The Niagara Falls Review

For sale: one robot in search of a job

But still, it is not entirely clear what someone would do with one of these robots

- CADE METZ AND MAX AGUILERA-HELLWEG The New York Times

WALTHAM, MASS. — Moving like a large dog, knees bent and hips swaying, the robot walked across a parking lot and into a rain puddle.

There, it danced a jig, splashing water across the asphalt. Then it turned and trotted toward a brick building, climbing over a curb and stopping within inches of a floor-length window. Pausing for several seconds, it seemed to eye its own reflection in the glass.

The scene was mesmerizin­g — so mesmerizin­g, it was easy to forget that a woman was guiding the four-legged machine from across the parking lot, a joystick in her hands and a laptop computer strapped to her waist.

The robot was called SpotMini. It was designed by Boston Dynamics, a company widely known for building machines that move like animals and humans. Thanks to a steady stream of YouTube videos from the otherwise secretive robotics lab, its machines have become an internet phenomenon.

But YouTube fame has not translated to very much revenue. In the coming year, Boston Dynamics, which was founded in 1992, plans to start selling the SpotMini, its first commercial robot. The mechanical dog would be a turning point for an outfit that has bewildered people with both its wondrous technology and its seeming lack of interest in making things someone — anyone — would actually want to buy.

Even now, it is not entirely clear what someone would do with one of these robots. That makes it hard to get past a question people have been asking about Boston Dynamics for years: Is this a business or a research lab?

“We think the technology has reached a point where it can be deployed productive­ly,” Marc Raibert, the company’s founder, said during a recent interview inside his robotics lab, about 10 miles from Boston. “But we don’t know what the big applicatio­n is.”

As the rest of the tech industry has focused on robotic cars and other contraptio­ns that can navigate roads and warehouse floors, Boston Dynamics, which is owned by the Japanese conglomera­te SoftBank, has plugged away at machines that can walk through the woods, into a rock quarry, across your home.

“These robots can climb stairs,” said Sangbae Kim, a professor of mechanical engineerin­g at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology who is working on similar machines. “They can jump on a table.”

Though these machines are shockingly lifelike, they have limits. They can handle some tasks on their own, like spotting a curb and climbing over it. But when moving across unfamiliar spaces, like the parking lot outside the Boston Dynamics lab, they still need a human guide. In person, they stumble and fall more often than they do on YouTube.

Walking through the Boston Dynamics lab, Raibert, 68, wore blue jeans and a Hawaiian shirt, as he does nearly every day. He wants to build robots that can do what humans and animals can do.

No machine comes closer to his vision than Atlas, a 165-pound anthropomo­rphic robot that can run, jump and even do back flips. Like the SpotMini, Atlas is controlled by a joystick, a laptop computer and a wireless radio.

At Boston Dynamics, Raibert wants to sell robots to businesses, government­s and all sorts of other customers.

He calls himself “a lifer” in his quest to build machines that can do everything animals and humans can do. And if that means finding a way to make money from his experiment­s along the way, so be it.

 ?? MAX AGUILERA-HELLWEG THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? SpotMini, a robot that Boston Dynamics plans to begin selling in the coming year, inspects an object under a desk during a demonstrat­ion.
MAX AGUILERA-HELLWEG THE NEW YORK TIMES SpotMini, a robot that Boston Dynamics plans to begin selling in the coming year, inspects an object under a desk during a demonstrat­ion.

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