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Built Robotics brings self-driving to construction

Built is taking the concepts and technology that others are using to build self-driving cars and adapting them for a whole different vertical: construction.

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Built is taking the concepts and technology that others are using to build self-driving cars and adapting them for a whole different vertical: construction.

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17 Comments

17 Comments

  1. Tony Ray

    April 25, 2019 at 12:42 am

    I just can’t see past all the people who will lose their jobs and livelihood. Love how he starts out with a lie about how they can’t find enough qualified people to operate a backhoe. Bulshit

    • Spooky

      April 25, 2019 at 7:37 pm

      Unfortunately they don’t care and obviously seem to have different concerns

    • General Lee N Knass /knot retired/

      April 26, 2019 at 6:05 pm

      Small businesses need help cost-cutting, whenever possible.
      But, “Big-Biz,” hell-bent on profit, could be taxed for eliminating jobs, to a degree.

    • The God Emperor of Mankind

      April 27, 2019 at 10:20 am

      M8, you need qualification to operate heavy machinery like that. If you don’t have it how do you expect to be hired for it?

  2. Stasis

    April 25, 2019 at 3:57 am

    Yip, that’s definitely getting hacked.

    • Daniel Nicklas V

      May 4, 2019 at 11:19 pm

      Hacking has never been and is not easy, and as the autonomy tech getting more and more mature it’s going to get progressively harder to mess it up, especially against larger companies with a lot of expertise like Tesla for example. Just look at how often Google is getting hacked, the military nowadays; those days are pretty much over. It has to be a very large effort now from a coordinated team backed up by a government in order for it to work; and where’s the incentive for such a large scale attack?

  3. Lytanshade

    April 25, 2019 at 3:57 am

    Yip, that’s definitely getting hacked.

  4. droneXfactor

    April 26, 2019 at 10:01 am

    Wow…… impressive

    • General Lee N Knass /knot retired/

      April 26, 2019 at 5:55 pm

      I imagined you commenting in a “non-excited monotone voice,” for some reason?

  5. General Lee N Knass /knot retired/

    April 26, 2019 at 5:44 pm

    *When did well paying jobs like that, become hard to fill?*
    If you’ve an IQ slightly higher than average, you can learn to use those, fairly easy.
    *I may’ve answered my own question?*

  6. 1234coolman

    April 27, 2019 at 12:59 am

    Hell yea!!! Make them work at night

  7. Hail Xenu

    April 27, 2019 at 3:34 pm

    This is going to put a lot of fat people out of work

    • Clint Brantley

      May 22, 2019 at 1:13 am

      No it’s not ..the labor shortage is too big and this is highly needed

  8. xL33CHx

    April 28, 2019 at 6:00 am

    “Hard to fill positions” hahaha They haven’t become hard to find workers at all! This is just what they say to make it sound like they aren’t developing them for anything other than making the CEO of mining companies huge money by NOT hiring humans. Robots are already driving all the trucks in the mines and cutting costs by not hiring humans there. human workforce being slashed by automation in australian mining industry by huge numbers in last 8 years due to automation. automation will have replaced 50% of the lower skilled workforce by 2029. Lesson: Learn robotics and programming.

    • Daniel Nicklas V

      May 4, 2019 at 11:09 pm

      Only a fraction of those that lose their jobs due to autonomy can have jobs in robotics and programming, and it’s not like it’s an easy field to begin with. This is why UBI and very possibly a rework of our entire money system and the idea of what is are going to be crucial to the stability in the west in the upcoming years.

  9. boson96

    April 30, 2019 at 4:28 pm

    If there were enough workers in the labour pool, there won’t be the economic push necessary to build these robots. It’s the same with truck drivers and the development of automated trucks.

    People underestimate how hard it is to do these jobs and the employees are hard to come by.

  10. Daniel Vela

    May 3, 2019 at 5:40 pm

    You show this to an operator who is making 3k a week, and he’ll flip he’s brains out.

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Science & Technology

Google just broke SEO. Here’s what replaces it. | Equity Podcast

Google I/O made it official: AI-generated answers are now front and center in search, and most brands have almost no visibility into how AI is describing them to their customers. For anyone who has spent years building a strategy around 10 blue links, the rules just changed in a pretty significant way. On this episode…

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Google I/O made it official: AI-generated answers are now front and center in search, and most brands have almost no visibility into how AI is describing them to their customers. For anyone who has spent years building a strategy around 10 blue links, the rules just changed in a pretty significant way.

On this episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Rebecca Bellan caught up with Matt Thompson, VP of partnerships at Scrunch, a startup positioning itself at the center of the AI search shift, to talk about what Google’s changes mean and marketers and founders should actually do about it.

Subscribe to Equity on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the casts. You also can follow Equity on X and Threads, at @EquityPod.

Chapters

00:00 Intro

01:15 Why Google is going all-in on AI search

03:25 Meet Scrunch

09:00 Personalized agents, shopping, and Google’s advantage

12:13 What advertisers need to track now

13:48 How websites become “agent ready”

15:34 AI search vs. traditional SEO

22:33 “Scrunching” webpages down for AI agents

23:47 Google’s SEO guidance vs. Scrunch’s approach

27:17 Why unique human content still matters

28:51 Advice for startups adapting to AI search

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SpaceX’s S-1 Claims a TAM as Large as the Annual US GDP

The SpaceX S-1 dropped, and the $28 trillion TAM claim inside is somehow not even the wildest part. The Equity podcast team breaks down what’s in the filing, and whether any of this math connects to reality.

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The SpaceX S-1 dropped, and the $28 trillion TAM claim inside is somehow not even the wildest part.

The Equity podcast team breaks down what’s in the filing, and whether any of this math connects to reality.

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SpaceX files to go public, and the math requires a little faith | Equity Podcast

The SpaceX S-1 is finally here, and the story it tells goes way further than rockets. The filing runs to 36 pages of risk factors alone, and the numbers inside match the ambition: a $28 trillion total addressable market, a pay package tied to establishing a Mars colony, and a valuation target that would make…

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The SpaceX S-1 is finally here, and the story it tells goes way further than rockets. The filing runs to 36 pages of risk factors alone, and the numbers inside match the ambition: a $28 trillion total addressable market, a pay package tied to establishing a Mars colony, and a valuation target that would make it the largest IPO in American history.

On this episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, and Sean O’Kane dig into the week’s biggest talent shakeups, acquisitions, and headlines — including what the filing actually says and whether any of this math connects to reality.

Subscribe to Equity on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the casts. You also can follow Equity on X and Threads, at @EquityPod.

Chapters:

00:00 Intro

3:28 NanoCo raises $12M seed for secure OpenClaw alternative

9:46 Anthropic acquires Stainless and hires Andrej Karpathy

15:12 The consumer backlash against AI being pushed by big tech

16:37 Google Search as you know it is changing as AI takes over

22:14 SpaceX’s S-1 is here

27:54 Is the $1.75 trillion valuation justified?

32:47 Outro

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