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Forbes - Consumer Tech

This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread Apple At 50 — A Leadership Shift And An AR Future We Are Under-Investing In Robotics ... 90% Of Humanoid Robots Are Made In China Ditch The Apple White: Beats Expands Colorful Cable Line-Up With New 10-Foot Option Satechi’s New ChargeView 140W Desktop GaN Charger With Real-Time Display The Hasselblad In Your Pocket: Oppo’s Find X9 Ultra Challenges The Galaxy S26 Ultra There's No Such Thing As Brain Honey How AI Agents Could Rebuild Fashion’s Visual Production Layer QClaw Goes Global. The Agent Built Itself In 5 Days Apple’s Tim Cook Exit Hides A $4 Trillion Agentic AI Power Move EZQuest Reveals A New Line Of Pro Series USB-C Hubs For MacBook Neo Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold 2 Already In The Works, Report Claims Apple Revealed New Siri Release Date For iPhone, Latest Report Claims How Arcani’s HARK Is Designed For Modern Battlefield Acoustics The Newest Trend In Tech Embraces Femininity And Fun Samsung’s 75R95H Ushers In A New World Of LCD TVs New Apple iPhone Fold Design Pushes Smartphone Rivals To Go Wider And Taller iPhone 18 Pro Report: Four New Colors Leak As Apple Cancels Popular Shade Nothing’s Design-Led Strategy: Carl Pei Reveals The Tech Brand’s Philosophy iOS 26.5 Release Date: When To Expect Your iPhone Messaging Upgrade Google Pixel And Highsnobiety Build A Talent Pipeline For Fashion Android Circuit: Samsung Raises Galaxy Prices, Oppo Pad Mini Teased, Microsoft Closing Outlook App Apple Loop: iPhone Fold Launch Dates, iPad Air Upgrade, iPhone 18 Pro Specs Comcast $117.5 Million Breach Settlement — Are You Eligible? Amazfit Cheetah 2 Pro Takes Aim At The Garmin Audience Disney’s Launches ‘Infinity Vision’ Certification For Premium Theaters SoundPeats Reveals New Air6 HS Semi-Open Wireless Earbuds Amazon’s $11.57 Billion Leap Into Space: A Challenge To Starlink Meta Quest 3 Hit With $100 Price Increase Backblaze Stops Backing Up Dropbox And Others—Calls It An Improvement ‘Technically Hard To Do’: Why Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra Privacy Display Is A Global First Ulanzi Launches D200X Creative Deck To Challenge Logitech And Elgato Plugable’s New 10-In-1 USB-C Hub Has Most Of The Ports You’ll Need AI Solved A Mathematical Problem That Had Stumped The World’s Best Minds For Decades RØDE Announces A Slew Of New Podcasting Innovations At NAB 2026 Samsung SmartThings Gets Smarter, Safer And More Personal Apple Announces Events In Run-Up To TCS London Marathon Apple Now Largest Smartphone Maker. Also, Samsung Now Largest Universal Announces 8-Movie ‘Steven Spielberg: The Spotlight Collection’ 4K Blu-Ray Boxset Denon Unveils Versatile New Living Room AV Receiver Google Android PIN Hackers Target 800 Apps During Attack Surge Canva AI 2.0 Launches With New Features And Conversational AI Govee’s New $450 Lightwall Brings RGBIC Effects Indoors And Out New Garmin Watch Is One Of The Most Expensive Yet The One Catch To Samsung’s New AirDrop-Style Sharing On Galaxy S26 World-First: Humanoid Robot On Live Industrial-Scale Electronics Production Line Cadence Teams With Nvidia And Google To Redefine AI System Engineering Dolby Files Lawsuit Against Barco Over HDR Patents Apple To Bring Major Upgrade To iPad Air In Months, Report Claims iPhone Setting Update—Stop FBI From Accessing Deleted Signal Messages GoPro Mission 1 Levels Up Action Cameras But One Mystery Remains Adobe Brings Chat To Firefly AI Assistant Across Creative Cloud Apps Sky Eyes Up Ring With Standalone Smart Home Launch Orico’s New X50 Thunderbolt 5 Compatible Enclosure Offers High-Speed Fanless Storage How 2,000 Tons Of Sand Stores 100 Megawatt-Hours And Slashes Carbon Emissions 70% iPhone’s Hidden Strength In The Rush To Wide Foldable Smartphones New Samsung Galaxy Price Shock Is Bad News For 2026 Buyers Can The Power Of AI Help You To Chat With Your Cat? Inside China’s Push To Build Birdlike Drones Sky Glass Air All-In-One Budget TV With Seamless Access To Sky Channels Booking.com Confirms Data Breach, Reservation PIN Codes Changed Google, DressX And The New Fashion AI Virtual Try-On Stack Why Major News Sites Are Blocking The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine iPhone Fold Release Date: New Report Details Frustrating Apple News Humanoid Robots’ 88% Fail Rate: Completing Home Tasks Why Your Next Smartphone Could Have Lower Specs And A Higher Price Apple iPhone Fold: Striking Design Revealed In Leaked Photos Here’s The Most Affordable Humanoid Robot You Can Buy Now Samsung’s Disappointing Price Update For Galaxy Phone Buyers Is It Time For Apple To Forget About The MacBook Air Oura Has Designed A Solution To A Big Smart Ring Problem Apple iPhone Fold: Striking Design Revealed In Leaked Photos Adobe Attacks Underway—Windows And Mac Users Given 72 Hours To Update iOS 26.4.1 Release: Crucial iPhone Feature Update Arrives, But No Security Fix Can’t Stand Liquid Glass? This New Hidden iPhone Setting Is A Game-Changer Android Circuit: Galaxy S27 Pro Emerges, Honor 600 Pre-Order Offers, Pixel 11 Display Leaks Apple Loop: iPhone 18 Pro Leak, Urgent iOS Update, MacBook Neo Issues The Costly Dream Of Space-Based AI Infrastructure Adobe Attacks Underway—Windows And Mac Users Given 72 Hours To Update New Google Security Warning For Android 14, 15 And 16 Users—Update Now Fosi Launches CD Player With Built-In DAC And Headphone Amplifier The Shift From Place To Performance In Workplace Design Dyson Just Launched A $99 Gadget: Meet The HushJet Mini Cool Fan Apple iOS 26.4.1 Unexpected New iPhone Software: Should You Upgrade? LG Announces All U.K. And Some U.S. Pricing For Its 2026 TV Range Google Brings New 2FA Bypass Protection To Chrome For Windows Users iOS 26.4.1 Release: Crucial iPhone Feature Update Arrives, But No Security Fix SiFive's $400M Round Signals A RISC-V Moment In AI Data Centers Google Issues Critical Update Alert For 3.5 Billion Chrome Users Apple Vision Pro Gets A Major Gaming Upgrade Disney Announces ‘Alice In Wonderland’ 4K Blu-Ray, Featuring An All-New 4K Restoration Surprise Galaxy S27 Leak Gives Samsung New Options Aqara Thermostat Hub W200: Matter Controller With Smart Heating Skills Now On Sale AI Transformation: No-One’s At The Wheel, Says 500-Company Study Insta360 Launches Screen For Taking Selfies With A Phone’s Rear Camera Apple iPhone Fold Gets New Release And Screen Confirmation Angry Hacker Drops Microsoft Zero-Day Exploit, 1 Billion Users Warned Artemis II Just Dropped Stunning Wallpapers For Your Phone Or PC New Amazon Hack Attack—Alert For 300 Million Users Apple’s 2026 Shake-Up: iPhone 18 Pro Leaks While iPhone Fold Steals The Show
These Robot Hands Can Literally Make You An Egg Scramble Breakfast
John Koetsier · 2026-05-07 · via Forbes - Consumer Tech
Screenshot of the Genesis AI robot hands making breakfast: cracking eggs, frying them, slicing tomatoes, adding salt, and more.

Screenshot of the Genesis AI robot hands making breakfast: cracking eggs, frying them, slicing tomatoes, adding salt, and more.

John Koetsier

For years, "robot hands" have meant one of two things: a parallel-jaw gripper that looks like a pair of pliers, or a stiff plastic mannequin claw bolted onto the wrist of a humanoid that could pose for a press photo but couldn’t actually do anything useful with its fingers. Newer hands on updated humanoid robots are better, of course, but you still see the immobile claws sometimes on robots that are showing off their dance moves or running a marathon, but not really doing any useful work.

That’s changing fast.

This morning, San Carlos and Paris-based startup Genesis AI emerged from “a year of quiet building” with GENE-26.5, what the company is calling "the first robotic brain to give robots human-level physical manipulation capabilities." The launch video — which is getting significant attention on X as I write this — shows a robot hand doing some seriously impressive things: cooking a 20-step meal with actions like cracking eggs, chopping tomatoes, adding salt, then serving a breakfast scramble alongside a drink it mixed. Then it switches gears and applies electrical tape to wires (!!!) and solves a Rubik’s cube. Importantly – according to Genesis AI – it’s working in fully autonomous mode and shown at 1x speed, not sped up like many robot videos.

It also grabs a straw out of a container, and separates a plastic cup from a stack of multiple others: something that is hard even for humans sometimes. It’s one of the most impressive robot manipulation demos I’ve ever seen, similar in some ways to Kyber Labs’ new robot hands.

"Manipulation is the most valuable problem in robotics," Genesis AI says. "It is also the hardest unsolved problem."

Backed by $105 million from Eclipse, Khosla Ventures, Bpifrance, Eric Schmidt, and Xavier Niel — one of France's largest early-stage rounds — Genesis is building the whole stack: a robotics-native foundation model, a 1:1 human-like robotic hand, a noninvasive data collection glove for capturing motion, force, and touch from human workers, and a simulator that compresses weeks of physical experiments into minutes. The pitch is that data has been the bottleneck for robotics foundation models, and the only way past it is to capture human dexterity directly, in the wild, at scale.

If the demo holds up outside a controlled environment, it's a genuinely big deal.

Here's the catch.

"Literally zero robot hands deployed right now"

A few weeks ago I sat down with Tyler Habowski and Yonatan Robbins, the co-founders of Kyber Labs, for a TechFirst episode about the hardware behind dexterous manipulation. Habowski came out of SpaceX. Robbins comes from medical devices and industrial design. They’ve built a hand that, in the demo videos they shared with me, also does some genuinely impressive things, and they share a similar perspective on the value of highly capable robot hands.

"There are literally zero robot hands deployed right now doing routine work," Habowski told me. "The best hands are hundreds of thousands of dollars, and they break all the time."

Ouch. That’s not what humanoid robot makers want to hear.

Or their investors.

We are in a moment where humanoid robotics companies are raising at multi-billion-dollar valuations, where Genesis is announcing the "endgame," where every other week a new demo video racks up millions of views. And a engineer who came out of SpaceX, who actually builds this stuff, says the installed base of dexterous robot hands doing real work in the real world is, functionally, zero.

That gap between what the demos show and what’s actually deployed is the most important gulf in robotics right now. It’s the gap that limits robotic SKU coverage and, therefore, limits robotic effectiveness in non-standardized applications. Fixing this with a durable solution immediately puts humanoid robots – and other kinds of robots – in the running for all kinds of higher-skill jobs.

But how you close this gap depends a lot on which problem you think you're solving.

Two bets on the same problem

In a way, Genesis AI and Kyber Labs are betting on opposite ends of the stack. Or, at least, they’ve approached the problem of dextrous manipulation from different directions.

Genesis’s bet is that the AI model is the moat. Build the best foundation model, feed it the largest and most diverse human dexterity dataset you can collect (via the glove), train against the fastest simulator ever built, and the hardware becomes a delivery mechanism. Their hand exists because they couldn’t buy what they needed, not because hardware is their focus. CEO Zhou Xian told TechCrunch the company "decided to go full stack" only after realizing they needed control over the hardware.

The endgame is general-purpose physical AI. The path is data plus compute, and data comes from hardware in motion.

Kyber’s bet started somewhere else: hardware first, software later.

"When I first wanted to build this company, I wanted to build the software," Habowski told me. "I was like, okay, great, let's get some software engineers together. Then I looked at what was available, and it was: the best hands are hundreds of thousands of dollars and they break all the time. So we needed to build our own hardware."

That hardware bet has a specific thesis behind it: humans aren't precise, we're force-driven.

"If I tell you to put your fingers 23.4 millimeters apart, you have no idea," Habowski said. "But if I tell you to apply just enough force to pick up a potato chip and not break it, you can do that all day long."

Most robot hands optimize for the wrong thing: they mimic the kinematics of a human hand (how it moves) without mimicking the actuation modality (how it feels and reacts). That’s why robot hands can look human in photos but feel rigid and clumsy in operation.

Kyber’s design strips out the gearboxes most hands rely on — "you can’t feel anything on the other side of a 300-to-1 gearbox" — and uses what they call torque-transparent actuation. The motors are the force sensors. The hand can detect a feather laid across a finger by measuring impedance in the motor itself: no tactile sensor required, and no expensive force-torque sensor stack.

The best part in a machine is no part, Habowski says: one of about a hundred SpaceX mindsets he absorbed by osmosis.

Kyber’s first commercial deployment isn’t a humanoid. It’s a stationary system at a clinical lab whose technicians sit at benches all day picking up pipettes, uncapping source tubes, mixing samples and following established procedures.

"We're not pitching magical general-purpose autonomy or the orb that will control all robots and do anything you could possibly ask it on day one," Habowski said. "We're pitching a path to get there that is much more pragmatic."

For now, that means no legs, no wheels, and no massive focus on a solve-it-all vision-language-action model. It’s just hands that work on an off-the-shelf arm, doing one job well.

Everyone knows we need to go beyond the demo

The Genesis AI demo is literally awesome. Who doesn’t want a humanoid that, in addition to cleaning up after us, can make us great-tasting and healthy meals?.

So GENE-26.5 looks a very meaningful capability jump, and Genesis AI’s data engine plus glove approach is a smart way to attack the data scarcity problem that is limiting robotics foundation models.

But what we also need is durability at reasonable cost. Genesis isn’t saying yet what their hand costs to manufacture, or how long it lasts under continuous load, or what the service model looks like. All of that matters. As Kyber Labs’ Yonatan Robbins told me: a robot hand has to cost less than the person doing the same job. A hand that needs replacing very week or month won’t result in a very affordable robot.

And a robotic hand has to do so many different things.

One that an executive talked to me a year ago: can a robot wash its hands? It’ll need to, after cracking eggs. No-one wants egg white on their vacuum cleaner handle, or, worse, front door knob.

I’m sure we’ll get there on both cost and capability, and maybe both Kyber Labs and Genesis AI will get there. But it’s likely to be a few generations down the road.

Genesis's bet is that a foundation model plus a great hand can clear that long tail. Kyber's bet is that you'll get to the long tail faster by deploying narrower, working hard at force-control hardware, and iterating on real data from real workbenches.

It’s possible both are correct.

The pottery class

I asked Habowski what breakthroughs the field still needs. Better motors? Better sensors? His answer surprised me.

"We need to deploy and iterate. We don't know what we need right now until you actually test."

He compared it to NASA versus SpaceX. NASA spent decades engineering the perfect rocket from every conceivable requirement, and built the Space Shuttle: a great rocket on some measures, with no iteration loop.

SpaceX iterated every single launch. "Through the first 50 launches, no two of those rockets were the same."

There’s a story I told them about a pottery class, probably from the book Art & Fear by Ted Orland and David Bayles. The teacher splits the class in two. One half is graded on quantity: just make as many pots as you can. The other half is graded on quality: make one perfect pot.

Surprise, surprise: at the end of the term, the best pots all come from the quantity group. They got better by making more, breaking more, learning from the wreckage.

That’s exactly Habowski’s point.

Robotic hands are somewhere between the perfect pot and the fiftieth pot. The Genesis demo is gorgeous. Kyber’s pipette-uncapping clinical lab system is also super-impressive. But both need to be in operation, whether it’son a workbench in a hospital lab running blood tests, or in a commercial-grade kitchen for a burger joint.

Both bets can be right. Both bets need more use, testing, data, learning, and iteration.

The endgame Genesis is gesturing at — general-purpose hands driven by a robotics-native foundation model — is probably the destination. But the path Kyber is describing — vertically integrated, narrow, deployed, iterating against actual customer workflows — might be more aligned to how you actually find out which parts you’re getting wrong.

Robot hands really are getting insanely good. Certainly in demos, in research labs and on a small number of carefully chosen workbenches.

The version where there are millions of them folding your laundry, prepping your eggs and threading the nuts in your car’s transmission is still gated by hardware that doesn’t break, software that generalizes, and unit economics that pencil out below the cost of a human.