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Why Travis Kalanick believes humans are on the verge of a ‘golden age’

The Uber-famous founder, Travis Kalanick, says a new golden age is coming — and it’s robots that are ushering it in.

Kalanick announced a new venture called Atoms on Friday in a 1,600-word screed in which he said the automation of the physical world is the next phase of the AI era.

“Software has automated tasks of language and math, but the complete automation of the physical world — autonomy — remains largely untouched territory, the principal unlock to the next era of progress and abundance,” he wrote. “History refers to this kind of moment of radical progress as a Golden Age.”

Kalanick said this “golden age” is emerging as production and transportation become driven primarily by computation, minerals, and energy. With autonomous machines building other machines and software constantly improving itself, he said, productivity could reach unprecedented levels.

“The organization of human capital becomes superhuman,” he wrote.

Kalanick later said on the tech talk show TBPN on Friday that Atoms has been operating in stealth mode for the past eight years. Now, the company aims to expand its delivery infrastructure beyond food into industries such as food service, mining, and transportation.

He said in his announcement that the company’s goal is to create “gainfully employed robots.” He defines these as “specialized robots with productive jobs that bring abundance to their owners and society at large.”

He also said humans should be careful about building robots in their own image. “I watched the half-marathon and couldn’t help but think how much better it would be if they just had wheels,” he wrote, referring to a competition in Beijing last year that pitted humanoid robots against each other.

Kalanick cofounded Uber in 2009. He led the company as CEO until 2017, when he stepped down amid reports of a toxic workplace culture and ongoing regulatory battles.

He isn’t the only tech executive who believes AI robots should extend beyond humanoid form.

The cofounder and CEO of World Labs, Fei-Fei Li, said on the No Priors podcast last year that building physical AI in a singular form is energy inefficient.

“Just an extreme and trivial example, if we put robots underwater, they should not be the shape of humans,” she said. “They better be in the shape of fish. Just think about energy efficiency. The same with flying.”




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‘I never left’: Travis Kalanick launches new company Atoms

The former Uber CEO is venturing into robotics.

Travis Kalanick announced that Atoms is out of stealth mode and expanding beyond food delivery infrastructure into industries such as food service, mining, and transportation.

“When I told my friends, family, and colleagues about my plans for what was next, they were really excited that I was ‘coming back,'” Kalanick wrote on the website for the new venture.

“The thing is, I never left.”

In an interview on “TBPN” on Friday, Kalanick told show hosts John Coogan and Jordi Hays that he will be folding his ghost-kitchen startup CloudKitchens into the new venture, a detail that is also mentioned on Atoms’ website.

Atoms’ webpage says the company plans to build a “wheelbase for robots,” a platform designed to power specialized machines rather than humanoid robots. Kalanick said on “TBPN” that the company will focus on practical industrial systems instead of humanlike designs, and that the venture was just renamed as “Atoms” from “City Storage Systems” today.

“We’ve been in stealth mode for eight years,” said Kalanick. “Employees were not allowed to put the name of the company on their LinkedIn. We have thousands of employees.”

“Humanoids have their place, but there’s a lot of room for specialized robots that do things in an efficient, sort of industrial-scale kind of way, which is sort of where we play,” he added.

According to Kalanick, Atoms is close to acquiring Pronto, an autonomous vehicle startup focused on industrial and mining sites that was founded by his former Uber colleague, Anthony Levandowski.

Uber didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.




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