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1X Technologies Europe

1X Technologies is a Norwegian-American humanoid robotics manufacturer founded in 2014 (originally as Halodi Robotics) that produces the NEO home robot and earlier EVE platform. The NEO is priced at $20,000 upfront or $499/month, with first-year production of 10,000 units sold out and delivery planned for 2026, though current versions operate primarily under remote teleoperation rather than autonomous control.

Overview and Use Cases

1X Technologies develops humanoid robots intended for household applications. The company's primary product offering is the NEO home robot, which targets residential deployment. Earlier iterations include the EVE platform.

Current NEO units operate predominantly through remote teleoperation by human operators rather than autonomous behavior. Household task demonstrations have been performed by company personnel using virtual reality teleoperation systems. Early adopters receive robots that function in data-gathering capacity, with 1X operators monitoring homes through onboard cameras to collect information for future autonomous system development.

Key Capabilities

  • Remote teleoperation via virtual reality interface
  • Onboard camera systems for environmental monitoring and data collection
  • Physical platform for household task execution under operator control
  • Data gathering from residential deployments to inform autonomous system development

Specifications

  • Pricing: $20,000 upfront purchase or $499 monthly subscription
  • Production Capacity: Current manufacturing capacity of 10,000 units per year across facilities in Hayward, California and planned San Carlos facility; target capacity of 100,000 units annually by end of 2027
  • First-Generation Availability: 10,000 units for first-year production sold out; delivery scheduled for 2026
  • Control Method: Remote teleoperation; full autonomous capability stated as development goal

Manufacturer

1X Technologies was founded in 2014 by Bernt Øivind Børnich. The company was originally established under the name Halodi Robotics before adopting its current name. The company maintains operations across multiple manufacturing facilities in California.

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