Boston Dynamics’ robot dog now reads gauges and thermometers with Google’s AI



Robots such as Boston Dynamics’ four-legged Spot can now accurately read analog thermometers and pressure gauges while roaming around factories and warehouses. Those improvements come courtesy of Google DeepMind’s newest robotic AI model that aims to enhance robotic capabilities for ‘embodied reasoning’ when interacting with physical environments.

The new Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6 model announced on April 14 performs as a “high-level reasoning model for a robot” that can plan and execute tasks, according to Google DeepMind. This model also unlocks the capability of accurately reading instruments such as complex gauges and doing visual inspections using sight glasses that provide a transparent window to peek inside tanks and pipes—a performance upgrade that came about through Google DeepMind’s ongoing collaboration with robotics company Boston Dynamics.

Boston Dynamics has a keen interest in testing both quadruped and humanoid robotic workers in a wide range of industrial facilities, including the automotive factories of the robotic company’s corporate owner, Hyundai Motor Group. The company’s robot “dog,” Spot, is being trialled as a robotic inspector that roams throughout industrial facilities to check up on everything. Such inspection duties require “complex visual reasoning” to interpret the multiple needles, liquid levels, container boundaries and tick marks, along with text, in various instruments.

The model driving it

To handle such tasks, the Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6 model provides robots with “agentic vision” that combines visual reasoning with the capability of executing code to create a “visual scratchpad” for inspecting and manipulating images. Such agentic vision was introduced in Google’s Gemini 3.0 Flash model back in January 2026.

The agentic vision capability reportedly boosts robotic performance on instrument reading tasks from 23 percent in the older Gemini Robotics-ER 1.5 model to 98 percent in the new Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6 model. For comparison, Gemini 3.0 Flash delivered just 67 percent accuracy.

The baseline Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6 model can still achieve 86 percent accuracy in reading instruments even without agentic vision. That is because the model uses a process of pointing to different elements in a visual image to process complex tasks, such as counting items or identifying the most salient features. It also supposedly delivers an improved “multi-view reasoning” capability that allows a robotic system to use multiple camera streams to better understand its environment.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Your Ears Know What’s Good. Vote for Your Favorite Headphones and Earbuds of 2026

    CNET just launched People’s Picks, a series of surveys where actual real-life humans like you vote for the products and services they use and can’t live without. This month, we want…

    GoPro’s new Mission cameras are priced beyond most weekend athletes

    GoPro is pricing its new Mission 1 and Mission 1 Pro cameras at $599.99 and $699.99, respectively, each discounted by $100 if you subscribe to its ecosystem — fine for…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Vance Heads to New Talks With Iran. At Stake: Peace and His Own Standing.

    Chatbots often offer ‘problematic’ cancer advice, study finds

    Chatbots often offer ‘problematic’ cancer advice, study finds

    Your Ears Know What’s Good. Vote for Your Favorite Headphones and Earbuds of 2026

    Your Ears Know What’s Good. Vote for Your Favorite Headphones and Earbuds of 2026

    Canada, Mercosur aiming to sign free trade deal this year: Brazilian official

    Canada, Mercosur aiming to sign free trade deal this year: Brazilian official

    Iran War Is Forcing a Reckoning in Colombia on Energy Demand

    Myanmar military regime widens sanitary towel ban, claiming rebels use them for first aid | Global development

    Myanmar military regime widens sanitary towel ban, claiming rebels use them for first aid | Global development