© Boston Dynamics The Boston Dynamics SpotMini, the former Alphabet unit's first commercial robot. |
[post_ads]Boston Dynamics, maker of uncannily agile robots, is poised to bring
its first commercial product to market — a small, dog-like robot called
the SpotMini.
The launch was announced in May, and founder Marc
Raibert recently said that by July of next year, Boston Dynamics will be
producing the SpotMini at the rate of around 1,000 units per year.
The broader goal, as reported by Inverse,
is to create a flexible platform for a variety of applications.
According to Raibert, SpotMini is currently being tested for use in
construction, delivery, security, and home assistance applications.
The SpotMini moves with the same weirdly smooth confidence as previous experimental Boston Dynamics robots with names like Cheetah, BigDog, and Spot.
Spot, the Mini’s closest ‘relative,’ stands at close to four feet and weights about 160 pounds. A video of Spot navigating stairs
and other complex terrain — and staying on its feet when kicked — has
been viewed nearly 19 million times on YouTube. Fascination with Boston
Dynamics’ creations is largely rooted in their agility, which can make
them seem shockingly like living creatures.
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Where
Boston Dynamics’ previous robots featured plenty of exposed wiring and
bare metal, the SpotMini has the sleek, finished design of a commercial
product — but those fearful of a robot uprising will still find plenty
of nightmare fuel.
At 3 feet high and around 55 pounds, the
SpotMini can go where larger robots can’t. Its optional snake-like arm,
which attaches where a real dog’s head would be, even lets SpotMini do
things like open doors. That trick is reminiscent of a certain pair of dextrous velociraptors
— and upping the eeriness factor even further, a SpotMini with its arm
folded bears an entirely unwelcome resemblance to the bloodthirsty “Dog Alien” Xenomorph from Alien 3.
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But
this robot is, we are assured, here to help — and you could soon cross
paths with it in many walks of life. According to Raibert, the same
expansion port used by the arm will support add-on tools for varied
applications, to be designed and produced by third parties. The original
Spot was used in package delivery experiments, and SpotMini could
provide a lower-risk alternative to the airborne delivery drones that
have been tested by companies like Amazon.
The expansion of Boston Dynamics’ ambitions comes about a year after what could be seen as a setback. After being acquired by Google in 2013, the search giant sold the robot maker to Japan’s SoftBank
in 2017. That decision seems to have been driven by uncertainty that
Boston Dynamics could produce a marketable product, at a moment when
Google was taking a more results-oriented stance toward its more
speculative projects.
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