[ExI] Google robots may pose challenge to Amazon drones

Eugen Leitl eugen at leitl.org
Wed Dec 4 13:12:42 UTC 2013


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-25212514

Google robots may pose challenge to Amazon drones

By Leo Kelion

Technology reporter

Meka M1 robot

Meka's M1 robot is one of the systems that has been acquired by Google

Google has revealed it has taken over seven robotics companies in the past
half a year and has begun hiring staff to develop its own product.

A spokesman confirmed the effort was being headed up by Andy Rubin, who was
previously in charge of the Android operating system.

The spokesman was unwilling to discuss what kind of robot was being
developed.

But the New York Times reports that at this stage Google does not plan to
sell the resulting product to consumers.

Schaft

Google has hired a team of Japanese engineers who make humanoid robots
Instead, the newspaper suggests, Google's robots could be paired with its
self-driving car research to help automate the delivery of goods to people's
doors.

It notes the company has recently begun a same-day grocery delivery service
in San Francisco and San Jose, called Google Shopping Express.

That would pitch the initiative against Amazon's Prime Air Project, which
envisages using drones to transport goods to its customers by air.

"Any description of what Andy and his team might actually create are
speculations of the author and the people he interviewed," said Google of the
NYT article.

One UK-based expert welcomed the news.

"This is a clear sign that days of personalised robotic technology entering
the mainstream market is imminent," said Prof Sethu Vijayakuma, director of
the Robotics Lab at the University of Edinburgh.

"Movement and sensing systems for robotics technology have made great
strides. Now, with mainstream companies like Google taking up the challenge,
other elements such as robust software integration, standardisation and
modular design will pick up pace."

Industrial Perception robot

Google now owns a company that makes a robot arm designed to handle packaged
goods The search giant's robotics project is based in Palo Alto, California,
and will have an office in Japan - one of the world's leading nations in the
field.

Speaking to the NYT, Mr Rubin said Google had a "10-year vision" for bringing
the effort to fruition.

"I feel with robotics it's a green field," he said.

"We're building hardware, we're building software. We're building systems, so
one team will be able to understand the whole stack."

Meka S2 robot head

Meka's parts have been developed with human-robot interactions in mind The
companies acquired by Google to jumpstart its effort are:

Autofuss - a San Francisco company that employed robotics to create adverts.
It has worked on several campaigns for Google's Nexus-branded products.

Bot & Dolly - a sister company to Autofuss that specialised in precise-motion
robotics and film-making. Its systems were used to make the film Gravity.

Holomni - a Mountain View, California-based company that specialised in
caster wheel modules that could accelerate a vehicle's motion in any
direction.

Industrial Perception - a Palo Alto-headquartered business that focused on
the use of 3D vision-guided robotic technologies to automate the loading and
unloading of trucks, and handle packages.

Meka Robotics - A spin-off from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) that built robot parts that appeared friendly and safe to humans. Its
products included heads with big eye sensors, arms and a "humanoid torso".

Redwood Robotics - a San Francisco-based company that focused on creating
next-generation robot arms for use in manufacturing, distribution and service
industries such as healthcare.

Schaft - a spin-off from the University of Tokyo that focused on the creation
and operation of humanoid robots.



More information about the extropy-chat mailing list