Meet Memo, a home robot that doesnโ€™t try to be your new metallic overlord.

A stylized robot character with a rounded body and an orange cap, set against a light background.

Instead, it rolls around like a cheerful animated sidekick, complete with a wide base and a playful cartoon cap that makes it feel more like a character than a machine. Itโ€™s immediately disarming in the best way.

A humanoid robot with a blue cap is serving two cocktail glasses while standing in a kitchen setting.
With a rolling, weighted base, and a telescoping pedestal design, Memo is unlike many other humanoid robots.

Whatโ€™s refreshing about Memo is that itโ€™s built for real life, not for a glossy tech demo.

Close-up of a cheerful home robot with a white body and an orange bucket hat, resembling a playful character rather than a machine.
Offered with a range of cap styles, there’s some serious charm happening here.

If you believe all of the marketing, it can clear dishes, help fold laundry, pick things up, and generally act like the worldโ€™s most patient little helper.

And, Memo is doing so fully autonomously, unlike a number of other humanoid robots.

Sunday Robotics trained it using a special sensor glove in hundreds of actual homes, which means itโ€™s unbothered by messy kitchens, kidsโ€™ toys on the floor, or the general chaos that most robots would panic over.

Memo has seen things.

A robot with arms is serving drinks at a dining table set with plates and utensils in a modern home environment.

In an increasingly crowded field of humanoid robots trying (and often failing) to mimic us, Memo stands out by embracing its own oddball charm.

It doesnโ€™t pretend to be human, it just tries to be helpful, reliable, and a tiny bit adorable.

And honestly, that might be the future of home robots: not tall, sleek androids, but friendly, hardworking characters you wouldnโ€™t mind sharing a house with.

A humanoid robot with white and red arms is seen placing a plate of food on a kitchen counter, surrounded by cooking utensils and a plant in the background.

Founded by Stanford PhD roboticists Tony Zhao (CEO) and Cheng Chi (CTO), they have assembled a small yet impressive team that claims their robot can learn home skills faster than any other robot out there.

Sunday Robotics, is gearing up for a late-2026 beta launch, offering real household help thanks to a unique training system that captures human movements in hundreds of real homes.

The company says each unit currently costs about $20,000 to build by hand, though they expect mass production to cut that figure by at least half, with final pricing still unannounced. 

A friendly robot named Memo, with a white body and orange accents, interacting with a kitchen appliance.
A robot with a red cap is loading a dishwasher in a modern kitchen, featuring white cabinets and a wooden countertop.

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1 Comment

  1. butterfly9591

    I need one of these so helpful

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