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TIME Cover Story Offers Grounded Look at Figure 03's Ambitious Reality
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Exclusive Report Reveals Progress and Problems in Push for Domestic Humanoid
SUNNYVALE, CA – Just as Figure officially launches its Figure 03 humanoid, a TIME Magazine cover story has provided the public with the first candid, behind-the-scenes look at the ambitious startup. The article, titled "The Robot in Your Kitchen," tempers the hype of polished marketing videos with a sober assessment of the robot's current abilities and the immense challenges the company still faces on its path to putting a humanoid in every home.
The report by journalist Billy Perrigo, based on visits to Figure's headquarters and CEO Brett Adcock's home, details a company moving at incredible speed, fueled by over a billion dollars in funding and a vision of a "$40 trillion" labor market ripe for disruption. However, it also paints a picture of a technology that, while impressive, is still far from the seamless butler portrayed in promotional materials.
A Tale of Demos: Successes and Stumbles
TIME's reporting gives a rare glimpse into the day-to-day reality of training a general-purpose robot. While the Figure 03 demonstrated successful tasks like loading a dishwasher and a "memory" feature for locating hidden keys, the demonstrations were not without flaws.
The article describes instances where an older Figure 02, running the same "Helix" AI software as the new model, repeatedly failed to place a folded towel in a basket and dropped laundry on the floor, unable to recover from the error. Even the newly assembled Figure 03 struggled with folding T-shirts during a video shoot at Adcock's home.
These stumbles underscore the immense difficulty of robotics, particularly in handling unpredictable objects and recovering from mistakes—a reality often absent from carefully curated demo videos.

The "Data Fixes Everything" Strategy
According to the report, Figure's core strategy rests on the belief that its current limitations can be overcome with massive amounts of data. CEO Brett Adcock tells TIME that "data fixes almost all this at this point." The company is heavily investing in hiring human "pilots" who use VR headsets to perform tasks, generating first-person video to train the Helix AI.
However, the article also gives voice to skepticism within the robotics community. It quotes Rodney Brooks, co-founder of iRobot, who has argued that vision-only data is insufficient for teaching dexterity, suggesting the lack of advanced tactile feedback is a fundamental challenge.
Ambitious Timelines Meet Unsolved Challenges
While Figure's marketing has heavily featured domestic settings, Adcock admits to TIME that the Figure 03 is not ready for home deployment at launch. "We think we can get there in 2026, but it's a big push," he states, acknowledging that safety is "one of the hardest problems we face."
The article touches upon the profound safety and privacy implications of bringing these machines into private homes. Adcock confirms Figure has its own proprietary version of Asimov's laws of robotics but notes the company is still grappling with system safety, cybersecurity, and ensuring the robot's AI doesn't make harmful decisions. Furthermore, Adcock says the company plans to use data collected from robots in customer homes to train future models, raising significant privacy questions.
The TIME feature ultimately portrays Figure as a company at a critical juncture. It possesses immense funding, a clear vision, and has made undeniable progress in a short time. Yet, the story serves as a crucial reminder that the gap between a robot that can perform a task under supervision and one that can be trusted to work safely and reliably in the unpredictable chaos of the real world remains vast.