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RE: LeoThread 2025-01-12 05:27

in LeoFinance16 days ago

Robot vacuums just keep growing

CES saw wild innovations from Roborock and Dreame and helpful upgrades from the rest of the pack, all of which are set to make 2025 a banner year for those who’d rather leave the cleaning to the robots.

#technology #robot #ces

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As the industry races ahead in its quest to find the best way to clean our floors, it can be hard to see the function through all the hype. I spent the last week in Las Vegas hanging with our robot friends to find out just how much better they’re getting. Here’s a look at all the new tech that came out and how it could help keep your floors sparklingly clean.

The main focus of flagship robovacs over the last few years has been obstacle avoidance. Adding AI-powered camera navigation systems has helped robots avoid getting stuck on socks, slippers, and toys, but it means they haven’t actually cleaned all of your floor.

The solution: adding a robotic arm to move the items out of the way. Roborock’s Saros Z70 and Dreame’s concept vacuum both showed off what a robovac can do, given a robotic claw on top.

Both companies say they have software that will allow you to designate where items get placed, letting the vacuum tidy up for you in a whole new way. Roborock said you can designate an area for the bot to put things it cleans up, and Dreame said its concept vac will be able to put specific items in specific places, such as cat toys by the cat bed or shoes by the front door. Neither demoed their app, however, so I didn’t get to see how this works.

The biggest limitation for these arms is weight: Roborock’s can only pick up light items up to 300 grams — it’s currently programmed for socks, tissues, small washcloths, and sandals. Dreame says its will be capable of up to 500 grams, which means it can tackle shoes ( a sneaker up a men’s size 42/9). But only Roborock actually demoed its robot picking anything up — and that was just a sock.

Dreame’s arm does look more robust. It’s bigger and thicker with a fatter pincer claw. But I didn’t get to touch it. I did get to play with the Saros Z70’s arm, and it felt surprisingly strong, especially for how slim it is.

What Dreame’s arm has that Roborock’s doesn’t (yet) are attachments. Dreame showed off a small toolbox that stored two brushes — a sponge for wet messes and a bristle brush. The idea is that the robot can attach these to its arms and then get into nooks and crannies the main robot can’t. I didn’t get to see the robot actually do any of this, though, so it's all still a concept.