Boston Dynamics fell out with Google over humanoid Atlas

Boston Dynamics fell out with Google over humanoid Atlas

Boston Dynamics fell out with Google over humanoid Atlas

When former Boston Dynamics employees released video of humanoid robot Atlas – walking unassisted over difficult terrain, such as rocks and snow – Google was reportedly displeased; despite the research receiving high praise from roboticists while wowing the public.And the real reason Google is selling off Boston Dynamics is, by and large, due to insiders telling Tech Insider that the robotics firm was unwilling to fall in line with the internet giant's vision of a consumer robot for the home.Google reportedly envisioned the firm as one of nine in a division called Replicant. Initially, under the guidance of Android co-founder Andy Rubin, the firms would continue with existing research and Google would see what ideas and innovations they came up with.

In October 2014 Rubin left the company, and by early 2015 – for the first time – Boston Dynamics' roboticists saw Google put the pressure on and try to direct the research towards a commercial product."That's when we first started seeing Google... actually trying to have leadership structure over all those robotic groups," a former employee said. "Where they're saying, 'Okay, what do you do? Are you mobility, are you vision?' and grouping them and directing them toward a commercial product space."When Google started to shepherd Boston Dynamics' roboticists towards creating a machine that helped out around the home and asked them to switch to electronics instead of hydraulics to make the robots quieter, many of the employees were unhappy. They started to resist pressure from Google to build a consumer product, and instead pursued their own research.

"I felt like the response in the Boston office was to put a higher wall up and protect their entity, rather than provide leadership out in California," another former employee said. "At the end of day what I saw was a sense of us and them instead of a we — we weren't part of Google; we were sort of a separate thing."According to Bloomberg, internal emails show Google feared the general public to be unreceptive to the teaming of the powerful Atlas humanoid with Google's impressive AI technologies – that perhaps it would associate the robot with the terrifying Skynet robots in Terminator