TechBriefly
  • Tech
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Science
  • Geek
  • How to
  • About
    • About TechBriefly
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Languages
      • 中文 (Chinese)
      • Dansk
      • Deutsch
      • Español
      • English
      • Français
      • Nederlands
      • Italiano
      • 日本语 (Japanese)
      • 한국인 (Korean)
      • Norsk
      • Polski
      • Português
      • Pусский (Russian)
      • Suomalainen
      • Svenska
No Result
View All Result
TechBriefly
Home Tech Robotics
Stanford-led OpenMind is building a robot operating system

Stanford-led OpenMind is building a robot operating system

Backed by $20M OpenMind plans to test OM1 in homes starting with a fleet of robot dogs launching in September.

Aytun ÇelebibyAytun Çelebi
5 August 2025
in Robotics, Tech
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

OpenMind, a Silicon Valley-based company, is developing a foundational software layer named OM1, designed to function as an operating system for humanoid robots. The company aims to become the “Android” of robotics by providing open and hardware-agnostic software.

Founded in 2024 by Stanford professor Jan Liphardt, OpenMind recognizes that while robots have long performed repetitive tasks, the increasing development of humanoids for human-to-machine interactions, particularly in domestic settings, necessitates a new operating system that can “think more like a human.” Liphardt noted, “All of a sudden, this world is opening where machines are able to interact with humans in ways I’ve certainly never before seen.” He emphasized the company’s perspective as a “collaboration between machines and humans.”

On Monday, OpenMind unveiled FABRIC, a new protocol enabling robots to verify identity and share context and information with other robots. Liphardt highlighted that unlike humans, machines can learn almost instantly, and this connectivity will facilitate rapid training and information absorption. He provided the example of robots sharing data on different languages, allowing them to interact with a broader range of people without direct human instruction for each language. “Humans take it for granted that they can interact with any other human on Earth,” Liphardt stated, suggesting that machines will similarly require robust infrastructure for trust, communication, and coordination.

OpenMind is preparing to ship its initial fleet of 10 OM1-powered robotic dogs by September. Liphardt stressed the importance of deploying the technology and iterating based on user feedback. “We full well expect all the humans that will be hosting these quadrupeds, they’ll come back with a long list of things they didn’t like or they want,” he explained, underscoring the company’s commitment to rapid iteration and improvement.

The company recently secured $20 million in a funding round led by Pantera Capital, with additional participation from Ribbit, Coinbase Ventures, Pebblebed, and various strategic and angel investors. OpenMind’s immediate focus is on getting its technology into homes to gather feedback. Liphardt concluded, “The most important thing for us is to get robots out there and to get feedback. Our goal as a company is to do as many of these tests as we can, so that we can very rapidly identify the most interesting opportunities where the capabilities of the robots today are optimally matched against what humans are looking for.”

Tags: om1OpenMind
ShareTweet
Aytun Çelebi

Aytun Çelebi

Starting with coding on Commodore 64 in elementary school moving to web programming in his teenage years, Aytun has been around technology for over 30 years, and he has been a tech journalist for over 20 years now. He worked in many major Turkish outlets (newspapers, magazines, TV channels and websites) and managed some. Besides journalism, he worked as a copywriter and PR manager (for Lenovo, HP and many international brands ) in agencies. He founded his agency, Linkmedya in 2019 to execute his way of producing content. He is recently interested in AI, automation and MarTech.

Related Posts

Substack launches TV app for Apple and Google platforms

Substack launches TV app for Apple and Google platforms

23 January 2026
JBL enters the practice amp market with AI-driven Stem separation technology

JBL enters the practice amp market with AI-driven Stem separation technology

23 January 2026
Google Search adds “Personal Intelligence” to AI Mode

Google Search adds “Personal Intelligence” to AI Mode

23 January 2026
Anthropic redesigns hiring tests after Claude 4.5 “aces” human interview

Anthropic redesigns hiring tests after Claude 4.5 “aces” human interview

22 January 2026

LATEST

OpenAI appoints Barret Zoph to lead enterprise sales

Vimeo begins global staff reductions following Bending Spoons acquisition

LiveKit reaches unicorn status with $100 million in new funding

Substack launches TV app for Apple and Google platforms

Oracle and Silver Lake lead consortium in landmark TikTok US deal

JBL enters the practice amp market with AI-driven Stem separation technology

Google Search adds “Personal Intelligence” to AI Mode

Amazon set to launch second wave of corporate layoffs next week

Blue Origin’s New Glenn-3 mission to deploy AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird 7

Anthropic redesigns hiring tests after Claude 4.5 “aces” human interview

TechBriefly

© 2021 TechBriefly is a Linkmedya brand.

  • Tech
  • Business
  • Science
  • Geek
  • How to
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Contact
  • | Network Sites |
  • Digital Report
  • LeaderGamer

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Tech
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Science
  • Geek
  • How to
  • About
    • About TechBriefly
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Languages
      • 中文 (Chinese)
      • Dansk
      • Deutsch
      • Español
      • English
      • Français
      • Nederlands
      • Italiano
      • 日本语 (Japanese)
      • 한국인 (Korean)
      • Norsk
      • Polski
      • Português
      • Pусский (Russian)
      • Suomalainen
      • Svenska