Building TARS from Interstellar in real life episode artwork

EPISODE · Dec 19, 2025 · 21 MIN

Building TARS from Interstellar in real life

from TechFirst with John Koetsier · host John Koetsier

What if someone actually built TARS from Interstellar—and discovered it really could work?In this episode of TechFirst, host John Koetsier sits down with Aditya Sripada, a robotics engineer at Nimble, who turned a late-night hobby into a serious research project: a real, working mini-version of TARS, the iconic robot from Interstellar.Aditya walks through why TARS’s strange, flat form factor isn’t just cinematic flair—and how it enables both walking and rolling, one of the most energy-efficient ways for robots to move. We dive into leg-length modulation, passive dynamics, rimless wheel theory, and why science fiction quietly shapes real robotics more than most engineers admit.Along the way, Aditya explains what he learned by challenging his own assumptions, how the project connects to modern humanoid and warehouse robots, and why reliability—not flash—is the hardest problem in robotics today. He also previews his next ambitious project: building a real-world version of Baymax, exploring soft robotics and safer human-robot interaction.This is a deep, accessible conversation at the intersection of science fiction, physics, and real-world robotics—and a reminder that sometimes the ideas we dismiss as “impossible” just haven’t been built yet.⸻GuestAditya SripadaRobotics Engineer, NimbleResearcher in legged locomotion, humanoids, and unconventional robot form factors⸻If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe for more deep dives into technology, robotics, and innovation:👉 https://techfirst.substack.com⸻Chapters:00:00 – TARS in Real Life: Why Interstellar’s Robot Still Fascinates Us01:00 – Why Building TARS Seemed Physically Impossible02:00 – From Weekend Hobby to Serious Robotics Research03:00 – How Science Fiction Quietly Shapes Real Robot Design04:00 – Walking vs Rolling: Why TARS Uses Both05:00 – Why Simple Robots Can Beat Complex Humanoids06:00 – Turning Legs into a Wheel: The Rolling Mechanism Explained07:00 – Leg-Length Modulation and Passive Dynamics08:00 – Inside the Actuators: Degrees of Freedom and Compact Design09:00 – Why TARS’s Arms Don’t Really Make Sense10:30 – Lessons Learned: Never Dismiss “Impossible” Ideas12:00 – Rimless Wheels, Gaits, and Robotics Theory13:00 – What This Project Taught Him at Nimble14:00 – What “Super-Humanoid” Robots Actually Mean15:30 – Why Reliability Matters More Than Flashy Demos16:30 – TARS as a Research Platform, Not a Product17:30 – From TARS to Baymax: Exploring Soft Robotics19:00 – Can We Build Safer, Friendlier Humanoid Robots?20:30 – What’s Next: Recreating Baymax in Real Life21:30 – Final Thoughts and Wrap-Up

What if someone actually built TARS from Interstellar—and discovered it really could work?In this episode of TechFirst, host John Koetsier sits down with Aditya Sripada, a robotics engineer at Nimble, who turned a late-night hobby into a serious research project: a real, working mini-version of TARS, the iconic robot from Interstellar.Aditya walks through why TARS’s strange, flat form factor isn’t just cinematic flair—and how it enables both walking and rolling, one of the most energy-efficient ways for robots to move. We dive into leg-length modulation, passive dynamics, rimless wheel theory, and why science fiction quietly shapes real robotics more than most engineers admit.Along the way, Aditya explains what he learned by challenging his own assumptions, how the project connects to modern humanoid and warehouse robots, and why reliability—not flash—is the hardest problem in robotics today. He also previews his next ambitious project: building a real-world version of Baymax, exploring soft robotics and safer human-robot interaction.This is a deep, accessible conversation at the intersection of science fiction, physics, and real-world robotics—and a reminder that sometimes the ideas we dismiss as “impossible” just haven’t been built yet.⸻GuestAditya SripadaRobotics Engineer, NimbleResearcher in legged locomotion, humanoids, and unconventional robot form factors⸻If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe for more deep dives into technology, robotics, and innovation:👉 https://techfirst.substack.com⸻Chapters:00:00 – TARS in Real Life: Why Interstellar’s Robot Still Fascinates Us01:00 – Why Building TARS Seemed Physically Impossible02:00 – From Weekend Hobby to Serious Robotics Research03:00 – How Science Fiction Quietly Shapes Real Robot Design04:00 – Walking vs Rolling: Why TARS Uses Both05:00 – Why Simple Robots Can Beat Complex Humanoids06:00 – Turning Legs into a Wheel: The Rolling Mechanism Explained07:00 – Leg-Length Modulation and Passive Dynamics08:00 – Inside the Actuators: Degrees of Freedom and Compact Design09:00 – Why TARS’s Arms Don’t Really Make Sense10:30 – Lessons Learned: Never Dismiss “Impossible” Ideas12:00 – Rimless Wheels, Gaits, and Robotics Theory13:00 – What This Project Taught Him at Nimble14:00 – What “Super-Humanoid” Robots Actually Mean15:30 – Why Reliability Matters More Than Flashy Demos16:30 – TARS as a Research Platform, Not a Product17:30 – From TARS to Baymax: Exploring Soft Robotics19:00 – Can We Build Safer, Friendlier Humanoid Robots?20:30 – What’s Next: Recreating Baymax in Real Life21:30 – Final Thoughts and Wrap-Up

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Building TARS from Interstellar in real life

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This episode is 21 minutes long.

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This episode was published on December 19, 2025.

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What if someone actually built TARS from Interstellar—and discovered it really could work?In this episode of TechFirst, host John Koetsier sits down with Aditya Sripada, a robotics engineer at Nimble, who turned a late-night hobby into a serious...

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