
Brett Adcock
Founder and CEO of Figure AI, the humanoid robotics company building AI-powered general-purpose robots for labor-intensive commercial and industrial work. He previously co-founded Archer Aviation and Vettery.
AI Competition Shifts From Models to Chips, Power, and Supply Chains
Bloomberg Technology framed the latest AI race less as a contest over individual products than as a fight over infrastructure constraints, from Nvidia chip export politics and U.S. semiconductor labor to cloud spending, energy, memory and data-center capacity. Ed Ludlow, Caroline Hyde and Bloomberg reporters treated Donald Trump’s discussion of Nvidia’s H200 chips with Xi Jinping as emblematic of that shift: significant for markets, but short of any clear export deal. The program’s interviews with Goldman Sachs’ Eric Sheridan, OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar and Figma CEO Dylan Field similarly argued that compute, distribution and ownership of the stack are becoming the decisive limits on AI growth.
Figure Claims 50-Hour Autonomous Humanoid Test Was Not Teleoperated
Figure chief executive Brett Adcock told Bloomberg that the company’s livestreamed humanoid package-sorting test is fully autonomous and not remotely operated, rejecting viewer claims that repeated hand motions suggested teleoperation. Adcock said the robots were running on Figure’s onboard Helix 2 neural network, had operated for close to 50 hours with little downtime, and had pushed nearly 60,000 packages through the line. He framed the demonstration as evidence that Figure is moving toward commercially useful, human-speed humanoid robots built through a vertically integrated hardware, manufacturing, data and AI stack.