iRobot CEO: Forget 'The Jetsons'

NEW YORK--iRobot would rather people forget their 1960s futuristic robotic home fantasies and appreciate practical robots that work.

The iRobot home is certainly not The Jetsons cartoon home from what company Chief Executive Colin Angle presented on Thursday at DigitalLife 2007.

Photos: iRobot phones home, cleans gutters

"I'm asking everyone today to say goodbye to The Jetsons, goodbye to Hollywood robots...That's as likely as us going to live in bubble homes above the ground...And welcome perhaps a little boring looking, but fantastically capable robots," said Angle.

Angle took the audience through the entire lineup of iRobot's consumer robot line including the new Roomba 500 series vacuum, the Scooba, the DirtDog shop-vac robot and the Vero pool-cleaning robot.

He then unveiled and demonstrated two new robots for the home, the Looj and the ConnectR. While the Looj does deal with the outdoors, it's not the lawnmower robot competitor to Husqvarna Auto Mower that people had speculated iRobot might offer.

Instead, the Looj is a remote-control gutter-cleaning robot that uses an auger to break up debris, paddles attached to the auger to fling the debris out of the gutter and a small brush for sweeping. It costs $99 and is available now from the iRobot Web site, with a rollout to stores in the coming weeks, according to Angle.

The second robot, the ConnectR, is a communication robot that offers two-way audio, a Webcam and the ability to move around a room. It connects to a local wireless network and can be controlled from anywhere through a Web-based application. The ConnectR will be available next year.

"I'm guilty personally of making very cool but impractical walking robots for years before I realized this is the point. If we want to change the world, we have to create robots that perform and deliver practical results. There's this tension of cool versus practical," he said.

Despite the ConnectR price tag of about $499, Angle insisted the iRobot home is not for the privileged few. The company is offering the ConnectR at a discounted price of $199 in exchange for feedback. While anyone can apply for the program, iRobot is only offering the deal to a limited number of people.

"The robot home done well is going to give you more control and opportunity in your life. The iRobot home is absolutely not the sole domain of the tech elite, the digerati, the tech gadget guys," he said.

More from News.com on this story's topics

Robots

RSS feed

Consumer hardware

RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
iRobot Corp., robot, Colin Angle, CEO

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Won't work in Seattle
by tsupasat September 28, 2007 11:38 AM PDT
I'm afraid the Looj won't work here in Seattle where Fall is extremely wet ... unless the Looj can sweep masses of heavy leaves and mud.
Reply to this comment View reply
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Latest tech news headlines

Most Popular Stories
Google's search secret: It gets rid of you
Developer creates copy-paste tech for iPhone
Palm Treo Pro: Not digging it
Intel says it has 'first silicon' for next mobile chip
American Airlines launches in-flight Wi-Fi
Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (0.09%) 10.67 11,428.10
S&P 500 (0.26%) 3.34 1,277.88
NASDAQ (0.00%) 0.00 1,816.15
CNET TECH (-0.01%) -0.10 1,630.70
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement
Click Here
On The Insider: That's What He Said: John Mayer Edition
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CBS Interactive sites