Red Rabbit Robotics develops autonomous humanoid robots designed to address labor shortages in manufacturing and supply chain operations. Led by co-CEOs Lingkang Zhang and David Goldberg, the US-based company is building general-purpose humanoid platforms capable of performing what it categorizes as dull, dangerous, and dirty jobs across manufacturing, logistics, packaging, and food sectors. The company's technical approach combines sophisticated sensors with advanced machine learning to enable robots to handle complex tasks requiring human-like precision and adaptability.
The company's flagship product, the RX1 humanoid robot, follows a development path that begins with remote teleoperation and progresses toward full autonomy. This staged approach allows the system to operate in real-world industrial environments while the autonomy capabilities mature. The platform is designed for continuous operation without the fatigue and error patterns associated with repetitive human labor. Red Rabbit's technical domains span humanoid robotics, sensors, advanced machine learning, teleoperation, robot autonomy, and industrial automation.
Red Rabbit Robotics has set an ambitious deployment target of one million humanoid robots, positioning its technology against a projected need for 3.8 million new manufacturing employees by 2033. The company estimates that nearly half of these positions may remain unfilled due to skills gaps. Its stated performance targets include operational costs at half that of human labor while delivering three times the productivity, though these represent mission-level goals rather than validated field metrics. The company frames its technology as a means to shift human workers toward creative and strategic roles while robots handle routine operational tasks.