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Not even Google's cleaning robots are safe from the tech industry's layoffs and cost-cutting efforts

Google sign outside San Francisco office
A Google office in San Francisco, California. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

  • Google is shutting down Everyday Robots, a subsidiary of parent company Alphabet. 
  • The company made over 100 robots that could perform simple cleaning and organizing tasks.
  • The decision was part cost-cutting efforts and layoffs announced last month, Wired reported.
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The recent string of layoffs hitting the tech industry is now stretching beyond just humans — it's also impacting robots. 

Google is shutting down a company that created and trained dozens of robots that performed simple tasks at the company's headquarters, spokespeople confirmed to Insider. Everyday Robots — which was formed within X, the "moonshot program" of Google's parent company Alphabet — is being shuttered as a cost-cutting measure, as first reported by Wired.

Representatives for Everyday Robots and X told Insider the robot maker will "no longer be a separate project within Alphabet," but an unspecified amount of staff and technology will be retained within Google's existing robotics programs.

The company developed over 100 robots trained to perform tasks like cleaning cafeteria tables and separating trash and recyclables. The robots were also programmed to open doors and replace missing chairs in offices through a variety of teaching techniques, Chief Robot Officer Hans Peter Brandom wrote in a November 2021 update.

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Everyday Robots' original goal was to create a "general purpose" robot that can perform a wide variety of tasks in many different environments, according to the X website. The robots use cameras and machine learning to evaluate their environment, and position their arm to clean and perform simple tasks.

According to former Everyday Robots employees speaking to Wired, the decision to shut down Everyday Robots was made as part of the wider cost-cutting initiatives Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced last month, including laying off 12,000 employees.

The robots also had language models like the technology behind ChatGPT incorporated into its abilities so it could understand verbal commands, and perform tasks like taking snack requests for hungry employees or understanding when someone asked for help cleaning a spill.

 

Many of Everyday Robots' over 200 staff members were unsure if their primary goal was developing new technology or creating a robot that would be commercialized for consumers, per Wired.

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"It's unfortunate to see it shut down," one former employee told Wired. "We are starting to see that robots can do meaningful work in a general way. I don't think it's a sign of a lack of progress. With the right focus, in five years you could have a meaningful product in the market."

On February 28, Axel Springer, Business Insider's parent company, joined 31 other media groups and filed a $2.3 billion suit against Google in Dutch court, alleging losses suffered due to the company's advertising practices.

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