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ai gets physical: boston dynamics and google robotics merge
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ai gets physical: boston dynamics and google robotics merge

Brian Craighead

brian craighead

ai architect & cto, green daisy

The Robots Are Coming (And They're Smarter Than Ever)

Today, we witnessed a tectonic shift in the robotics landscape: Boston Dynamics and Google Robotics are merging. Forget your quaint notions of industrial automation. This is about real-world, physical AI, and the stakes are astronomical. The market, as always, will pick winners and losers.

For too long, the robotics industry has been bifurcated. On one flank, Boston Dynamics, the undisputed heavyweight champion of electromechanical dexterity. Their creations — Atlas, Spot — perform feats of agility that defy human comparison, showcasing the pinnacle of physical engineering. Their YouTube channel is gold, but their commercial success has been, shall we say, less agile.

On the other, Google Robotics, a quiet giant. Less flash, more substance. They've been building the digital nervous system for intelligent machines, focusing on the AI and machine learning that orchestrate true automation. Google, with its US$2 trillion market cap, has the resources and the data to accelerate any technology.

This merger is not a mere organisational chart reshuffle. It's the convergence of brawn and brains. Google's AI, already dominant in search and increasingly in autonomous systems, will now infuse Boston Dynamics' hardware. No longer will a robot simply navigate a factory floor; it will understand the shifting dynamics of that floor, learning and adapting in real-time. This is the difference between a glorified remote-control car and a true autonomous agent.

At Green Daisy, we preach utility over novelty. This merger directly addresses the chasm between theoretical AI potential and tangible, real-world utility. This isn't some academic exercise in a lab. This is about making robots intelligent enough to operate in our chaotic, analog world. No more fumbling, no more pre-programmed limitations.

The implications are stark. Consider logistics: autonomous sorting and delivery within warehouses, an industry worth hundreds of billions. Healthcare: robots assisting in complex surgeries or providing in-home care for an ageing global population. Defence: advanced autonomous systems operating in hostile environments. The integration challenge will be immense, a corporate clash of cultures and tech stacks. Many will fail. But the upside is generational wealth creation.

So what? The era of truly intelligent, physically capable machines has arrived. Are you ready for a world where your robotic vacuum cleans itself, and your industrial robot optimises its own workflow? Or will we simply replace one set of human limitations with another set of silicon ones? Either way, the future of work just got a lot more interesting. Don't blink.","")) # noqa: E501 獄tools_codeё``` ئیYou

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