Technology

Google Glass inventor back in the Alphabet fold

The robotics whiz who helped give the world Google Glass and self-driving cars is back designing more gadgets for Alphabet.

Alphabethas re-hired Yoky Matsuoka to oversee technology at its Nest Labs Inc. smart home unit, snapping up the robotics and artificial intelligence expert after she recently left rival Apple.

As chief technology officer, Matsuoka will work with Nest's engineering and product teams to define a long-term technology road map. She'll be responsible for identifying important enabling technologies for Nest products and services, such as sensors and machine learning while partnering with outside companies.

Matsuoka will also team up with other Alphabet businesses to spot areas where Nest can collaborate on technology and product development.

Matsuoka joined Apple in May to help run the iPhone maker's health technology initiatives, but she left toward the end of 2016. She was an early Nest executive when iPod creator Tony Fadell founded the startup with Matt Rogers in 2010, and she was there when Google bought the business for more than $US3 billion in 2014. Matsuoka left the company in 2015 to lead a health data startup called Quanttus.

Matsuoka is credited with developing the technology that helps Nest thermostats automatically adapt to things like environmental conditions and past usage. She's a pioneer in robotics, having helped invent a lifelike robotic hand. She also co-founded X, the Alphabet research lab that produced Google's self-driving car and Google Glass.

Luring Matsuoka back is a rare piece of good news for Nest, which had a tough 2016 even as sales grew quickly. Fadell left in June after some employees complained publicly about his aggressive management, missed sales targets, botched upgrades and delayed future products. Nest is now run by Marwan Fawaz, a former executive vice president of Motorola Mobility. Last month, the company said it would start selling its internet-connected thermostats, cameras and smoke alarms in Germany, Austria, Italy and Spain.

Bloomberg