Microsoft Aims to Create Large Cutting-Edge AI Models By 2027 - Bloomberg.com
“We must deliver the absolute frontier,” Mustafa Suleyman, chief executive officer of Microsoft AI, said in an interview. “Certainly by 2027, the objective is to really get to state-of-the-art” across models that can respond to or generate text, images and...

Key takeaways
The most recent coverage shows the humanoid‑robot sector moving quickly toward large‑scale commercialisation. In China, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology rolled out its first national “Humanoid Robot and Embodied Intelligence Standard System (2026 Edition)” in late February, establishing six pillar standards that cover everything from neuromorphic computing to safety and ethics; the new rulebook is expected to streamline certification and accelerate market adoption. At the same time, Shanghai‑based Agibot announced on 30 March that it has produced its 10,000th humanoid unit, a milestone reached after tripling output in just three months, while rival UBTech is targeting 5,000 units in 2026 and 10,000 in 2027. Prices are falling sharply as well: Unitree Robotics reported that its average humanoid price dropped from about $85,000 in 2023 to roughly $25,000 in 2025, and broader market data now show a tiered price range from $16,000 for basic platforms up to $250,000 for advanced industrial models. Major manufacturers are also testing deployment in real‑world settings—BMW began piloting Hexagon’s wheeled humanoid at its Leipzig plant, and Amazon disclosed an acquisition of Fauna Robotics, a New York‑based developer of the Sprout research platform, signaling interest in personal‑robot applications. Together, these developments indicate that standards, volume production, and falling costs are converging to push humanoid robots from research labs into everyday industrial and consumer use.
“We must deliver the absolute frontier,” Mustafa Suleyman, chief executive officer of Microsoft AI, said in an interview. “Certainly by 2027, the objective is to really get to state-of-the-art” across models that can respond to or generate text, images and audio.
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Microsoft Aims to Create Large Cutting-Edge AI Models By 2027
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By Matt Day
Takeaways by Bloomberg AISubscribe
Microsoft Corp. aims to develop large, cutting-edge artificial intelligence models by next year, part of a push to build in-house alternatives to the most powerful AI tools from OpenAI and Anthropic.