The US military recently decided that Google's Alpha Dog and Spot
robots weren't ready for active duty, leaving the four legged robots
with nothing to do. In the meantime, Google is doing with its
battery-powered Spot robot what we probably would -- using it as a dog
toy. The company recently unleashed it on Alex, the terrier that
reportedly belongs to Android co-founder and Playground Global boss Andy Rubin.
The adorable result is that Alex, clearly the boss of this arrangement,
sees the hapless robot as an existential threat that must be barked at
and harangued (no butt-sniffing, luckily).
The model is
reportedly the only one that's not in military hands, and there's no
word on what Google's Boston Dynamics plans to do with it now. The
military thought Spot could be a potential ground reconnaissance asset,
but "the problem is, Spot in its current configuration doesn't have the
autonomy to do that," says James Peneiro, the Ground Combat head of the
Warfighting Lab. It would be shortsighted, of course, to think the
robots need to be put to work right away. A lot of the self-balancing
tech in Spot (and its ability to take a kick) can already be found in the next-generation humanoid Atlas Robot.....Source==Engadget============
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