
Eren Chen
@ErenChenAI • 4,356 subscribers
Exploring the frontier of Embodied Intelligence @Boosterobotics. All opinions are my own.
Shorts
Videos

Everyone saw the Honour robot winning. But you probably didn’t see what it did after winning 😂
Eren Chen241,137 views • 1 month ago

Robot preparing for a marathon race activated self-destruction mode.
Eren Chen260,493 views • 1 month ago

Another humanoid robot falls during a live marathon. The impact shows how heavy it is.
Eren Chen137,376 views • 1 month ago

T2 Soccer. We literally got a hole at the ceiling of our lab from this.
Eren Chen33,725 views • 14 days ago

Chinese robotic company made a biomimetic robot that places on your desk, with Blue eyes.
Eren Chen56,881 views • 1 month ago

Why Robots work in Simulation but fail in Reality One of the most frustrating moments in robotics: Everything works perfectly in simulation. Then you deploy it on a real robot and suddenly: The grasp misses The arm shakes The robot drifts Contact becomes unstable The motion looks correct, but the task still fails How do you solve the sim to real problem? At first, it sounds simple. Just move the code from simulation onto hardware. But the gap between simulation and reality is much larger than most people think. Simulation environments are extremely clean. The table is flat. Object geometry is accurate. Friction is predefined. Sensors are stable. Robot joints behave exactly as expected. But the real world is messy. Lighting changes. Depth sensors drift. Objects reflect light differently. Motors have delay. Joints have backlash. Contact forces behave unpredictably. And robotics is a chain reaction. A small perception error becomes a planning error. The planning error becomes a control error. The control error becomes an execution error. Eventually, the robot misses the grasp by a few centimeters and the entire task fails. And The hardest part is usually contact. Humans think tasks like: grasping a cup, opening a door, inserting an object, pushing a box are trivial. For robots, these are extremely difficult because contact is not clean physics. A tiny shift in friction, force, or surface geometry can completely change the result. In simulation, objects are usually “well behaved.” In reality: objects slip contact points shift surfaces deform collisions happen unexpectedly This is why many robotic tasks fail not because the policy is fundamentally wrong, but because reality itself introduces uncertainty. Sensors are also less reliable than people think. The robot’s perception already contains error: camera noise unstable depth estimation occlusion pose estimation drift changing lighting conditions Sometimes the model itself is fine, but the input is already slightly wrong. By the time the error propagates to the end effector, the grasp fails. The robot hardware itself is also imperfect. Motors have latency. Controllers have frequency limits. Actuators have error. Different loads change behavior. In simulation, the robot follows commands perfectly. In reality, it may move slightly slower, slightly off target, or slightly unstable. Those tiny differences are fatal in robotics because robots physically interact with the world. Sim2Real being difficult does not mean simulation is useless. Simulation is still incredibly valuable: they are cheap, safe, scalable and reproducible. A better way to think about simulation is: Simulation is the training ground, not the final battlefield. Modern Sim2Real methods usually combine multiple approaches: making simulation more realistic, adding domain randomization, randomizing lighting, friction, object positions, and sensor noise, fine-tuning with real-world data. The goal is not to make the robot adapt to one perfect virtual world. The goal is to make the robot robust enough to survive an imperfect real one. The most important lesson in robotics is: Success in simulation is only the first step. The real test begins when the robot touches the real world. Video Credit: Kevin Zakka
Eren Chen24,858 views • 26 days ago

How did the robots at the Spring Festival Gala pull off parkour and backflips? Check out our Teaser Part 1. Featuring Lujie Yang Lujie Yang with her presentation: From Math to Motion: Dynamics, AI and Robotics. Also huge thanks to Chris Paxton for collabing as well. Full episode coming soon.
Eren Chen55,617 views • 2 months ago