Roomba’s “intelligence” is a bag of random numbers with some constraints on it. Their competitor is a bunch brainier in terms of room mapping and general navigation; for instance, it doesn’t require a special beacon to tell it where a doorway is.
Stupid Roombas don’t seem very convenient. (I don’t think people enjoy getting their Roombas out of corners or stuck places.) Or do you mean that the Neatos, despite their greater intelligence, are much more inconvenient in some other way (also explaining why Roombas continue to sell as much as they do)?
Roomba’s “intelligence” is a bag of random numbers with some constraints on it. Their competitor is a bunch brainier in terms of room mapping and general navigation; for instance, it doesn’t require a special beacon to tell it where a doorway is.
If true, that just sharpens the question: why isn’t iRobot improving their Roombas’ software if a competitor is doing so?
They’re not selling brains; they’re selling convenience?
Stupid Roombas don’t seem very convenient. (I don’t think people enjoy getting their Roombas out of corners or stuck places.) Or do you mean that the Neatos, despite their greater intelligence, are much more inconvenient in some other way (also explaining why Roombas continue to sell as much as they do)?