October 23, 2006 4:55 AM PDT

Robot smackdown on hardwood floors

by Mike Yamamoto
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Be warned, a robot war is brewing. The battlefront: Your kitchen floor.

The RoboMop

iRobot--maker of the unlikely consumer hit the Roomba--has gone virtually unchallenged as it cleaned up (sorry) the market in automated carpet vacuums. Competitors are starting to come forth, however, such as one from Evolution Robotics. Now, the Roomba may meet yet another formidable opponent on hard surfaces, this one from Europe.

Last year, iRobot came out with the Scooba, a wet-cleaning device, for $400. That has since been cut to $300, but it's still way more than the price of rival RoboMop--a Norwegian-made bot for non-carpeted floors that sells outside the United States for about $56. Shiny Shiny, where we learned of the RoboMop, says it has a 98 percent accuracy rate too. Still, it has a long way to go: RoboMop has yet to prove, for example, that it's got as much personality as the Roomba and Scooba.

(Photo: RoboMop International)

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I'm not buying it
by thatcherm October 23, 2006 9:30 AM PDT
The RoboMop may get the job done, but where's the charm? Does it play a happy little tune when you turn it on to sweep? And can you imagine naming this funky ball-in-a-cage? My Roomba got a name as soon as I saw him in action (yes, "him"). The Roomba does hardwood, too, though it's a little noisy.
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by PascalForget November 16, 2008 12:56 PM PST
You can buy Robomop (or Robomaid in the US) by cases of 12 on eBay, for about the price you mention for one, or even on Amazon. Nothing new either: Robomaid have been around for a few years now, as an «as seen on TV product».
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