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Roomba Robot Vacuum Gets Siblings

Victor Tramp writes "Apparently, the cute little robot vacuum by iRobot has siblings now! An article over at Forbes.com goes into some detail about the new Roomba models; featuring the Roomba Pro, which 'is an improvement on the original Roomba, including an intelligent navigation system..', and the Roomba Pro Elite, which is the '...new flagship model. It comes with a remote-control unit that lets you navigate the Roomba around the room, changing cleaning options as it goes.' I have one of the original Roombas, and it actually does a really good job!"

23 of 204 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Interesting... by nonmaskable · · Score: 5, Informative

    It works great on the medium thickness carpet (as well as the wood and tile) in my home. Cleaning carpet seems to hit the battery harder than cleaning wood, so you can pretty much only get one large and one small room on a charge.

    On any surface, it doesn't replace a once every few months hand cleaning with a regular vacuum, but for a once or twice a week cleaning, it really does work.

  2. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by ramk13 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you seen one? I've used the original. As far as I know they have no 'auto charging' capability. You pick it up when it dies and then plug it into the charger. It's very far from worthless though.

    You just clean one or two rooms a day, and you don't have to watch it while it's doing it. It's very convenient, even without the auto recharge feature you are talking about. Features like intellegent autocharging and networking probably won't be in consumer vacuums for a little while. (Especially since a viable Roomba competitor hasn't popped up.)

  3. Re:Interesting... by ramk13 · · Score: 2, Informative

    You can head to a Sharper Image store if there's one nearby you and ask for a demo. I went with my cousin when he got one for my uncle. It works well for maintenance cleaning.

  4. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by MoobY · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've seen a demonstration of a robot vacuum cleaner a couple of weeks ago (I can't remember the brand, but it was a yellow robot). This vacuum robot did manage to go back to the recharger. But that was not the only thing it could do, it also dumped the collected dust into a container sitting in the recharger, so you never had to actually do anything with the robot, as it was able to feed itself and get rid of the dust. It was however a tad more expensive than the the roomba (but I can't remember the correct price tag either).

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    --- Sigmentation Fault - Comments Dumped
  5. A mature product already exists by CoderByBirth · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Swedish house appliance manufacturer Electrolux has a model called Trilobite which has been around for a couple of years.

    I haven't seen this sucker in action, but if memory serves me correctly it should be able to move around your home on flat surfaces, avoid obstacles and return to the power station.

    1. Re:A mature product already exists by EddWo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nice use of Flash here.
      http://trilobite.electrolux.co.uk/

      They say it can recharge itself automatically.
      It must build an internal map remember how far it moved to return to recharging station.

      --
      "Taligent is still pure vapor. Maybe they'll be the last who jumps up on Openstep... "
    2. Re:A mature product already exists by bhima · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is one on display at one of the stores here in Graz, I don't remember exactly how much, but I think it was over 700 Euros. Which is much more than roomba.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    3. Re:A mature product already exists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have one and it works very well!

      It's a bit more expensive, but looks much better and
      finds the chargestation automatically when needed.

    4. Re:A mature product already exists by Judge_Fire · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's quite advanced. It builds a map, but isn't tied to it. For navigation, it has a sonar which crackles in a wickedly robotic way, when it tries to find the power station.

      If you accidentally nudge it, when its loading, it will bleep in a slightly annoyed tone and replace its, umm, hindside on the connectors.

      So it actually has a bit of personality and really feels like a semi-sentient robotic pal.

      J

  6. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Here's something for you:

    http://trilobite.electrolux.co.uk

    Regards!
    Darko

  7. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by Sanctuary · · Score: 3, Informative

    Do you mean this?
    Cye Personal Robot

  8. This one does by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.megapool.nl/site/modules/showhtml.asp?s trCondition=a&intGroepID=557 From Karcher, site is in Dutch. Mod me up, this thing is much cooler than a Roomba.

  9. The Karcher RoboCleaner is much better by markus_baertschi · · Score: 5, Informative

    I prefer the Karcher RoboCleaner for one important reason:

    It requires almost no manual intervention

    You just tell it how often it should go out and clean and once in a while you empty the dirt in the base station. No other interventions are necessary.

    Il empties its dirt container itself and recharges itself automatically et the base station.

    Details here

    Markus

    1. Re:The Karcher RoboCleaner is much better by bobbyque · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nice unit, but did you check the price? $2995. Ten Roombas could do a whole lotta cleaning...

  10. Sucks for me... by CheapScott · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...but in a good way!

    I bought a Rooma a couple of weeks ago after the last article that mentioned about the cheap (money-wise and quality-wise) competitor. We have two cats, two dogs, and hardwood floors. We "set it free" each morning as we go out to work. We didn't do it yesterday, and I noticed it as I was lying on the floor...sand and hair. It really does a good job for us.

    As far as having the ability to go back and recharge itself when it's done...yeah, it'd be nice, but it works fine for us how it is. Otherwise, we (i.e. my wife) would have to be dragging out the regular vaccuum every day. It does great in terms of just maintaining a sane level of cleanliness.

    I can see a future of fleets of these things roaming a hotel cleaning all of the rooms. Sort of reminds me of the robots from Minority Report.

  11. Re:Durability of Roomba? by Sparr0 · · Score: 4, Informative

    After intentionally disabling the ledge sensors in mine and having it take a tumble down a flight of stairs I can tell you that this is one of the most durable mobile appliances in my house, easily tougher than my normal vacuum cleaner.

  12. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by clifyt · · Score: 2, Informative

    "You pick it up when it dies and then plug it into the charger. It's very far from worthless though"

    Yeah -- but unless you have the rapid 2.5 Hour Recharger -- this is VERY annoying. I think even the new Pro models come without this important piece.

    I just picked one up the original this weekend and its VERY cool. But the fact that I can get a single large room and half of my hallway in a day is a problem. It takes 12 hours to recharge otherwise. On weekdays -- this isn't as bad as on the weekend -- on the weekend, I spend a lot more time at home and I know I'm going to kill the battery by doing half charges.

    Still a GREAT machine -- I'm just pissed I got caught behind the curve for once exactly how my friends always scream they are going put off buying something because 'a new version is just around the corner' -- with me telling them they are idiots. I've wanted one of these for over a year now and I had a little extra money, so I don't feel bad about the purchase -- but I'm SERIOUSLY thinking of taking the standard back in for a Pro as soon as the local Sharper Image has one in stock.

  13. Didn't like my Roomba by Laur · · Score: 5, Informative
    I bought a Roomba as soon as it came out and ended up returning it within a week. My experiences were thus:

    1. It sucked at sucking. It would roll over the same piece of fuzz on the carpet several times and still not pick it up. It just plain didn't work too well. At best it could be a supplement to a regular vacuum, but I didn't think it was worth it.

    2. It wasn't much quieter then a regular vacuum. You couldn't really do much while it was working, such as watch TV in the next room. You couldn't ignore it, it was just too loud. This might be okay for people who leave the house often and run it then, but if you're home and just don't like to vacuum this isn't gaining you much.

    3. The heuristics didn't work to well. Maybe they worked great in the lab with a perfectly square room, but when it needs to work in the real world and go around furniture it seems to fail miserably. It would go over the same patch of floor 5 or 6 times, yet never go over the patch 5 feet away within the time allowed.

    4. It couldn't transition from tile to carpet as advertised. It tried to go over at an angle, got stuck with one wheel on, one off, and proceeded to start rubbing a black rubber mark in my carpet (yes, the carpet/tile transition height was within advertised limits).

    I know other people have these and love them, but these are my experiences (YMMV). I found that manually vacuuming and sweeping took much less time and did a much better job. Further, the Roomba can't replace manually sweeping and vacuuming, it can only supplement it, and IMHO the price is too high for that.

    I certainly wish iRobot the best of luck with the Roomba, since success with this early model will lead to continuously improved products. I am certainly not against robotic appliances, I also have a Robomower and love it. It has many advantages over a manual mower and no drawbacks (except a bit higher price tag, but the benefits far outweigh this IMHO). It's very quit (I can run it at night), nearly maintenance free (it mulches while it cuts, no bag to empty, no engine to maintain), and completely replaces a standard mower. I long for the day when we have more products like this, but I just didn't think the first gen Roomba was it.

    --
    When you lose something irreplaceable, you don't mourn for the thing you lost, you mourn for yourself. - Harpo Marx
  14. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I have one (the first robotvacuumcleaner) that
    does this. It's the Swedish Electrolux Trilobite.

    Works very well. The only feature the roomba has
    that it lacks is the sensor for stairs. But this
    can be solved with some magnetic tape...

  15. Re:does it go to the recharger when low on juice? by molarmass192 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Karcher one looks very cool but it's $3000 AUD (~$2000 USD). I'm not paying $2K for a vacuum cleaner unless it does a heck of a lot more than just sweep the rugs.

    --

    Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
  16. Getting your house "Roomba-ready" by leinhos · · Score: 3, Informative

    We got a Roomba last December, and it took a little while to get our 1st floor completely "roomba-ready". All the kid's toys get thrown in baskets, I pick up a tassled rug and throw it over a radiator, and I use a virtual wall unit to block a threshold that the Roomba *always* gets stuck on (even though it's below the advertised limit). Now, after dinner, we get our entire 1st floor roomba-ready (pick up toys, move chairs, etc.), and all go upstairs for the kid's baths + stories + bedtime. By the time the kid's are in bed, the Roomba's done (45-60 minutes or so). We still have to vacume every other week or so, but the Roomba keeps the floors cleaner between manual cleaning. Sure, I could sweep every night, but the Roomba does it while I'm doing something else. I figure it saves me 10-15 minutes each day, which is great for those of us with small children. So in the past year, I figure the Roomba has saved me 60-90 hours of free time, which translates to about $2-3/hour. If the thing lasts another year without any maintenance costs, then we're talking about $1-1.50/hour. Would I spend a dollar for an extra hour of free time? (I guess I already do!)

    It's gotten to the point where my 3-year-old daughter can pick it up, put it in the middle of the floor, and turn it on by herself.

  17. Re:Interesting... by jfinke · · Score: 2, Informative
    I too have 3 cats. I bought a roomba. It couldn't keep up. I spent more time cleaning the roomba then I would have vacuuming by hand.

    I bought at Dyson Animal the other month. It is pretty amazing. It is actually disgusting how much crap it picks up. I got it for $450 from amazon (they were having a Friday special). It also has a little attachment for pet hair. It works pretty well.

  18. Re:What about dirt amount? by Sparr0 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The dirt compartment is about the size of a VHS tape (give or take). Yes, it fills up quickly if you vacuum once a month. This is not a problem because the idea of the Roomba is to run it every day, sometimes twice a day. Go vacuum your living room with a fresh bag, then put another fresh bag in it and vacuum again the next day. See how much dirt/hair is in the second bag. That is all the Roomba needs to handle.