Xiaomi has strengthened its robotics division by hiring Zach Lu Zeyu, a former Tesla Optimus engineer, to lead its dexterous hand research and development.
Lu, whose expertise includes tactile sensing and dexterous grasping, joined the Beijing-based tech company last month, according to his LinkedIn profile.
With a doctorate in mechatronics, robotics, and automation engineering from the National University of Singapore, Lu brings a wealth of experience from globally renowned institutions, including internships at Johns Hopkins University and Tsinghua University. His appointment reflects Xiaomi’s growing ambition to position itself as a serious player in humanoid and dexterous robotics.
Xiaomi has recently ramped up recruitment for robotics roles, with over a dozen positions specifically for the dexterous hand project, alongside more than 200 other openings across its robotics division.
While the company has previously showcased humanoid prototypes, most notably the CyberOne robot in 2022, capable of simple greetings and handing objects, these developments remain largely experimental and primarily serve to demonstrate Xiaomi’s technological capabilities rather than generate immediate revenue.
The emphasis on hiring top-tier talent like Lu underscores Xiaomi’s commitment to long-term research and development rather than rapid product launches. Analysts suggest that these moves reflect the company’s ambition to bridge the gap between experimental humanoid systems and commercially viable robotics solutions.
Although Xiaomi’s humanoid robots like CyberOne have garnered attention, the company’s near-term robotics business is driven by industrial automation.
Its Beijing plant, capable of producing up to 10 million flagship phones annually, operates 24/7 with minimal human intervention. Using 96.8% self-built packaging equipment and fully in-house software, this “lights-out” facility exemplifies how Xiaomi leverages robotics to optimize efficiency and scale operations.
This industrial focus ensures that Xiaomi can demonstrate its robotics expertise while gradually refining technologies for more complex humanoid applications. The CyberOne project, therefore, remains a showcase of skill rather than a product designed for mass-market adoption.
In addition to physical robotics, Xiaomi has made strategic strides in AI with its MiMo-Embodied model, now available on Hugging Face and GitHub.
This open-source model allows robots to perceive and act through physical systems and has set state-of-the-art benchmarks in areas such as affordance prediction, task planning, and driving decision-making.
MiMo-Embodied’s versatility attracts interest from startups and automotive companies that seek production-ready embodied AI solutions without building foundational models from scratch. Public cloud providers can offer hosting and fine-tuning services, while simulation platform vendors can integrate the model into virtual environments for cross-domain robotics and autonomous driving applications.
Xiaomi’s hiring of Lu and expansion of its robotics team signals a deliberate, long-term investment in humanoid and dexterous robotics.
While immediate consumer products remain limited, the company’s combined focus on AI, automation, and research positions it to play a more significant role in the robotics industry in the coming years.
As Xiaomi continues to build capabilities in both hardware and software, industry watchers will be closely monitoring how these efforts translate into commercially viable robotics solutions. For now, the appointment of a Tesla-trained engineer highlights Xiaomi’s serious ambitions and its desire to compete with global leaders in robotics innovation.
The post Former Tesla Optimus Engineer Joins Xiaomi Robotics Team appeared first on CoinCentral.

![QQQ short term cycle nearing end; pullback likely to attract buyers [Video]](https://i0.wp.com/editorial.fxsstatic.com/images/i/Equity-Index_Nasdaq-2_Medium.jpg)