Meet the next generation of robots that shape-shift, are squish-able, and can troll the world’s oceans for months on a single battery charge. iRobot, best known for its Roomba disc-shaped robotic floor sweeper, is going way beyond scooping potato chips from under couches with its latest robot offspring.
Shape Shifting Robot
Easily the least recognizable robot at the showcase was a beige shape-shifting blob crisscrossed with lines and numbers and with tiny tubes emanating from one end. With a few taps from a nearby laptop, each tiny facet of the soft-sided robot could soften to the consistency of firm dough or become as hard and rigid as an overinflated soccer ball. When the facets were softened and hardened in the right order, the blob could rock-and roll.
iRobot’s Angle modestly described the experimental soft robot as a “shape shifting, amorphous, squishable blob that can roll itself.” Annan Mozeika, an iRobot representative said the technology was developed at the University Chicago and noted that a wireless version without external tubes had already been tested.
Ready-for-Combat Robot
Ocean Faring Robot
“We took the initiative,” said Angle. “We challenge and we make things happen…. We change things.”
Tom Frost, program manager for iRobot’s maritime systems, noted that the Seaglider can work for months on a single battery charge because it has no propulsion device like a propeller. Instead it relies on an internal bladder which can be filled or emptied of oil to change the unit’s buoyancy. Once it sinks, wing-like fins cause it to glide forward and by shifting an internal battery pack from one side to the other, the Seaglider’s direction can further be controlled.
Video below is of iRobot’s Angle discussing Seaglider.
He noted that the Seaglider, which can dive as deep as 1000 meters, was developed at the University of Washington and is licensed by iRobot. Frost also noted that the Seaglider, which can be outfitted with many types of cameras and sensors, can be controlled from any computer with Web access.
“Some of my guys even checked up on this with their iPhones,” he said.
So what would it cost to take a Seaglider home? Around $100,000 to $120,000, depending on how it’s configured, Frost said.
New Roomba: Modular Design
Video below shows the new modular design of the iRobot’s fifth-generation Roomba robot sweeper.