Former Alphabet ‘moonshot’ robotics company Intrinsic is folding into Google

Former Alphabet ‘moonshot’ robotics company Intrinsic is folding into Google


Google is folding in former moonshot robotics software company Intrinsic as Alphabet tries to streamline its ambitions in the space.

After five and a half years developing its technology at Alphabet’s “moonshot factory” X, Intrinsic became an independent Alphabet company in its “Other Bets” division in July 2021. The Google parent company announced Wednesday that it will be folded into Google itself.

While hardware like robotic arms has become cheaper, programming them remains incredibly complex, often requiring hundreds of hours of manual coding by specialized engineers that can vary based on the particular robot.

Intrinsic’s flagship product Flowstate is a web-based platform that allows users to build robotic applications without having to write thousands of lines of code.

“Joining Google allows us to amplify our collective work across frontier AI spanning R&D through to deployment and daily operations enabling industrial use cases in manufacturing and logistics,” the company said in its announcement.

The company added that the platform will utilize Gemini models and Cloud and work closely with Google DeepMind.

This shift moves the software platform to a core enterprise priority so Google can better compete with rivals like Amazon and Tesla. It also shows the company is ready to scale its products while working more closely with Google’s AI teams.

In November, Intrinsic and Nvidia supplier Foxconn announced a partnership to deploy AI robots for electronics assembly in Foxconn’s U.S. factories.

Intrinsic CEO Wendy Tan White said in Wednesday’s announcement that by using Google’s AI and infrastructure, it can “unlock the promise of physical AI for a much broader set of manufacturing businesses and developers.”

Wendy Tan White, Intrinsic CEO: A Fortt Knox Conversation



Source

Nvidia’s forecast points to accelerating growth, as Vera Rubin starts hitting market
Technology

Nvidia’s forecast points to accelerating growth, as Vera Rubin starts hitting market

Jensen Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks during the 2026 CES event in Las Vegas, Nevada, US, on Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026. Siemens and Nvidia announced an expansion of their strategic partnership to develop industrial and physical AI solutions to bring AI-driven innovation to industrial workflow. Photographer: Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg via Getty Images Bloomberg […]

Read More
Nvidia keeps the AI party alive with a booming quarter and even better outlook
Technology

Nvidia keeps the AI party alive with a booming quarter and even better outlook

Nvidia on Wednesday delivered strong quarterly results to cap off its fiscal year, outdone only by the chip giant’s outlook for the current quarter, in a sign the AI boom continues apace. Revenue in the company’s fiscal 2026 fourth quarter increased 73% year over year to $68.13 billion, outpacing the $66.2 billion the Street was […]

Read More
Wall Street priced an AI apocalypse in software, but Jim Cramer says reality is less dire
Technology

Wall Street priced an AI apocalypse in software, but Jim Cramer says reality is less dire

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday that he believes plenty of software companies will survive the threat of AI disruption, rejecting the most doomsday predictions. Still, he cautioned that investors also shouldn’t hold their breathes for a return to the glory days when investors paid major premiums for their stocks. “The software companies are survivors. They […]

Read More