The
robots are coming. Every week, it seems, announcements hail a coming
era of personal robots: machines that will ingratiate themselves into
our homes by liberating us from despised chores like folding fitted
sheets.
Vacuuming is one of those chores. And for that, help is already here in the Roomba by iRobot.
More
than 10 years ago, I bought the first-generation version of the Roomba,
intrigued by the algorithm that sent it scooting automatically around
the room, entertaining my cat along the way. But the vacuum didn’t clean
very well, and when the battery no longer held a charge, the expensive
cat toy found its way down to the basement where I imagine it still
sits.
The
latest Roomba, the 880, will probably not share that fate. The machine,
which has the same hockey-puck profile of the earliest Roombas, not
only cleans floors as well as an upright or canister vacuum cleaner, it
may actually do a superior job on pet hair.
The
algorithm still sends the robot careening around a room in what seems
like a random pattern. When it comes across a bit of dirt, the little
machine focuses on the spot, twirling around in a spiral until it licks
the problem.
A
little spinning brush under the Roomba whisks the dirt into two rotors
that never seem to get tangled with hair and string, unlike many of the
most expensive vacuum cleaners. (The trick? No bristles on the rotors.)
The
machine signals when the dirt bin is full, and when I was alerted I
found a large clump of cat hair and dirt inside. Very satisfying.
The
Roomba emits a pleasant hum, not the high-pitched whine of most
vacuums. Aside from it gently thumping into table legs and walls, you
get used to it working in the background as you go about more important
tasks.
And
like the previous generations of Roombas, you don’t need to worry about
it crashing down stairs. Sensors stop it from going over the edge.
The
machine comes with two pillars that block off portions of the room that
you don’t want cleaned. The pillars shoot off an infrared beam that
acts as a fence, maybe to wall off a precious vase or the pet bowls on
the floor.
In
my experience, the Roomba never grabbed carpet tassels, which can’t be
said of many regular vacuum cleaners I’ve tried. (The iRobot engineers
added what they call “anti-tassel mode,” by making the rotors
momentarily go in reverse if it detects a cord or carpet fringe.) And at
3.6 inches high, the machine can slip under most furniture, a chore
that with a regular vacuum cleaner would force you to bend and twist.
It’s
also easy to schedule the robot, so the machine can work every day
without you raising a finger. You can see the house getting cleaner.
Every day there is less debris in the bin so you know it is working.
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