Thursday, December 3, 2015

iRobot Roomba 870 #ExpressReview

iRobot Roomba 870 #ExpressReview
Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the iRobot Battery
My first encounter with a robot was the LG HOM-BOT vacuum cleaner a few year back. Strangely, even now the one functional robot you can bring home is a vacuum bot, and they are getting better. iRobot has been a leading player in vacuum cleaning robots with a host of models. While the small Indian market has predominantly been the domain of LG and local players like Milagrow, it seems iRobot now wants to make an impression here.
The iRobot Roomba 870 is the size of a large frying pan and stands about 3.6 inches tall and weighs 3.8 kg. So while the Roomba can move about on its own, it is not difficult for even a child to take it around if needed with battery like iRobot Roomba 80501 Battery, iRobot Roomba 500 Battery, iRobot Roomba 510 Battery, iRobot Roomba 530 Battery, iRobot Roomba 560 Battery, iRobot Roomba 580 Battery, iRobot Roomba 600 Battery, iRobot Roomba 700 Battery, iRobot Scooba 5800 Battery, iRobot Scooba 5900 Battery, iRobot Scooba 6000 Battery, iRobot Scooba 350 Battery. Under the Roomba are tangle-free AeroForce extractors that can pick up pretty much anything on that floor. In fact, while cleaning up after the review, I saw quite a few pieces of my son’s building blocks. Yes, this is one powerful beast.
Technology for me has to bring in convenience and not complicate life. That is what the Roomba 870 does. The vacuum robot just needs to be charged on its dock and as soon as you hit the clean button, it is off on a stroll around the house gobbling up dirt in its path. But the best thing here is that you don’t have to hit the clean button. Just schedule the time of the day, or night, when you want Roomba to do its cleaning rounds.
The Roomba is no dumb robot. It knows its way around the house and will not fall off the stairs or get stuck at the first obstacle. It finds a way around obstacles and since our cramped urban homes have a lot of sofa legs and chairs to negotiate, this is a good feature.
Here is where it gets interesting. The Roomba charges itself on a dock and does not have wires that go into it. So if there is a scheduled cleaning, it can move out of the dock on its own and go about its job. But this also means when the cleaning is over, or when it is running out of battery it comes back to the dock on its own.
There is also a dock button and on pressing this, the Roomba finds its way back to the dock wherever it is. And it does find the way, even in a layout as complex as that of my house. After all, this is what robots are supposed to do.
You can also prevent the Roomba from venturing into no-go zones, like your baby’s play area using the Virtual Wall Halo that comes in the box. Keep one of these in the no-go zone and the Roomba will avoid it during cleaning.

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