When Google folds a moonshot into its core operations, it’s not cleaning house. It’s placing a bet. On February 25, Alphabet-owned Intrinsic–which builds AI models and software designed to make industrial robotics more accessible–officially joined Google.
The company will remain a distinct group within Google, working closely with Google DeepMind and tapping into Gemini AI models and Google Cloud. No purchase price was disclosed.
On the surface, this looks like a routine internal reshuffle. It isn’t.
From Moonshot to Mandate
Intrinsic graduated into an independent Alphabet-owned company in 2021 after five years of development within Alphabet’s X, the moonshot research division–the same factory that produced Waymo and Wing. Its mission from the start: make industrial robotics AI accessible to manufacturers who don’t have armies of specialist engineers.
While hardware like robotic arms has become cheaper, programming them remains incredibly complex, often requiring hundreds of hours of manual coding by specialised engineers that can vary based on the particular robot. Intrinsic’s answer to that is Flowstate–a web-based platform that allows users to build robotic applications without having to write thousands of lines of code.
The platform is designed to be hardware-, software-, and AI-model-agnostic. Think of it less as a product and more as an operating layer–one that Google CEO Sundar Pichai has reportedly compared directly to Android. “He said this is the Android of robotics,” Intrinsic CEO Wendy Tan White said, noting that Pichai worked on Chrome and Android before becoming CEO.
Why now, why Google?
The timing isn’t arbitrary. The sequence of hiring Boston Dynamics’ CTO, releasing a standalone robotics SDK, and now absorbing Intrinsic represents a deliberate consolidation of robotics capability inside Google’s core. Taken together, these moves position Google to offer manufacturers something no competitor has assembled quite as cleanly: AI models from DeepMind, deployment software from Intrinsic, and cloud infrastructure from Google Cloud–all under one roof.
Last month, Google also teamed up with Boston Dynamics to integrate Gemini into Atlas humanoid robots built for manufacturing environments, while Google DeepMind hired the former CTO of Boston Dynamics in November.
The industrial robotics AI market Google is chasing is not small. McKinsey projects that the market for general-purpose robots could reach US$370 billion by 2040.
What it means for the enterprise
For enterprise decision-makers, the more interesting signal here isn’t the technology–it’s the accessibility shift. Google plans to integrate Intrinsic’s robotics development platform and vision models with its broader AI ecosystem, combining advanced reasoning, perception and learning capabilities with industrial-grade robotics software to allow machines to interpret sensor data better, adapt to dynamic environments and execute complex tasks.
Intrinsic has also expanded through acquisitions–acquiring the Open Source Robotics Corp. in 2022, the for-profit arm of the foundation behind the Robot Operating System (ROS). And its commercial pipeline is already in motion: in October 2025, Intrinsic formed a strategic partnership with Foxconn focused on developing general-purpose intelligent robots for full factory automation within electronics manufacturing.
White framed the integration in terms enterprise leaders will find hard to ignore: production economics, operational transformation, and what she described as truly advanced manufacturing — all within reach once Google’s infrastructure is fully behind it.
That’s a significant claim. But with Gemini, DeepMind, and Google Cloud now aligned behind it, the infrastructure to back it up is, for the first time, actually there.
See also: Physical AI adoption boosts customer service ROI

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