See Spot, a 160-pound robotic dog. See Spot walk around the office. See Spot get kicked by a human male.
It’s become a signature move for Boston Dynamics, the Google-owned robotics and engineering firm behind BigDog, a hulking quadrupedal robot, and ATLAS, a six-foot-tall humanoid robot built with DARPA funding. Kick the robot.
Videos by VICE
Here’s Spot, post-office kick, getting a swift boot to the side:
Here’s BigDog getting kicked:
And here’s an earlier version of BigDog getting the boot:
Bonus: When kicks fail, just heave a wrecking ball at the machine:
Why kicking? Maybe it’s an easy stress test to run in the field. Maybe it’s a way to show off BigDog’s or Spot’s or whatever other platform’s ability to regain footing and balance after getting rocked. Maybe it’s both. Boston Dynamics did not return a request for comment.
Whatever it is, it’s funny, though not in the way we find videos of robots failing funny on account of mechanical malfunctioning.
It’s funny in a more sobering sense—you’re in awe, and let out a nervous, staccato chuckle—to watch an electrically-powered, hydraulically-actuated bot like Spot recover so quickly post-kick and then pair up with another Spot. There they go, trotting over uneven terrain into the sunset. Just two happy robot dogs, kicking it.