
Faraday Future is preparing for a busy June as the company continues shifting its public identity from electric vehicles toward humanoid robots, physical AI, and education.
In a weekly investor update, founder and global CEO YT Jia said Faraday Future will hold two major robotics events this month. The first is scheduled for June 16 at the company’s Los Angeles headquarters, where FF plans to introduce its EAI robotics education ecosystem strategy, an education product line, and several new EAI devices. The second is scheduled for June 22 at Automate in Chicago, where the company plans to debut its multi-form EAI robot lineup.
The bigger near-term story is education. Faraday Future said its robotics division has signed a strategic cooperation memorandum with Lynwood Unified School District in Los Angeles, along with a formal agreement for a robotics summer camp. According to the company, this is its first strategic cooperation inside the U.S. K-12 public school system.
The planned summer camp will include AI learning sessions, hands-on robotics practice, and student project showcases. Faraday Future is positioning the deal as a starting point for a broader education strategy that reaches both public school districts and family education customers.
That matters because Faraday Future is increasingly treating schools as an entry point for humanoid robotics. Instead of waiting for robots to become common in homes, the company is trying to introduce them through classrooms, camps, teacher programs, and young developer tools. The idea is that students do not just watch robots work. They learn to program them, train them, and build skills for future robot applications.
Faraday Future also said it has completed the first version of Create Studio, a motion capture and robot skill creation tool. The company says the tool is designed to make it easier for users to create robot movements, dances, performances, teaching interactions, and other behaviors. Another tool, EAI Soul, is in internal testing and is focused on building robot personas for business roles such as tech product sales, real estate sales, and financial services.
The company is framing all of this as part of its Three-in-One EAI ecosystem, built around physical devices, data, and an AI brain with an open developer platform. Faraday Future says this structure is meant to support real-world deployment and eventually create specialized robots for different industries.
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