
Boston Dynamics is the company behind pretty much all of the scary robot videos on YouTube you’ve had nightmares about. But despite the company officially making us all feel like Terminator 2: Judgement Day is just around the corner, Alphabet Inc. has reportedly put the company up for sale, because it has been deemed unlikely to produce a marketable product in the next few years.
See also: From Android to robots: Andy Rubin moves on
Bloomberg reports that the reshuffle into Alphabet Inc. apparently has the mucky-mucks at Google putting its various holdings under the microscope and assessing them for profitability and their likelihood of generating “real revenue” from marketable products in the next few years.
Boston Dynamics certainly has huge potential, from military to government to corporate and domestic applications. But it looks like all that is just a little too far in the future for Alphabet’s new focus on immediate returns. It’s a way less sexy business outlook compared to Google’s famed “moonshots”, especially when you consider the robotics division of Boston Dynamics is now housed under X, Google’s infamous moonshot factory.
The Boston Dynamics story at Google
Under Andy Rubin’s direction, Google bought Boston Dynamics back in 2013 for $500 million dollars – not a bad investment when you think of how close the company is to to the cutting edge of robotics. But ever since Andy Rubin’s departure one year later, Boston Dynamics found itself without a leader and consequent conduit into Google’s ecosystem.
Tensions flared and everyone started to feel the friction. The robotics division of Boston Dynamics wasn’t able to produce a plan for a marketable product to be released in the next few years. Google demanded this to help offset the costs of the larger-scale, long-term robotics projects the team might need another decade to complete.
Eventually the robotics team was absorbed into Google[x] under Astro Teller and threatened with re-assignment “if robotics aren’t the practical solution to problems that Google was trying to solve”. I’ve spoken with Teller in the past and he has assured me the secret to Google[x]’s success is to fail fast and move on.
The problem is that Boston Dynamics itself wasn’t taken under Google[x]’s wing and, with no plan for a marketable product in the foreseeable future, it has been put up for sale. Right now it looks like the most likely suspects for purchasing the company are Amazon or the Toyota Research Institute. While Google may be backing off robotics in the short term, remember that the robotics engineers are staying at Google.
What do you think of this decision? Do you see Google coming back to robots eventually?
Source: ANDRIOD AUTHORITY