Physical Intelligence, the two-year-old, San Francisco-based robotics startup that has quietly become one of the most closely watched AI companies in the Bay Area, published new research Thursday showing that its latest model can direct robots to perform tasks they were never explicitly trained on — a capability the company’s own researchers say caught them off guard.
The new model, called π0.7, represents what the company describes as an early but meaningful step toward the long-sought goal of a general-purpose robot brain: One that can be pointed at an unfamiliar task, coached through it in plain language, and actually pull it off. If the findings hold up to scrutiny, they suggest that robotic AI may be approaching an inflection point similar to what the field saw with large language models — where capabilities begin compounding in ways that outpace what the underlying data would seem to predict.