy time for Trump, engrossed in peace talks with Iran, to eventually focus on Cuba.

“Iran’s not finished, and the president is not in a rush,” another senior administration official said. “Trump wants to exhaust all the levers that he can. But at this point, there aren’t as many levers as before.”

A third senior administration official said: “We have a pretty deep toolbox, especially when it comes to sanctions and enforcing them. More is on the way.

The big picture: The Cuba operation aims to eliminate the wellspring of Latin American Marxist agitation and anti-U.S. activism, ever since Fidel and Raúl Castro led their successful revolution in 1959.

To bring Cuba to its knees this year, the administration first targeted the island’s lifeline: Venezuela and its socialist leader, Nicolás Maduro, who kept Havana afloat with oil shipments that powered the country and gave it export revenue. 

Inside the room: Last month, U.S. Southern Command, which oversees military operations in the Caribbean, held a multiagency “tabletop” exercise to prepare for military action in Cuba, one of the senior administration officials said.

“Everything is on the table, but no invasion is planned or imminent,” the official said. “When POTUS says go, we’re ready for anything.

In the exercise, another source said, U.S. officials discussed Cuba’s possession of drones and how to respond to possible unrest in the sweltering Cuban heat as spring turns to summer.

“It’s going to be hot,” the source said. “People won’t have electricity. Food spoils without refrigeration. People get angry. They can take to the streets. And then what happens? I can’t see the president doing nothing if there’s repression.”

Another source, a Trump adviser, disagreed: “The president does not want boots on the ground for more than 48 hours. It’s a quagmire in the making. This could get messy.

One presidential adviser said the approach to Cuba is “classic Trump: Push your enemy off balance. It’s pressure, watch the response, apply more pressure, watch the response, apply more pressure.

One of the officials said: “We have time. The regime doesn’t.”Go deeper: 3 crucial differences between Cuba and Venezuela.
    

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IBTimes UK: More international controversy in response to Donald Trump’s comment about Oman …

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euronews: NATO is staging military drills near Russia’s border … being aware is now essential

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New Economics Foundation: The Milburn review published today is warning of a ‘lost generation’ of young people not in work or education. But crucially it identifies that this is a systemic problem, not an issue of individual responsibility. George Bangham responds.

It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare; it is because we do not dare that things are difficult

Seneca the Younger

NEF

@NEF

·

The Milburn review published today is warning of a ‘lost generation’ of young people not in work or education. But crucially it identifies that this is a systemic problem, not an issue of individual responsibility. George Bangham responds.

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Fortune: China cuts Arts degrees but Jensen Huang advises parents not to worry about what their kids study

AIJensen Huang

Asia

As China bets its future on AI by cutting arts degrees, Jensen Huang says parents shouldn’t worry about what their kids study

Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

By 

Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

Reporter

May 26, 2026, 2:38 PM ET

Add us on

Nvidia founder and CEO, Jensen Huang.

Nvidia founder and CEO, Jensen Huang.Patrick T. Fallon—AFP via Getty Images

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang may have studied engineering, but he says it won’t matter what your child studies in the future. 

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Huang said even in a world dominated by AI journalism, the arts, and design are still going to matter. Therefore, parents shouldn’t worry about pushing their kids into AI-focused careers.

“I think that it won’t matter. All the things that used to matter are still things that are going to matter in the future,” he told Singapore’s Channel NewsAsia Monday.

He noted that even with advanced AI, storytelling will be just as important, and young people should instead focus on how technology can enhance their area of study.

“The only one thing that you have to do is to make sure that you ask yourself: ‘How can AI help elevate my learning, my craft, you know, my purpose,’” he told the broadcaster.

Why is China eliminating arts degrees?

Huang’s advice comes as China has taken the opposite stance, eliminating degrees that authorities claim are no longer justified in the AI era. One of the most prestigious schools in China for media and the arts, the Communication University of China in Beijing, last year cut five undergraduate degrees as it recalibrates its offerings for a new era.

Several arts degrees were cut including photography, comics, visual communication design, new media art, and fashion design. They will no longer be offered as standalone programs, but will be integrated into broader, technology-infused disciplines, according to Sixth Tone, a China state media outlet. 

The university’s top official, Liao Xiangzhong, said these changes were made because advances in technology have made it so that offering these degrees as standalone programs no longer makes sense. For example, photography can’t be offered as a standalone degree because “today everyone can be a self-media creator and recorder,” Liao said. Instead, its curriculum was rolled into the “film and television photography and production” degree.

Translation, another degree that was cut at the university, “has already been largely replaced by AI,” he added. 

“Setting up a four-year major for translation in a specific language is a huge waste of national resources,” Liao said, according to the outlet. 

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At the same time, the university added three degrees, “intelligent imaging art,” “intelligent audiovisual engineering,” and “intelligent engineering and creative design.”

Apart from the Communication University of China, other universities across China are cutting degrees in the arts as the government aims to cut down on oversaturated fields and graduate more students with high-tech skills. 

Other colleges like Jilin University in northeastern China as well as East China Normal University and Nanchang University in the east have cut arts majors like drama, film literature, broadcasting, and animation. 

What did Jensen Huang study?

Before Huang turned a company focused primarily on gaming graphics cards into one of the most valuable companies in the world and the $5.2 trillion go-to AI chip provider for GoogleAmazon, and Meta, he studied electrical engineering as an undergraduate at Oregon State University. Soon after, he pursued a master’s degree in electrical engineering from Stanford. He graduated from college two years early, at age 20, after he skipped multiple grades and also graduated early from high school. A year after finishing his master’s degree in 1992, he started Nvidia.

Huang has previously said if he were to repeat his studies, he probably would’ve pursued “more of the physical sciences than the software sciences.” 

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Other top tech leaders also share Huang’s view of the future of education. Jack Clark, a billionaire cofounder of Anthropic who majored in English literature and creative writing said during a conference last month his education on “history and a lot about the kind of stories that we tell ourselves about the future,” was essential to his work on AI at Anthropic. 

Another Anthropic cofounder, Daniela Amodei, who studied literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said in an interview with ABC News earlier this year, while AI models have incredible STEM knowledge, young people should focus on areas where the technology still needs improvement such as communication skills and critical thinking.

“I actually think studying the humanities is going to be more important than ever,” she said. 

In 2001, Fortune first convened the smartest people we know, bringing together CEOs and founders, builders and investors, thinkers and doers. Since then, Fortune Brainstorm Tech has been the place where bold ideas collide. From June 8–10, we will return to Aspen—where it all began—to mark 25 years of Brainstorm. Register now.

About the Author

By Marco Quiroz-GutierrezReporter

Role: Reporter
Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez is a reporter for Fortune covering general business news.

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Psychology Today: The Dangerous Group Targeting Children Online. Do you know about the 764 Network


The Dangerous Group Targeting Children Online

The 764 Network is reaching young people through games, apps, and private chats.

Posted May 27, 2026 |  Reviewed by Gary Drevitch

Key points

  • The 764 Network targets children through online games, social media, and interest-based chat groups.
  • 764 coercion can escalate to sextortion, harming animals, self-harm, suicide, or violence.
  • The FBI is investigating 450 members of the 764 Network for crimes against minors.
  • Caregivers should stay engaged, know the signs, preserve evidence, and report suspected exploitation.

I’ve been struggling for some time with how to share this information because it’s one of the toughest topics I’ve ever discussed.

As someone who spends time researching and educating on topics of interpersonal and intrapersonal violence, I know more than my share of what humans are capable of doing to others, and the 764 Network keeps me awake at night.

Throughout history, parents and caregivers have been concerned about in-person strangers harming their children and teenagers. Some worry every time their child leaves the house. Unbeknownst to many, some of the worst predators are trying to enter their home through their child’s phone, gaming console, or laptop.

The 764 Network’s Victims

Members lurk online, posing as friends through compliments and commonalities. Their goal is to torment and gain power over minors. They represent one of the most dangerous online networks targeting minors today.

These loosely connected predators commit some of the most heinous acts one can imagine. Since 764’s inception, members have a pattern of sextortion, creation and distribution of child sexual abuse material (CSAM), stabbings, and more. In fact, a single member was recently convicted of 29 charges for acts against those as young as 11.

There are documented victims who were instructed to carve their abuser’s name into their own skin as an act of ownership. Other children were ordered to torture animals as proof of loyalty. A few were pushed toward suicide in front of members while on camera.

At the time I’m writing this, the FBI is investigating 450 members of the 764 Network for crimes against minors.

Though some involved with the 764 Network consider themselves neo-Nazis, they share no single political ideology. What they share is a nihilistic interest in cruelty, harm, and violence. You will find these predators frequenting seemingly benign sites such as Roblox and Minecraft.

The Path to Torment

The online preying typically begins the same for all 764 members. First, they find a vulnerable child, then strike up a conversation, and spend days or weeks building a seemingly real friendship. They claim to share the child’s interests and talk for hours while gaming. Others DM targets in their social media accounts. They validate their victim’s feelings, especially loneliness, being misunderstood, or not fitting in, while gaining the victim’s trust. They are patient, calculated, and insidious.

Once trust is established, they move the conversation to a private, encrypted platform where they gradually introduce the child to disturbing content consisting of gore, self-harm imagery, and common group language, framing it as something that “only cool people like us understand.” The victim is made to feel weak or rejected if they don’t watch.

Requests and Threats

Then come the requests for explicit photos or videos framed as a test of trust or a romantic gesture. The moment the innocent child or teen sends anything, the dynamic shifts and the predator begins threatening to send the images to the child’s school, friends, and family unless the victim complies with escalating demands. The demands? More images, in addition to live acts of self-harm, murdering their own pets, and other horrific acts.

Out of fear that their previous acts will be shared with family members, or that family members will be harmed or killed if they don’t comply, these young victims then often target others to spare themselves because they don’t realize their content is already being shared widely.

In January 2025, a 17-year-old at Antioch High School in Tennessee shot two students, one fatally, after posting audio claiming the attack was carried out on behalf of a 764-affiliated group. A teenager in Connecticut, once an honor roll student, was arrested after being manipulated into making bomb threats. Investigators found self-mutilation photos on her devices alongside images paying tribute to 764.

Warning Signs Every Parent Should Know

Look for clusters of changes, not just one.

Physical

  • Unexplained cuts or scars, particularly on the arms or torso, especially if they appear patterned. Often, victims are made to carve names or messages on their bodies
  • Wearing long sleeves in warm weather
  • Sudden changes in hygiene or appearance

Behavioral

  • Increased withdrawal from family and real friends
  • Intense secrecy around their phone or computer
  • Unexplained mood swings, rage, or hopelessness
  • A new fixation on death, darkness, or “not belonging”
  • Unexplained injuries or deaths of pets

Digital and language

  • Use of unfamiliar terms like CVLT, Lore, or 764
  • A new online “friend” or “relationship” with someone your child has never met in person and is reluctant to discuss
  • An obsessive desire to play particular video games or be on their cell phone
  • Unexpected packages addressed to your child

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What You Can Do Right Now

Oversee internet and gaming use

  • Delay online gaming privileges and open internet access until your child is aware of online dangers
  • Have regular conversations about internet safety and online predators

Talk to your child — without panic

  • Keep communication open, not fear-based
  • Ask about online friendships the same way you’d ask about school friendships.

Know the platforms

  • Roblox, Minecraft, and other gaming environments are not inherently dangerous, but they are access points
  • Discord and Telegram are where conversations escalate
  • Familiarize yourself with what your child is using

Children often stay silent for fear of getting in trouble, so if your child discloses abuse or exploitation, do not punish them

  • Make it clear that you will not be angry
  • Provide reassurance that what has been done to them is not their fault

Report immediately

  • If your child has been targeted, contact the FBI at tips.fbi.gov or 1-800-CALL-FBI
  • You can also file a report with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at cybertipline.org
  • Do not delete messages or devices. Preserve everything as potential evidence
  • Call 988 if your child is in immediate mental health crisis. The Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is available by call or text, 24 hours a day

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References

Daviess, B. (2026). 764 and The Com: Misconceptions and guidance (IIM-2026-U-044161). CNA Corporation.

Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Division. (2026, February 19). Open letter to parents, guardians, and caregivers. Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Federal Bureau of Investigation. (n.d.). Parents, caregivers, and teachers: Protecting your kids. U.S. Department of Justice.

Institute for Strategic Dialogue. (2025). Networks of harm: A victim-centric information resource on the 764 sextortion network. ISD Global.

Levine, M. (2025, October 31). DOJ, in a first, brings terrorism charge against alleged member of 764 network. ABC News.

Levine, M., Christie, M., Thomas, P., & Chang, J. (2025, November 18). ‘Modern day terrorism’: How the online extremist network 764 is threatening teen lives. ABC News.

Trenary, J. (2025, December 23). 6-7 is silly, 764 is deadly: The rise of decentralized online exploitation terrorism. Our Rescue.

United States Attorney’s Office, District of Columbia. (2025, April 30). Leaders of 764 arrested and charged for operating global child exploitation enterprise. U.S. Department of Justice.

Winston, A. (2024, March 13). “There Are Dark Corners of the Internet. Then There’s 764,” Wired.

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GZERO Media. Is Trump about to invade Cuba?

Is Trump about to invade Cuba?

GZERO Staff

May 21, 2026

Make us preferred on Google

Is Cuba next?

Yesterday the Trump administration indicted Raúl Castro.

Now the question—in Washington as much as Havana—is if Trump is preparing another regime change campaign in the Caribbean. But he’d do well to remember that Cuba is not Venezuela, says Eurasia Group’s Latin America expert Risa Grais-Targow.

cubatrumpraul castrothe debrief

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Axios: Hormuz handover


PRESENTED BY GOLDMAN SACHS
 
Axios PM
By Mike Allen · May 26, 2026
😎 Welcome back, Tuesday team. Today’s newsletter, edited by Alex Fitzpatrick and Natalie Daher, is 762 words, a 3-min. read. Thanks to Sheryl Miller for copy editing.
 
 
1 big thing: Hormuz hangover
 
Illustration of an oil barrel seen double in psychedelic colors.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
 
Even if a U.S.-Iran deal lands, the oil market will look different from its pre-war version, Axios’ Ben Geman writes. 

Why it matters: The emerging deal — which would reopen the Strait of Hormuz while nuclear talks proceed — could return large numbers of barrels to the market, but it will take time.

Related: U.S. Central Command disputed reports today that the Navy restarted escorting commercial vessels through the strait.What we’re watching:

1.  Confidence: Vessel owners and crews need to feel safe transiting the world’s most important energy shipping line. It’s unclear they will, said oil analyst Ben Cahill of UT Austin.

2.  Timelines: The International Energy Agency estimates at least two to three months are needed to reestablish steady exports after mines are cleared.Persian Gulf countries need time to resume production that declined after the main export route was cut off.

3.  Definitions: What “open” means for the strait is unsettled.Iran may not call it a toll, but Iranianofficials are floating new fees on tankers.This could be a boon to Iran even if the fee is relatively small, said Edward Fishman, an ex-State Department aide at the Council on Foreign Relations.

4. ⚠️ Vibes and market risk: Before the crisis throttled supplies, there was debate in oil circles about whether markets were blasé about threats to infrastructure or shipping.Even once the crisis passes, watch the level of geopolitical risk premium — the market’s willingness to preemptively price in risk — that elevates prices.

5.  U.S. oil production: Higher prices will likely push producers to increase output, as the broader market went from oversupplied to tight.

Between the lines: Restoring Gulf shipping, rebuilding crude inventories and restarting shuttered production will take months, Bloomberg Intelligence analysts said in a note today. 

That delay makes the timing of steep pump price cuts more uncertain.

The bottom line: The old normal is gone, and the new one is still being shaped.Share this story … Get Axios Future of Energy.
    
 
 
2. 🏓 Pickleball peters out
 
A heat table that ranks U.S. cities by pickleball courts per 10,000 residents in 2025. Madison, Wisconsin, leads at 2.6 courts, followed by Lexington-Fayette County, Kentucky, at 2. Honolulu is at 1.9. Tulsa is lowest among the 10 cities at 1.5. Values range from 1.5 to 2.6.Data: Trust for Public Land. Table: Alex Fitzpatrick/Axios

The pickleball craze may be cooling off, Alex Fitzpatrick writes from new Trust for Public Land data.The number of pickleball courts across the 100 most populous U.S. cities increased just 4% from 2025 to 2026.That’s compared to 13%–14% growth in each of the previous two years. Garden spending is up 8%, disc golf is up 4% and outdoor fitness zones are up 3%.Reality check: Parks in the country’s biggest cities now have 3,765 pickleball courts, TPL says. That’s up nearly 900% from 2017. Will Klein, TPL’s director of parks research, tells Axios that the slowdown “mirrors what we’re seeing more broadly in parks systems nationwide, where local leaders are balancing tighter budgets, aging infrastructure, and growing demand for many different kinds of recreational amenities.”Go deeper.
    
 
 
A MESSAGE FROM GOLDMAN SACHS
Oil disruption is driving U.S. consumer inflation
 
 
Rising prices, driven by disruptions to the flow of oil from the Middle East, are having a measurable impact on U.S. consumers, according to Goldman Sachs Research.The impact: Low-income households are facing the biggest hit proportionally.Read the outlook for U.S. consumer inflation.

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New Atlas: Humanoids ready for real life. Comment: The Silk Road … countries like UK and Ireland are not included. Do we care? We should.

Humanoids are heading to school as China readies them for real life

By Bronwyn Thompson

May 25, 2026

The Class of 2026 is set to make history – and shape the future – when the humanoid training center opens its doors in July

The Class of 2026 is set to make history – and shape the future – when the humanoid training center opens its doors in July

National and Local Co-Built Humanoid Robotics Innovation Center/People’s Daily Online

The first humanoid “training school” for robots of all shapes and sizes will open its doors in July, bringing together more than 100 different models made by a host of companies. As well as mastering real-world skills, the humanoids will provide unique data that’ll be used to advance the bots that follow in their footsteps.

For some, this sounds like a dystopian nightmare, but if you’ve been lucky enough to spend time witnessing the emergence of this technology first-hand in China, as I have, it’s hard not to be excited about the country’s first heterogeneous humanoid training center. Here, more than a dozen companies have enrolled 100-plus robots to take part in the pilot training program at the 5,000-square-meter (53,800-sq-ft) facility in Shanghai’s high-tech heart of Zhangjiang (张江).

Here, they will finetune their motor skills in order to ease into everyday life for people who can afford a domestic bot, as well as master tasks needed for specialized workplaces across the country. Then, millions of data points gathered from this inaugural Class of 2026 will be used to train larger and even more diverse robots at a faster rate. Depending on their capabilities, the humanoids are expected to be trained to work in a variety of fields including industrial, medical, service and agriculture.

It’s also worth noting here that this facility and the groundwork it’s laying are key aspects of China’s robotics industry. The sector operates more like a tech ecosystem – from startups to established companies – centered around crowded clusters of manufacturing and innovation hubs. With this comes the sharing of infrastructure, hardware suppliers and components between tech firms. Of course, there’s still plenty of competition, but there’s also collaboration. Which, generally speaking, results in faster, cheaper and more efficient advances. And this robot training school is a pretty good reflection of that.

Operated by the National and Local Co-built Humanoid Robotics Innovation Center, the new facility, which has been a few years in the making, will train a wide range of humanoids, with two goals. Firstly, to get these models ready for life in the real world – and also to build a massive database of learning intel to help future facility intakes of robots get up to speed quicker.

The first lesson will be how to actually grip a book (not confirmed)
The first lesson will be how to actually grip a book (not confirmed)

As the facility’s general manager Xu Bin told People’s Daily Online, the center is designed to advance the humanoid robot industry through shared technologies and fine-tuning the robots for real-world use.

“We established the center to enable large-scale data sharing and utilization, empowering the entire industry,” Xu said.

The diversity of the robots – which come in all shapes and sizes and have varying degrees of movement – will help researchers gather data on performance, strengths and ways to best work with specific humanoid designs in the future.

The “students” will have no time for R&R, with the robots expected to begin their learning by mastering 45 “atomic skills” including grasping, picking, placing and transporting items, crucial for the humanoids to function in industries like hospitality and in factories.

“The embodied robots being trained at the center are expected to accomplish more complex tasks requiring a sequence of actions based on their autonomous judgments formed through searching and matching the data collected through training,” Yang Zhengye, director of market systems at the center, told People’s Daily Online.

Much like my own experience in the science laboratories at university, the robots will need to understand directives from their human teachers, then follow through with the task on their own. They’ll also be put through more repetitive drills, like the surprisingly difficult art of grasping objects like humans can. This has been one area of movement that robots in the past have struggled with – yes, looking at you, Neo – but will be integral to their integration into fields that depend on precision and, well, knowing when to let go of a frying pan when it’s time to. (Though perhaps the joke is on that YouTuber who spent US$80,000 on his pan-flipping-and-tripping Unitree G1 late last year, which you can now buy for $13,500.)

The robot training center’s primary focus will be on gathering all the data possible, across a diverse collection of robots, in an effort to be able to fine-tune methods to teach new bots old tricks. According to the paper, a scientist may be tasked with watching and guiding a humanoid as it performs a single core movement or action up to 600 times a day, collecting important data along the way.

The 2026 class of assorted robots will primarily be trained to master 10 key tasks needed for work in the industries they’re most likely to be deployed to – domestic labor (of course), in industrial settings and in tourism. And while humanoids have come a very long way in a few short years, they still have some work to do when it comes to what we’d consider basic tasks: folding clothes, moving objects from one spot to another, tidying shelves and cleaning equipment. Incidentally, folding a T-shirt is one of the most challenging jobs for a robot as this article explains. (Just wait until someone introduces them to fitted sheets.)

Yang added that the training center, which is expected to be fully operational in July – and hopefully New Atlas will be able to check it out – will generate around 50,000 data points each day, amounting to an incredible 10 million pieces of intel a year. This critical foundational work will help China fast-track training and spot problems regardless of model.

True to China’s collaborative system, the center is also expected to create a data-exchange model for robotics firms to access and allow them to to focus on specific industries for their products, like healthcare, and to improve efficiency. Consider it home schooling, but with robust scientific data at the center of the curriculum.

And that’s not all. The mountain of data will be pooled, creating a general purpose robot (can we call it “Student Zero”?) – a model that will represent the wide range of humanoids being trained at the center. Yang told the news outlet that this “super brain” will allow robots of all shapes and sizes, developed by different manufacturers, to learn and advance together. And while this may sound like some sinister sci-fi movie arc, China’s focus is more about progress than power, supporting its community – be it human or machine.

Meanwhile, some robots skipped ahead to go straight into the workforce – where 3,000 machines work alongside humans in this Chongqing, China mega-factory.

Inside a factory run by 3,000 robots

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