Google’s Intrinsic could herald a new era of robots-as-a-service
Google is back in the robotics game with Intrinsic, a new spin-out that recently emerged from stealth mode promising to build a universal software platform for robots. This software could play a key role in lowering the barriers to entry when it comes to automation, and enable development of the robots-as-a-service model to make advanced machines more affordable for small companies.To get more news about Robotics as a Service, you can visit glprobotics.com official website.
Emanating from X, the special projects division of Google’s parent company, Alphabet, Intrinsic has been in development for five and a half years according to Wendy Tan-White, the company’s CEO.
“Intrinsic is working to unlock the creative and economic potential of industrial robotics for millions more businesses, entrepreneurs, and developers,” Tan-White said. “We’re developing software tools designed to make industrial robots (which are used to make everything from solar panels to cars) easier to use, less costly and more flexible, so that more people can use them to make new products, businesses and services.”
It is not the first time Google has made a foray into robotics. In 2013 it purchased Boston Dynamics – best known for its videos of acrobatic robots – before selling it to SoftBank four years later, after reportedly failing to earn its owner any revenue. If Intrinsic can deliver on its promises, its software could prove considerably more lucrative.
While robots have been deployed widely in some industries, such as automotive, for some time, others have been slower to adopt automation. “We’ve seen big fixed robots in cages battering cars for more than 40 years,” says Paul Miller, principal analyst at Forrester who focuses on smart manufacturing. “But when you move to other parts of manufacturing, where throughput is lower and variability is higher, using a robot becomes more problematic. At the moment, robots are very good at doing the same thing again and again, and they need to do it a lot to justify the investment.”
Miller says so-called ‘cobots’, which are designed to work alongside humans in a more flexible way, have been developed as a solution to this issue. But, he says, “our data show only 29% of manufacturers are using robotics in a meaningful way, so there’s a big market still to address.”
Not only is the deployment of robots in manufacturing limited in numbers, the vast majority of investment is coming from Asia, meaning manufacturers in other regions risk being left behind. Making systems easier to use could help to level the playing field.Professor Terje Kristoffer Lien is a robotics expert and professor emeritus at NTNU, the Norwegian university of science and technology. He agrees that small volume manufacturing remains a challenge when it comes to the economics of robotics. "Robots can do almost anything we need in manufacturing industries," he says. "But doing small batches is the primary barrier. In some cases, there's also the question of needing human oversight because the operation is so delicate or difficult that you can't trust a machine to do it. That's also a reason people are reluctant to use them."
Major players in the space, such as Swedish robotics giant ABB, are starting to address the flexibility issue, Miller says. "The big conversation at the moment is how you use robots alongside people," he says. "A lot of the early talk around robotics was about robots coming in to steal jobs, but in fact, the question is more about understanding how humans and robots can work together. That's why a lot of investment is going into easy-to-use interfaces which allow a shop-floor worker to show the robot what they want it to do."
What will Intrinsic do?
Intrinsic wants to provide one such interface. It is seeking to "take the logic of Silicon Valley and the platform economy, and apply it to industrial robots," says Rian Whitton, head of industrial, collaborative and commercial robotics research at ABI Research. "It wants to build a software platform that's applicable to all industrial robots, which will provide machine vision, planning, multi-robot control and no-code programming. I guess you could say it wants to be the Android [Google's operating system] for industrial robot control."
Having a simpler control system could make it easier for staff to re-program robots, meaning they could be used cost-effectively for smaller and more varied tasks. Whitton says the cost factor remains a big barrier for SMEs wanting to automate processes using robots. "When you're buying an industrial robot, you're not just buying the hardware itself," he says. "It's the installation costs, the redeployment costs, the maintenance costs. On top of that, they aren't always easy to use, and often small companies don't have the capital or the skills within their organisation to automate."