Ilya Fushman
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It could hold hands.
It could respond to being called out by name.
It could pick things up.
It could take things from the kitchen and bring it to you.
This is a big deal.
And what's really clear here from what I'm hearing is that this is not meant for deliveries or for manufacturing or anything within their fulfillment centers or operations.
The idea here is to learn about humanoid robots and to get the technology and the right people to potentially build a consumer-grade humanoid robot.
So they'd be obviously going toe-to-toe here with companies like Tesla, Boston Dynamics, Figure, you name it.
Mark it down, 11.12 Eastern on March 25th.
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman used the word adorable.
Thank you very much.
Now, here in Washington, the Trump administration says it's working to cut red tape around AI and the build-out of critical infrastructure.
But that push is facing fresh resistance on Capitol Hill.
Senator Bernie Sanders and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
are set to introduce legislation that would impose a moratorium on new AI data centers until stronger safeguards are in place.
That debate is especially relevant in Virginia, home to one of the largest concentrations of data centers in this country.
Joining us now is representative Suhas Subramanian, Democrat from Virginia.
Your reaction, I suppose, to that initiative, and we can then talk about the scale of footprint of data centers in your state.
Yeah, it's important to understand where it's coming from.
I don't support a full data center moratorium at all, but I do think there's a lot of frustration in communities like mine when it comes to data center steamrolling communities and having siting issues where they create power problems in those communities.