Technology
Eve the robot can cook, clean and guard your home
Have you ever wished you had a helper who could do anything you asked, such as cleaning, cooking, shopping, tutoring, or even guarding your house? Well, now you can, thanks to 1X, the Norwegian company that created EVE, the humanoid robot that can perform a range of tasks.
CLICK TO GET KURT’S FREE CYBERGUY NEWSLETTER WITH SECURITY ALERTS, QUICK VIDEO TIPS, TECH REVIEWS, AND EASY HOW-TO’S TO MAKE YOU SMARTER
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
The humanoid robot, by the numbers
EVE is an advanced humanoid robot that looks and moves like a human but with some extra features. EVE is equipped with cameras and sensors to perceive and interact with its surroundings. Eve is 6 feet 2 inches tall, weighs 192 pounds, can travel 9 mph at its top speed, has a 33-pound carry capacity and can run six hours on a single one-hour charge.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Its mobility, dexterity, and balance allow it to navigate complex environments and manipulate objects effectively. EVE has wheels and gripper hands, so it can assist humans in various tasks such as cleaning and cooking.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How does the humanoid robot use AI?
EVE is a smart and versatile Android that uses a modified version of GPT-4, the same software that powers ChatGPT, to handle a variety of tasks. Whether you need a recipe suggestion, a dishwashing assistant or a cookie baker, EVE has got you covered.
With OpenAI’s backing, EVE is leading the way for a new generation of robots that can take care of our everyday chores in homes and warehouses. EVE can work independently, using artificial intelligence to navigate and perform tasks.
But what makes EVE truly amazing is its ability to see and create. EVE can scan your kitchen shelves and come up with delicious recipes based on the ingredients it finds. It uses GPT-4V software to process visual inputs and generate creative recipes. And it doesn’t stop there. EVE can also execute the recipes with its nimble ‘hands’ that are powered by rope-like muscles.
Eve the humanoid robot in the kitchen cooking (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
MORE: HOW THIS HUMANOID ROBOT LEARNED TO MAKE COFFEE BY WATCHING VIDEOS
How can the robot perform in different environments?
EVE is designed to help and excel in many different environments, such as:
1) At home: EVE can assist you with personal or professional needs, such as cleaning, cooking, and tutoring, using its human-like appearance and behavior to provide friendly and reliable service.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
2) Factories: EVE can assist with production, assembly, quality control, and maintenance tasks in factories, using its strength, precision, and sensors to handle materials and machines.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
3) Manufacturing: EVE can help with logistical tasks in manufacturing, such as loading, unloading, sorting and transporting goods, using its wheels and gripper hands to move and organize items.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
4) Buildings: EVE can navigate and keep watch at buildings, such as offices, hotels or malls, using its cameras and keypads to monitor and secure the premises. EVE can also interact with visitors and employees, using its natural language capabilities to greet, guide and assist them.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
MORE: GIANT TENNIS BALL-LOOKING AI ROBOT BALL DOUBLES AS A HOME HELPER AND PROJECTOR
How does the robot work with humans?
EVE works alongside trained human operators, who can control a fleet of up to 15 EVEs, tap into their cameras, and control their movement to take action from a distance. EVE operates autonomously by default, but it can report back to the operator if it detects an issue or needs guidance. The operator can then assume shared autonomy, which means they can take over EVE’s motor function when it’s time for a human to take action or make important decisions.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
MORE: THE NEXT GENERATION OF TESLA’S HUMANOID ROBOT MAKES ITS DEBUT
What are the benefits and challenges of humanoid androids?
Humanoid androids like EVE can automate repetitive, dangerous, or physically demanding tasks that humans traditionally handle. This can save time, money, and resources, as well as improve safety, quality, and efficiency.
Eve the humanoid robots in work environment (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Humanoid androids also pose some challenges and risks
Will human robots like EVE replace or complement human workers? Also, a big concern many of us have is how do we ensure humanoid androids are reliable and secure? It is important that the companies that manufacture them make sure they prevent them from malfunctioning or being hacked.
Eve the humanoid robot (1X Technologies) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
The company’s stance on responsible development and use of humanoid robots
1X believes that humanoid robots can create new opportunities for everyone’s benefit, as long as they are developed and used responsibly and ethically. 1X tests every EVE in real-world scenarios before they’re deployed, and ensures they comply with the highest standards of safety, quality, and privacy. 1X also provides training and support for human operators and users and encourages feedback and collaboration to improve EVE’s performance and functionality.
How can you get your hands on one of these robots?
If you are interested in getting EVE, whether one or a fleet, you can contact 1X and request a quote. 1X says it will assess your needs and preferences, and provide you with a customized solution that suits your budget and goals.
After purchasing EVE, your human robot is delivered to your location, where it is installed and activated by 1X technicians. You will also receive a user manual and a training session to learn how to operate and interact with EVE. You can also access 1X’s online platform, where you can monitor, update, and troubleshoot your EVEs, as well as contact 1X’s customer service if you have any questions or issues.
Kurt’s key takeaways
As you can see, EVE is a remarkable invention that has the possibility to revolutionize the way we live and work. EVE is not just a machine, but a companion that can help you with various tasks and challenges in your home or workplace. EVE is also a creative and intelligent AI robot that can learn and adapt to different situations and environments.
How do you feel about having a humanoid robot like Eve in your home or workplace? What tasks would you like Eve to help you with? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.
For more of my tech tips & security alerts, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by heading to Cyberguy.com/Newsletter.
Ask Kurt a question or let us know what stories you’d like us to cover.
Answers to the most asked CyberGuy questions:
Copyright 2024 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
Discord accidentally banned over 8,000 people for posting grids and other ‘benign’ images
Stanislav Vishnevskiy, Discord co-founder and chief technology officer, writes that the bug impacted around 200 users who posted “grid-like” pictures, in addition to about 8,000 people who posted “other benign images” since May 2026. “Everyone affected has now been unbanned,” Vishnevskiy says.
In a thread on X, Discord writes that its safety system is designed to flag content by “matching it against known harmful material.” This system can produce “false positives,” Discord explains, which is when an employee would step in to review the flagged content. But instead of just temporarily preventing the account from uploading content during the review, a glitch led its system to ban users entirely.
“When our staff reviewed and cleared those accounts, the same bug prevented the ban from being lifted automatically, so it just stayed in place,” Discord says.
Technology
Hoto’s PixelDrive screwdriver is down to $60, matching its best price
If your Prime Day purchases included a new desk, TV stand, bookshelf, or other furniture you still haven’t assembled, Hoto’s PixelDrive cordless screwdriver can help speed up the process. It’s currently on sale for $59.99 ($20 off) at Amazon, matching its best price to date.
From tightening loose screws on furniture to repairing electronics, the PixelDrive is designed to handle a wide range of household projects. Hoto includes 30 screwdriver bits that cover many of the most common screw types, all neatly organized in a small cylindrical case. It also offers six adjustable torque settings, allowing you to use less power when working with fragile electronics or increase it when putting together a desk, bookshelf, TV stand, or other furniture. You can also switch between a slower 80RPM mode for more precise work and a faster 200RPM mode with the press of a button.
Hoto also added several features that make assembling projects a little easier. A built-in display lets you quickly check your current torque setting and remaining battery life, while an integrated LED light helps illuminate dim spaces, whether you’re working under a desk or inside a cabinet. The rechargeable 2,000mAh battery also charges over USB-C, so you won’t need to keep buying disposable batteries.
Technology
Starship delivery robots leave campuses for cities
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Those little white robots that once rolled across college sidewalks with lattes, fries and late-night snacks are getting a new assignment. Starship Technologies recently announced that it will wind down its U.S. university campus operations and redeploy more than 1,200 robots toward grocery chains and hot food delivery in cities across the United States and Europe.
If you have ever watched one of these robots patiently wait at a crosswalk like a polite cooler on wheels, you know why students got attached. They became part campus convenience, part mascot. Now, the company is moving from a controlled campus setting into a much tougher public test.
CHINA‘S ROBOT-RUN HOTEL OPENS TO PUBLIC IN 2027
That raises the bigger question: will these cute campus robots be just as welcome when they start sharing crowded city sidewalks with you?
Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report
- Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.
- For simple, real-world ways to spot scams early and stay protected, visit CyberGuy.com – trusted by millions who watch CyberGuy on TV daily.
- Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide free when you join.
Starship is winding down U.S. campus robot operations as it expands grocery delivery in the U.S. and Europe. (Starship)
Why Starship is pulling robots from college campuses
Starship says the decision comes down to focus. The company says its grocery delivery operations are on a 10x growth trajectory over the next two years, driven by demand from major retailers in the United States and Europe.
In Finland, Starship says its robots already complete roughly one in five grocery deliveries. That gives the company a real-world model it wants to repeat elsewhere. To support that expansion, more than 1,200 robots from U.S. campus fleets will be moved into grocery delivery. For Starship, that is a major pivot. Campuses helped the company build its brand in the U.S. They also gave the robots a place to learn.
Why college campuses were the perfect robot testing ground
Starship made a big U.S. splash at George Mason University in 2019, when the school became the first U.S. university to offer autonomous robot deliveries from Starship. From there, the robots spread to dozens of campuses. That made sense. College students are often hungry at odd hours. Many live without a full kitchen. They also tend to be open to new tech, especially when it brings food to the dorm without small talk.
During the pandemic, contactless delivery became even more appealing. A robot that could roll up with lunch while limiting person-to-person contact suddenly felt useful in a very different way.
The campus pullback will not happen overnight
Starship says it has worked with its university campuses and industry partners to keep service running through the 2026–2027 back-to-school season, with transition plans in place to reduce disruption. So, this does not appear to be an instant shutdown where every campus robot disappears at once. Instead, the company is moving away from the university model while preparing its fleet for a bigger push into grocery and restaurant delivery.
For students who loved the bots, it may still feel like the end of an era. For Starship, though, it is a move toward the market where the company believes the economics are stronger. Starship CEO and co-founder Ahti Heinla says the company’s robots can deliver groceries at a cost $3-$4 lower per delivery than traditional courier fulfillment. That is the kind of claim that gets the attention of retailers trying to make last-mile delivery less expensive.
ZOOX ROBOTAXI REDESIGN BRINGS BIG RIDER UPGRADES
Why city sidewalks could be a tougher test
The next phase could get messy. Delivery robots have to share sidewalks with people who are walking, pushing strollers, using wheelchairs, carrying groceries or trying to catch a bus. That means every design choice matters. A robot that blocks a curb ramp can create a real problem. A robot that pauses in the wrong spot can turn from cute to irritating fast. If one reverses unexpectedly or gets stuck near a crosswalk, the novelty wears off even faster.
There have already been warning signs. Reports have described delivery robots bumping into people, getting stuck in odd places and raising accessibility concerns. Chicago has also seen local pushback and safety concerns around sidewalk delivery robots, which shows Starship still has work to do if it wants city residents to embrace them. That is the challenge Starship now faces. The same robot that felt charming on a campus may feel like clutter on a narrow sidewalk.
Starship Technologies is shifting more than 1,200 campus delivery robots to grocery and restaurant deliveries in cities. (Starship)
What grocery delivery changes
Grocery delivery is a different business from campus food delivery. A college order might be a sandwich, a soda or a late-night snack. A grocery run can involve heavier items, more frequent routes and customers who expect reliability every time. If Starship can make that work, the payoff could be huge. Grocery stores want cheaper local delivery. Customers want speed without sky-high fees. Cities want fewer cars clogging short delivery routes.
Starship says the global food delivery market is now worth $650 billion and needs delivery systems with higher autonomy levels. The company also says it has completed more than 10 million deliveries, which gives it a sizable head start in the sidewalk robot category.
However, the public will need convincing. People may welcome a robot bringing milk and eggs on a rainy night. They may also get annoyed if that same robot blocks a sidewalk during the morning rush. That will all decide whether sidewalk robots become normal or face more local limits.
Why Estonia still matters to Starship
Starship was founded in Tallinn, Estonia, in 2014 by Ahti Heinla and Janus Friis. Estonia remains home to the company’s core engineering and AI development team. That is important because this shift is not only about where the robots operate.
The big question for robot delivery
Starship’s move shows where the delivery robot business is headed. College campuses helped make the robots likable. Grocery delivery may determine whether they become profitable. Still, the sidewalks belong to the public. That means companies need more than clever machines. They need trust, clear rules and designs that respect people who move through cities in different ways.
A delivery robot should never make a sidewalk harder to use for someone with a cane, stroller or wheelchair. It should not turn public space into an obstacle course. If companies want these robots to feel normal, they need to prove they can operate without making daily life more frustrating.
ARE HUMANOID ROBOTS NOW COMING FOR RETAIL JOBS?
Starship says grocery delivery demand is pushing its robot fleet from college campuses into urban neighborhoods. (Starship)
What this means to you
You may start seeing more delivery robots near grocery stores, restaurants and apartment-heavy neighborhoods. If that happens, pay attention to how they behave in your area. Look for whether they yield to pedestrians, avoid curb ramps and handle crowded sidewalks well. Also, check whether your city has rules for personal delivery devices. Some places allow pilot programs, while others limit where these robots can operate.
If a robot causes a problem, document it safely. Take a photo or video, note the location and report it to your city or the delivery company. That is important because local officials need real examples, not vague frustration, when they decide what rules should apply. There is also a privacy angle. These robots use sensors and cameras to navigate. Companies may say the data supports safe operation, but you still deserve clear answers about what gets collected, how long it is kept and whether law enforcement can request it.
Watch the CyberGuy Live replay: Lock Down Your Phone in 30 Minutes
Your phone holds your email, passwords, photos, banking apps and personal data. In this free CyberGuy Live replay, Kurt the CyberGuy walks you step by step through simple phone security fixes you can do at your own pace. You’ll learn how to improve your privacy settings, spot the latest phone scams, use trusted security tools and walk away with a simple checklist to stay protected. Watch the replay and get our checklist here: CyberGuyLive.com
Kurt’s key takeaways
Starship’s campus exit feels like the end of a quirky era, especially for students who got used to seeing the little robots rolling around campus. But this shift also tells us something bigger about where autonomous delivery is going. The next battle will happen on city sidewalks, not college campuses. If these robots save money and reduce short car trips, they could become very useful. But if they crowd walkways or create safety headaches, people will push back hard. To me, the real test is pretty clear. Robot delivery needs to work for everyone on the sidewalk, including people who never ordered anything.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Would you be ok with a delivery robot on your block, or would you rather keep your sidewalks robot-free? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.
Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report
- Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.
- For simple, real-world ways to spot scams early and stay protected, visit CyberGuy.com – trusted by millions who watch CyberGuy on TV daily.
- Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide free when you join.
Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
-
Kentucky5 minutes agoFormer Kentucky guard Quade Green joins La Familia
-
Louisiana8 minutes agoLooking for a luxurious place to stay? These are Louisiana’s 6 best resorts
-
Maine13 minutes agoLeslie Marshall urges Democrat Graham Plattner to exit Maine Senate race amid allegations | Fox News Video
-
Michigan23 minutes agoMichigan religious leaders speak against what they say are voter intimidation efforts
-
Massachusetts28 minutes agoICE detentions rise in Massachusetts amid World Cup festivities
-
Minnesota35 minutes agoMan accused of attacking woman in Midwest Bank parking lot at gunpoint
-
Mississippi38 minutes agoJabil to invest $119 million in Marshall County, create 2,200 jobs
-
Missouri50 minutes agoExplosion reported after Missouri school employee hits firework with lawn mower