Posts Tagged ‘iRobot’

Robot Vacuum Cleaner. With Lasers. Robots. Lasers. Cleaning. Awesome. [Vacuum Cleaner]

This new Neato vacuum cleaner has one trick up its nozzle that your average Roomba doesn't—lasers. I'm sold!

Anyone who's ever used a Roomba robot cleaner before will know that it bumps into furniture regularly, even mounting curtains if your back is turned. This new Neato (New! Improved! Neato!) uses a Room Positioning System with its lasers, mapping the floorspace in 36-degrees so it doesn't get into trouble against your prized chaise lounge.

On sale in February, it'll cost $400. Did we mention it comes with lasers?! [Wired]




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Deadly Viper Killed by iRobot Roomba [Roomba]

There are worse things to worry about in the Middle East than a robotic vacuum cleaner, but to the viper who thought it’d be a cozy place to sleep, it proved to be the end of his violent, snakey existence.

The vipera palaestinae, as his parent snake gods christened him, had wound himself so tightly inside the iRobot Roomba that it died of head wounds. The Roomba? Well, it’s back to a life of giving kittens free rides and not cleaning corners correctly. [Facebook via BotJunkie]








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Roomba saves child from deadly Viper, challenges Tango to a fight
We've always known that the Roomba was something of a bad-ass -- iRobot, after all, has quite a reputation within the defense industry -- so we weren't surprised when one of the autonomous vacuum cleaners took down a certain Vipera palaestinae (a venomous snake found in the Middle East). Considered a leading cause of snakebites within its geographic range, the snake was found mangled 'round one of the robot's rotating brushes when Eli and Efi Frida returned to their home in Galilee, which they share with their two children, aged four and seven (as well as several cats and dogs). "We were very lucky," said Eli, "If the snake would have hid in the house and bitten one of the children it could have ended badly."

Roomba saves child from deadly Viper, challenges Tango to a fight originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Nov 2009 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iRobot creates new business unit for healthcare robotics
Well, it doesn't have a Roomba that will check up on your vitals just yet, but it looks like iRobot is betting on healthcare robotics in a fairly big way, with it taking advantage of the recent TEDMED conference to announce that it's forming a new business unit focused solely on the still burgeoning industry. That unit will be headed up by Tod Loofbourrow, who says that he believes the business "has the potential to make a significant difference in the field of healthcare," and adds that he thinks "the long-term potential of robotics to extend independent living is profound." While he's just as light on specifics, iRobot CEO Colin Angle is no less ambitious about the company's goals, saying that iRobot's "healthcare mission is add a million years of independent living to our customers." And in case you're wondering, the image at right isn't an iRobot robot, but it is all too real.

[Via So, Where's My Robot?]

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iRobot creates new business unit for healthcare robotics originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 21:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iRobot shape-shifting ChemBot is back, and it’s bad (video)

As you know, when iRobot isn't hard at work developing some adorable automated vacuum cleaners, it has a quite lucrative sideline in DARPA-funded research projects. On that front, it looks like we finally have some results to report back on that ChemBot project that first appeared on our radar early last year. Unveiled at the International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS) yesterday, this palm-sized troublemaker is being billed as "the first demonstration of a completely soft, mobile robot using jamming as an enabling technology." The "jamming" in question is something called "jamming skin enabled locomotion," which traps air and a collection of loosely packed particles in a package made of silicon rubber. When air is removed from the pocket, the silicon restricts and seems to solidify. The robot consists of several of these pockets, which can be inflated or deflated separately, giving the device the ability to perform simple actions. This is all pretty rudimentary at the moment, but who knows? We may see Flubber in our time, after all. Video after the break.

Continue reading iRobot shape-shifting ChemBot is back, and it's bad (video)

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iRobot shape-shifting ChemBot is back, and it's bad (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Oct 2009 06:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iRobot Makes First Version of T-1000 or Number Six—We Will All Die Anyway [Robots]

Gizmodo's bullpen five minutes ago. Me: "Holy f*ck. Check this." Matt: "We're all dead." Me: "We're so f*cked." Wilson: "Soft robotics. That's a scary phrase." Jason: "You mean a sexy phrase. Mmmm. Soft robots." Wilson: "Now, jamming skin...

That is sexy. Jammable slurry. Wow, a little hot under the collar here. This really is nuts."

It is really nuts indeed: A shape-shifting robot blob that can squeeze through cracks. Sounds familiar? Of course it does. But clearly, this iRobot and Darpa researchers don't read or watch any Sci-Fi material whatsoever.

In any case, ladies and gentlemen, it has been a pleasure and a privilege writing for you. Now, enjoy the rest of your lives. They won't last much more. [JWZ via Make]




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Creepy: iRobot’s “My Real Baby” [Image Cache]

Meet the offspring of iRobot, and Transformers creator Hasbro. No, really.

Back in 2000, the two companies teamed up on a project to create a baby doll that had emotionally expressive animatronic facial expressions. One look at this pic could explain why the project was later discontinued. [Ingenious' Flickr via Robot Stock News]




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