CES 2015: The robots moving in to your house
By Leo Kelion
Technology desk editor
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The modern family is getting a new member.
More than a dozen firms are promoting new kinds of home robots at this year's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
None are the human-like automatons of science-fiction. But they do point the way towards how domestic bots might evolve beyond the robo-vacuum.
South Korea's Furo-i Home is one of the more advanced examples.
It's a sleek-looking sensor-laden cone on wheels topped by a tablet that displays a friendly-looking animated droid's face.
You can verbally instruct it to take control of internet-controlled smart devices - telling it to turn lights, music and heating on or off - use it as a teaching aid for your children, or take advantage of its health check software to help care for elderly relations.
"The robot has many sensors, facial recognition and can detect the temperature," explains Se-Kyong Song, chief executive of its maker Futurebot.
The Furo-i Home can be used to look after young children or elderly relations
"You can set it to wake up an elderly parent, remind them to take their medicine, eat breakfast and follow the rest of a schedule.
"And if something unexpected happens, it can send a message to the family saying there might be a problem and then let them talk to their parent via video chat to ask if they are OK."
The machine is set to cost about $1,000 (£660) and Futurebot hopes to make and sell about 10,000 before the year's end.
The Furo-i Home is designed to interact with other internet-enabled devices
Those looking for a cheaper alternative might be interested in Ukrainian start-up Branto, which has just announced a crowdfunding campaign for a robotic sphere priced at $399.
Although it lacks a screen of its own, it promises broadly similar functions, including the ability to send you a notification if its motion sensor is triggered when your house is supposed to be empty.
There is one important caveat - at present the prototype's battery only lasts for about three hours before it stops providing most functions.
"We are trying to make it longer, but the device is very small and we want to keep it looking nice," says Alexandra Barsukova, the start-up's business development director.
Garden bot
Most of the other robots at CES are focused on doing a more limited set of tasks - and that may be a wise strategy suggests Casey Nobile from the Robotics Trends news site.
"It's very hard to make a robot do everything, like in the Jetsons analogy that everyone likes to refer to," she explains.
"You're going to see advances in robots controlling other smart home tech via software before you see something like a machine with an arm that makes you coffee and delivers it to your bedroom, just because of the limitations with manipulation technology and the issues with battery life."
Droplet, a robotic sprinkler, understands plants and knows how much water to give them
Droplet is one example of a more specialist robot.
The machine is an internet-connected sprinkler that can be set to propel different amounts of water to different plants in its surrounding area.
"We can accurately target two plants less than 6in [15cm] away from each other and give them very different amounts of water," explains Steve Fernholz, the firm's founder.
"And we take into account weather data, so if there's an 80% chance of a thunderstorm tonight it'll delay and wait to see if the rain actually falls."
He believes most people will be more comfortable with such a device at this stage rather than an automaton wandering through their home.
"It's not about when the technology is ready, it's when consumers feel comfortable enough about having a robot in their home. It's a very personal space.
"That's why even with Droplet we tried to make it look inviting - not something you would feel apprehensive going up to or might give you anxiety."
Branto's bot is one of the start-ups featured in Techcrunch's zone at CES
Specialist droids
The brush-spinning Grillbot is another niche robot on show - its speciality: cleaning your barbecue after a cook-out.
"It took over two years to come up with the algorithm to get it to run over every grill surface," notes Grillbot's chief executive Ethan Wood.
"It runs the three motors in a pattern that looks random, but there's an organisation to the madness."
It takes a Grillbot about half an hour to clean a barbecue
Another bot, Budgee, is designed to help elderly and otherwise infirm owners shift heavy loads around their homes.
"We have a transmitter that the owner carries or wears and it pairs with the robot," explains Nick Lynch, lead engineer at Five Elements Robotics.
"Once they activate that and put it into follow mode it will follow the sensor wherever it sees it.
"I have a co-worker whose father uses it to move a five gallon water bottle about the house, and it can be used for anything like that where you need an extra hand."
Budgee bots are designed to help infirm people move objects around their homes
Other specialist home robotics at CES include:
Otus - a machine that continually turns a tablet or smartphone to face the user while they video chat, so - for example - if they are moving around while they cook a meal in the kitchen they don't disappear from view
Zeta - an inkjet printer that crawls along a piece of paper to draw text and images, allowing it to be easily stored away when not in use
Atomobot - a mobile air purification machine that hunts the home for airborne dust and odours to remove
A Singapore-based start-up has created Otus, a robot that turns a smartphone or tablet to face its user when a video chat app is being used
High-five
One final home robotics trend is machines designed to help kids learn how to code
The latest entrant to an increasingly busy sector is Canada's Spin Master, which owns the rights to construction toy Meccano, and has just announced the Meccanoid.
Kids can build and program a robot to move in certain ways, and record and playback voices.
"I think it's a no-brainer," says the firm's marketing executive Tara Tucker.
Spin Master's Meccanoid can be programmed to mirror the movements of its owner
"Once you have built a robot that can pick up your soda pop, hit you over the head or high-five you, it's much more engaging that coding at a computer screen, and it will create future visionaries."
Whether those visionaries go on to build the nanny/cleaner/security guard/companion/carer all-in-one droid that many envisage when you suggest a home robot is another matter.
"Maybe in the very long-term that could happen," reflects Droplet's Mr Fernholz.
"But if you look at something that's been around for over a hundred years like the vehicle -
there's still no one device that transforms from an airplane to a car.
"So, while I think an all-in-one homebot is theoretically possible, it would either be cost prohibitive or in the act of trying to make it do everything, it could end up doing everything poorly."