Roomba vacuum maker
iRobot betting big on the 'smart' home
Send a link to a friend
[July 24, 2017]
By Jan Wolfe
(Reuters) - The Roomba robotic vacuum has
been whizzing across floors for years, but its future may lie more in
collecting data than dirt.
That data is of the spatial variety: the dimensions of a room as well as
distances between sofas, tables, lamps and other home furnishings. To a
tech industry eager to push "smart" homes controlled by a variety of
Internet-enabled devices, that space is the next frontier.
Smart home lighting, thermostats and security cameras are already on the
market, but Colin Angle, chief executive of Roomba maker iRobot Corp,
says they are still dumb when it comes to understanding their physical
environment. He thinks the mapping technology currently guiding top-end
Roomba models could change that and is basing the company's strategy on
it.
"There's an entire ecosystem of things and services that the smart home
can deliver once you have a rich map of the home that the user has
allowed to be shared," said Angle.
That vision has its fans, from investors to the likes of Amazon.com Inc,
Apple Inc and Alphabet who are all pushing artificially intelligent
voice assistants as smart home interfaces. According to financial
research firm IHS Markit, the market for smart home devices was worth
$9.8 billion in 2016 and is projected to grow 60 percent this year.
Angle told Reuters that iRobot, which made Roomba compatible with
Amazon's Alexa voice assistant in March, could reach a deal to sell its
maps to one or more of the Big Three in the next couple of years.
Amazon declined to comment, and Apple and Google did not respond to
requests for comment.
So far investors have cheered Angle's plans, sending iRobot stock
soaring to $102 in mid-June from $35 a year ago, giving it a market
value of nearly $2.5 billion on 2016 revenue of $660 million.
But there are headwinds for iRobot's approach, ranging from privacy
concerns to a rising group of mostly cheaper competitors - such as the
$300 Bissell SmartClean and the $270 Hoover Quest 600 - which are
threatening to turn a once-futuristic product into a commoditized home
appliance.
Low-cost Roomba rivals were the subject of a report by short-seller Ben
Axler of Spruce Point Capital Management, which sent the stock down 20
percent to $84 at the end of June.
The company's smart home vision has helped bring around some former
critics. Willem Mesdag, managing partner of hedge fund Red Mountain
Capital - who led an unsuccessful proxy fight against Angle last year
and wound up selling his iRobot shares - is now largely supportive of
the company's direction.
I think they have a tremendous first-mover advantage," said Mesdag, who
thinks iRobot would be a great acquisition for one of the Big Three.
"The competition is focused on making cleaning products, not a mapping
robot.
MILITARY ROOTS
Founded in 1990, iRobot saw early success building bomb disposal robots
for the U.S. Army before launching the world's first "robovac" in 2002.
The company sold off its military unit last year to focus on the
consumer sector, and says the Roomba - which ranges in price from $375
to $899 - still has 88 percent of the U.S. robovac market.
All robovacs use short-range infrared or laser sensors to detect and
avoid obstacles, but iRobot in 2015 added a camera, new sensors and
software to its flagship 900-series Roomba that gave it the ability to
build a map while keeping track of their own location within it.
[to top of second column] |
iRobot CEO Colin Angle is pictured at iRobot Shanghai office in
Shanghai, China, May 16, 2017. Picture taken on May 16, 2017.
Courtesy iRobot/Handout via REUTERS
So-called simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) technology right now
enables Roomba, and other higher-end Robovacs made by Dyson and other rivals, to
do things like stop vacuuming, head back to its dock to recharge and then return
to the same spot to finish the job.
Guy Hoffman, a robotics professor at Cornell University, said detailed spatial
mapping technology would be a "major breakthrough" for the smart home.
Right now, smart home devices operate "like a tourist in New York who never
leaves the subway," said Hoffman.
"There is some information about the city, but the tourist is missing a lot of
context for what's happening outside of the stations."
With regularly updated maps, Hoffman said, sound systems could match home
acoustics, air conditioners could schedule airflow by room and smart lighting
could adjust according to the position of windows and time of day.
Companies like Amazon, Google and Apple could also use the data to recommend
home goods for customers to buy, said Hoffman.
One potential downside is that selling data about users' homes raises clear
privacy issues, said Ben Rose, an analyst who covers iRobot for Battle Road
Research. Customers could find it "sort of a scary thing," he said.
Angle said iRobot would not sell data without its customers' permission, but he
expressed confidence most would give their consent in order to access the smart
home functions.
Another Roomba risk is that cheaper cleaning products are what consumers really
want. In May, the New York Times' Sweethome blog dethroned the $375 Roomba 690
as its most-recommended robovac in favor of the $220 Eufy RoboVac 11, saying the
connectivity and other advanced features of the former would not justify the
greater cost for most users.
Short-seller Axler's June report caused a stir mostly with its prediction that
value-priced appliance maker SharkNinja Operating LLC could launch a robovac by
year's end. SharkNinja declined to comment.
One potential iRobot bulwark against these new competitors: a portfolio of 1,000
patents worldwide covering the very concept of a self-navigating household robot
vacuum as well as basic technologies like object avoidance.
A handful of those patents are now being tested in a series of patent
infringement lawsuits iRobot filed in April against Bissell, Stanley Black &
Decker, Hoover Inc, Chinese outsourced manufacturers and other robovac makers.
The litigation is the most significant in iRobot's history.
A lawyer for Hoover declined to comment. Lawyers for Bissell and Black & Decker
did not respond to requests for comment.
The patents are a "huge part of our competitive moat, Angle said. It is
getting really hard not to step on our intellectual property.
(Reporting by Jan Wolfe; Editing by Anthony Lin and Edward Tobin)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |