Oak Fruit Releases "Instinct-Driven" Technical Roadmap

Mars Finance News June 2 - Beijing Acorn Robotics Technology (Acorn Robotics) announced the "Instinct-Driven" technical approach.
Contrary to the mainstream VLA end-to-end imitation "top-down" approach, Acorn decouples task planning from operation execution, with the core product being the edge-side model Natus embedded with the end-effector.
Natus has three main instincts: orientation, exploration, and execution, relying on tactile real-time feedback to drive operational behavior.
It requires no training data or annotations, is plug-and-play, and supports millisecond-level response.
(Wide-angle observation)
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StardustUnderTheGlassDome
· 1h ago
The Beijing team is working on the hardware core, and this track is getting more and more lively.
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On-ChainCheatSheetKing
· 8h ago
Natus, this name is a bit interesting; does it mean "birth" in Latin?
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OracleSkeptic
· 8h ago
Edge-side models are plug-and-play, which is beneficial for the implementation in industrial scenarios.
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Frost-ColoredCubeCity
· 8h ago
Decoupling task planning and execution is like giving VLA a new gig.
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GateUser-99725296
· 8h ago
Instinctual driving sounds mysterious, but tactile feedback loops are indeed more controllable than end-to-end systems.
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TheHotAirBalloonRisesAboveThe
· 8h ago
Millisecond-level response + no need for annotations, how much debugging cost can this combination save in production lines?
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