Why Are We Still Talking About SSDs When Embodied AI Needs Better Memory?
Memorial Day sales are pushing cheap storage, but the real bottleneck for humanoid robots isn't hard drive space.
Crédito de imagen: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Have you noticed how every tech sale seems to center on the same stuff? SSDs, laptops, maybe a smart TV if you're lucky. I was scrolling through the Memorial Day deals from Amazon and Best Buy this week, and honestly, I found myself wondering: who is still buying terabytes of storage for their desktop PC in 2026?
Okay, that's a little unfair. Plenty of people need local storage. Gamers, video editors, anyone who doesn't trust the cloud (valid). But here's what struck me: we're in the middle of this massive push toward embodied AI, toward robots that need to process, learn, and remember in real time, and the consumer tech conversation is still stuck on "look, 2TB for $89."
The memory problem nobody's solving. When I talk to robotics engineers (which, tbh, is most of my week), storage rarely comes up as a pain point. What does? Memory architecture. The kind of memory that lets a humanoid robot recall that you moved the coffee mugs to a different shelf last Tuesday. The kind that handles continuous learning without catastrophic forgetting.
This isn't the same as slapping a bigger SSD into a chassis. It's a fundamentally different problem. And I'm not sure the consumer hardware industry is even thinking about it yet.
I initially thought this was just a matter of time. Moore's Law vibes, you know? Eventually the tech trickles down. But after reading more about how companies like Figure and 1X are approaching on-device learning, I'm less confident. The gap between what consumer storage does and what embodied AI needs feels like it's widening, not shrinking.
What humanoids actually need. Let me try to break this down, though I should be upfront: I'm not a hardware engineer. My understanding here comes from conversations and papers, not firsthand design experience.
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