Manufacturer - iRobot Corporation
Home page - irobot.com/roomba
Roomba on Wikipedia
Manufacturer - iRobot Corporation
Home page - irobot.com/roomba
Roomba on Wikipedia
iRobot Roomba 700 Series Vacuum Cleaning Robots
Published on Apr 11, 2012
Using its patented, three-stage cleaning system, Roomba 700 Series Vacuum Cleaning Robots lift dirt, pet hair and other debris from all areas of your floor, including under and around furniture and along wall edges.
iRobot Roomba 500 Series Vacuum Cleaning Robot iAdapt Technology
Published on Apr 12, 2012
iAdapt Technology is intuitive and exploratory - it knows where dirt hides and isn't afraid to seek it out. With iAdapt, Roomba chooses from dozens of robotic behaviors more than 60 times per second to ensure complete coverage of every section of your floor.
Hair is no match for iRobot's new Roomba robotic vacuum
Published on Nov 19, 2013
iRobot updated its Roomba vacuuming robot to pick up more dirt and avoid hair tangles using what it calls AeroForce extractors or rubber-like rollers instead of traditional bristles. Follow reporter Nick Barber on Twitter @nickjb
Roomba vs. Battle Axe - WIRED's Battle Damage
Published on Nov 6, 2014
We trust them to clean our floors, but how do they stack up against a battle axe? Angry Nerd dared us to test the vacuuming robot Roomba—see what happens when we put it through a destruction test of viking proportions.
Roomba Upgrades - Battery, Brushes, & Bin = Better Robot!
Published on Dec 22, 2014
Some upgrades for my iRobot Roomba. These have made it perform better than new!
The products here are the AeroVac upgrade kit. Which comes with new bin, filters, side spin brush, and main brushes. It can be found on iRobots main site or Amazon. I also have the upgraded Lithium Power Inc. Battery, which can be found on Amazon.
Robot vacuum cleaner 'attacks' woman who fell asleep on floor
Published on Feb 9, 2015
Robot vacuum cleaner 'attacks' woman who fell asleep on floor. A robot vacuum cleaner has fired the opening salvo in the impending war between man and machine by “attacking” its sleeping owner. A woman from the South Korean city of Changwon left her Roomba to clean the floors and decided to take a nap on the floor. But the nefarious machine, which either thought her hair was dirt or was striking back at its 52-year-old human overlord, scooted over and sucked up the strands.
Her hair got caught up in the machine and the pain of having her scalp tugged woke her up.
She realised she was trapped and was forced to call emergency services to get free of the mechanised marauder. South Korean newspaper Kyunghyang Shinmun reports paramedics were able to free her without injury, but it is not known if she intends to keep the rebellious robot.
Source and read more:
"Robot vacuum cleaner 'attacks' woman who fell asleep on floor"
by Sam Webb
February 9, 2015
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