Kuri, the
home robot that wants to be more companion and less Roomba, has begun shipping
out to customers. Kuri creator Mayfield Robotics, a Bosch-owned startup,
revealed that its initial shipments have gone out via FedEx –
which means it technically met its goal of beginning to ship the photogenic
little friend bots prior to the end of 2017, if only just.
Kuri was
originally unveiled almost a year ago at the Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas, and it’s been steadily getting
smarter and closer to production-ready status since then, with regular updates
from the roboticists at Mayfield, who wanted to create a domestic robot that
wasn’t just functional, but that would be welcomed in as a virtual member of
the family.
The little
robot features touch sensors, expressive eyes with a built-in camera and
live-streaming capabilities, the ability to communicate via onboard speakers,
microphones and gestural motion actuators, obstacle avoidance smarts and wheels
that can handle room crossing from one room into another, as well as multiple
types of floors and carpets.
Kuri’s
designed to autonomously navigate the house, learn over time, automatically
capture special moments, play back music, audiobooks and podcasts, and
generally be a pal around the house. It’s a novel and daring approach to
bringing robotics into the domestic sphere – especially given its $700 price
tag. Mayfield seems to be enjoying healthy interest, however; the queue is
currently set to deliver sometime next spring for reservations made today.
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