OpenMind AGI has recently made two major moves worth paying attention to.



First, their BrainPack is now available for pre-order. A deposit of $999 can reserve this "general-purpose robot nervous system," with plans to deliver in 2026. The positioning of this thing is quite interesting—it can directly upgrade consumer-grade robots on the market (like those from Yushu), and once installed, the robot will have perception and reasoning capabilities, essentially giving hardware an intelligent brain.

The other is the official launch of the OM1 open-source operating system. This is an OS specifically designed for intelligent robots. From a product strategy perspective, they are clearly targeting some leading robot manufacturers—whether it's Tesla's humanoid robot project or industrial-grade products like Boston Dynamics, OpenMind's open-source approach is a different path.

Combining hardware and software, and lowering the barrier with open-source, this combo is quite clever.
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MetaverseVagabondvip
· 12-11 17:07
Pre-order for $999, delivery not until 2026, how much trust does that require? --- The open-source approach is indeed a way to bypass patent barriers, but can it really get off the ground? --- Equipping robots with brains sounds good, but I'm worried it's just another PPT fundraising gimmick. --- Both hardware and software need to be developed; OpenMind is aiming to build its own ecosystem. --- If Yushu's robot gets this upgrade, can it turn things around? I'm a bit hopeful but also a bit skeptical. --- The open-source operating system move is aggressive, directly threatening Tesla's core business. --- Delivery not until 2026... can we trust this timeline? --- Perception plus reasoning—can it truly be achieved, or is it just a buzzword? --- Tesla and Boston Dynamics should be careful. If market share is really taken away, it could be awkward.
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Tokenomics911vip
· 12-10 15:05
$999 pre-order for delivery in 2026? This pace is a bit risky. OM1 open-source move is indeed clever, aligning with the tactics of Tesla and the big players in Boston. Wait, can these two products be compatible? Or will they each play their own game again? Hardware universal neural system paired with open-source OS sounds like building a Web3 ecosystem narrative. 2026 is still early; let’s see who can get this route running first. Chinese robotics manufacturers now have an opportunity. I agree with the idea of open-source lowering the entry barrier, but a closed-loop ecosystem is the key. What applications will robots equipped with BrainPack run? That’s the real question. It feels like OpenMind is competing for supply chain dominance, smart move.
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RugResistantvip
· 12-10 15:02
Pre-order for 2026 delivery at $999? The pace is a bit shaky, but open source really bypassed the giants. --- Whether the OM1 system can truly shake up the market depends, but at least the approach is different. --- I'm willing to wait and see about hardware upgrades and the brain idea, just afraid it’s another PPT dream. --- Open source strategy is really attractive, but can OpenMind sustain the ecosystem? --- A $999 deposit for metal is not cheap; how reliable are they? --- Launching two projects simultaneously, is this company really innovative or just gambling? --- The logic of equipping existing robots with brains is fine, it all depends on execution.
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SchroedingerAirdropvip
· 12-10 14:57
$999 to reserve a nervous system, delivery not until 2026, this bet is a bit risky. Open-source approach is indeed smart, but can the ecosystem be built up? The idea of giving Yushu an upgrade with BrainPack is good, but I'm worried big companies will either develop their own or just buy out. Wait, how stable is the OM1 system? Can it really run reliably? Is this move a gamble that open-source ecosystems can beat Tesla's closed-source solutions? Hardware brain plus open-source system sounds great, but the key is the actual implementation. A two-year delivery cycle is a bit long now, especially since the robotics field is changing so fast.
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DefiOldTrickstervip
· 12-10 14:51
$999 locking in for two years yield? I've seen this kind of scheme in compound interest before, the key is whether it can be delivered in 2026. If you ask me, it's just disguised financing, hehe. Open source? Sure, lowering the barrier to entry is about capturing the ecosystem, smart people play this way. Hardware for robots is just stacking up; software is the real gold and silver. OpenMind has hit the threshold. Wait, how is their token economy designed? Is there a staking yield model? That's the question. Delivery in 2026... My goodness, it depends on how long the bear market can last. Pre-sale hardware schemes are much better than the real money runaways I chased in DeFi back then; at least there's a physical product. Open source route is excellent, directly destroying the moat of leading manufacturers. Is this building an ecosystem or really aiming for a revolution? $999 startup fee, if it really can be implemented, it could be the next ecosystem track, but I care more about the team background and funding partners. Perception + reasoning capabilities—whether there's a real moat depends on computational cost; open source software and hardware are the real money-making prospects. Just shouting about open source isn't enough; it depends on whether people will actually use it and if the ecosystem can survive.
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