
Alphabet's $80 Billion AI Bet: What It Means for the Factory Floor
Google's parent company is raising a staggering sum for AI, and if you're in industrial automation, you should be paying attention.
Crédit photo: Image via source article. Used under fair use for news commentary. · source
I was having coffee with an old colleague from my Kuka days last week when he forwarded me the Bloomberg story about Alphabet raising $80 billion for AI spending. Eighty billion. I had to read it twice. That's not a typo, and it's not hyperbole. That's roughly what the entire global industrial robotics market was worth annually back when I started in this business.
Look, here's the thing. When a company like Alphabet, which already spends more on R&D than most countries spend on their militaries, decides it needs to raise $80 billion specifically for AI, something fundamental is shifting. And yes, I know, everyone's been saying "AI is the future" for years now. I've sat through more trade show presentations about machine learning than I care to remember. But this is different. This is Berkshire Hathaway money. Warren Buffett money. The kind of capital that doesn't chase hype, it chases infrastructure.
Now, I'll be honest, the Bloomberg coverage doesn't tell us exactly where all this money is going. We don't know the split between data centres, chip development, acquisitions, or research. That remains frustratingly unclear. But I've been around long enough to make some educated guesses about what matters for folks in our world.
When I was at Kuka, we were already seeing Google's DeepMind people sniffing around robotic manipulation problems. That was years ago. The challenge back then, and it's still partly true today, was that the AI models were impressive in demos but brittle in production. You'd get a robot arm that could sort objects beautifully in a controlled environment, then it'd fall apart the moment someone changed the lighting or introduced a slightly different shaped widget. We used to joke that the neural network needed more coddling than a new apprentice.
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