Profile · Technical enthusiast
Robots for technical enthusiasts and early adopters
Bybotix helps advanced buyers understand what is realistic today and what remains a prototype, a pilot or a very expensive learning experience.
Concrete projects
Situations to evaluate before choosing a robot
Learning robotics
Hands-on work with SDKs, ROS, perception and control.
Content creation
A robot as a strong visual and technical story.
Maker experiments
Testing teleoperation, AI models and small automation ideas.
Community demos
Meetups, talks and demonstrations with clear safety limits.
Home lab
A controlled workspace for learning without pretending the robot is domestic.
Open-source stack
A way to explore ROS, LeRobot, simulation and datasets with real hardware.
Robots to evaluate first
Robots to compare first
The most realistic first serious robot for an individual technical buyer.
Open the analysis High risk Unitree G1Spectacular, but budget, import, safety and support must be treated seriously.
Open the analysis Watchlist 1X NEOA major domestic-humanoid signal, not a normal consumer product yet.
Open the analysis Best learning path LeRobot SO-100A more realistic first step than a full humanoid for hands-on AI robotics.
Open the analysisOperational watch points
What to frame before signing
Home insurance
Check whether a mobile robot is covered at home, during transport, and when shown to visitors or filmed for content.
Visitors and children
Define a safe test zone, supervision rules and emergency stop access before any demo around non-technical people.
Noise and neighbours
Motors, foot impacts, fans and repeated tests can make a robot much less domestic than videos suggest.
Required space
A serious robot needs clear floor space, storage, charging, tools and a place where failed movements are not dangerous.
Power and batteries
Budget for batteries, charger compatibility, safe storage, replacement cycles and time between demos.
Outdoor use
Public outdoor use can raise traffic, privacy, filming, insurance and local-authority questions. Treat it as a supervised event, not a toy walk.
Project checklist
Seven questions before launching
- 01 Can I repair or troubleshoot it?
- 02 Can I afford downtime?
- 03 Do I understand the safety limits?
- 04 Is the software accessible?
- 05 Do I have a safe test space?
- 06 Am I buying a platform or a fantasy?
- 07 Do I need support in French or English?
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Bybotix helps qualify maturity, availability, compliance, cost and support before recommending a robot.