Things continue to look bleak for the original robot vacuum maker. iRobot’s third-quarter results, released last week, show that revenue is down and “well below our internal expectations due to continuing market headwinds, ongoing production delays, and unforeseen shipping disruptions,” said Gary Cohen, iRobot CEO, in a press release.

This meant they had to spend more cash and are now down to under $25 million. “At this time, the Company has no sources upon which it can draw for additional capital,” said Cohen.

The Roomba manufacturer has been struggling for several years in the face of increased competition from Chinese manufacturers. A sale to Amazon in 2022 looked to be its lifeline; however, regulatory scrutiny scuppered the deal, and the company was left in further turmoil. It laid off over 30 percent of its staff, lost its founder and CEO, Colin Angle, and was left with substantial debt as a result of the fallout.

This year, iRobot launched an entirely new line of robot vacuums, ostensibly to better compete with companies like Roborock, Ecovacs, and Dreame, adding lidar navigation to its line for the first time (over VSLAM). The new models look significantly different from the original Roombas and more like their competitors. They also use a different app with fewer features, but added some new hardware features the previous models lacked, including spinning mop pads and a roller mop.

In a regulatory filing earlier this month, the company warned it may be forced to seek bankruptcy protection following the breakdown of advanced negotiations with a potential buyer, and if it couldn’t secure additional funding.

Roomba customers are understandably concerned about the impact these current financial troubles might have on their home cleaning robots.

Earlier this month, fellow American robot vacuum manufacturer Neato, which shut down in 2023, pulled the plug on its cloud services, leaving its robots unable to communicate with the Neato app. However, the vacuums can still be controlled manually.

Similarly, if iRobot goes out of business and its cloud shuts down, most Roombas should still continue to work in offline mode — pressing the physical button on the robot to start, stop, and dock it. However, they likely wouldn’t be controllable via the app for features like scheduling or specific room cleaning, or via voice commands. This potential dilemma just further highlights that cloud-connected devices should be enhanced by connectivity, not reliant on it.

  • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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    15 hours ago

    This is why IoT isn’t sustainable. If you don’t have total control you’re fucked.

      • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Definitely. I use home assistant but I found a lot of things require enabling integrations with other platforms. They’re bricks if that platform decides they are.

  • Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Customers shouldn’t need to be concerned because the company going down should not brick your PHYSICAL PRODUCTS

    And yet, here we are

    • BlindFrog@lemmy.world
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      47 minutes ago

      My lil neato bot from 2017/2018ish makes a perimeter map around my place each time it deploys, then makes back and forth sweeps. It’s got a built in weekly timer by the quarter hour to schedule sweeps. It beeps at me when its bin is full. Why do robot vacuums need the internet?

    • pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      I’ve got one, and it works well enough when offline.

      If not, I could set up Home Assistant and self-host it.

      It’s a shame, as Mozilla gave iRobot one of the better privacy ratings. That’s the only reason I allowed it in my house to begin with.

    • definitemaybe@lemmy.ca
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      24 hours ago

      But, clearly, a Google Home or Amazon Alexa needs cloud connectivity to function. And short of Stop Killing Games regulations forcing companies to release software to keep purchases functional after server shutdowns, there’s going to be no alternative when they shut down the servers.

      But where do we draw the line?

      A smart fridge should obviously keep working without cloud connectivity, since cloud features aren’t relevant to its core functionality.

      A spyware house-scanning vacuum robot, on the other hand, that stores video of your entire house on web servers “to map your home” may not have the processing power to model the home based on its surveillance video recordings. So, is it reasonable, then, that these break when servers go offline?

      Without any regulations, the answer is just “consumers can go fuck themselves”, which clearly isn’t a good answer.

  • buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    This potential dilemma just further highlights that cloud-connected devices should be enhanced by connectivity, not reliant on it.

    This should be everyone’s takeaway.

    The problem isn’t the company possibly going out of business, its the loss of online service nerfing the device that is the real issue.

    • ready_for_qa@programming.dev
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      16 hours ago

      We could have consumer protection laws that mandate when a service that a consumer product relies on is no longer being served by the company, they must release the source code as FOSS for the community to carry it on if they so chose. This could apply to video game servers as well as robot vacuums.

  • Lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    I bought a robot vacuum, rooted it, and installed Valetudo (Wyze WVCR200S w/motherboard from a Viomi V6 - same robot).

    I don’t have to worry about this shit anymore. The vacuum still does the vacuum thing whether or not it’s connected to the internet.

  • Emi@ani.social
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    1 day ago

    Glad we have dumb “roomba” that has just one physical sensor when he bumps into something and infra for detecting docking station and for remote control. It does the job and that’s the main thing. Over the years only had to replace the battery.

    • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Kodak said “we don’t believe digital photography will take over” and iRobot is like “we’ve tried nothing and we’re all out of ideas”

      • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        They fucked up by making their robots last seemingly forever, due to the fact they spy on you and get stuck every 15 mins so you never want to turn them on.

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    The entire problem is that automobiles have become an accepted housing option, and Roombas don’t operate well in a vehicular environment, thus drastically cutting into their sale.

  • stoly@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Do people genuinely rely on these or are they really just a novelty?

    • Evotech@lemmy.world
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      60 minutes ago

      I do rely on them. I have two. They basically enable me to never vacuum myself the last 6 years

      Honestly I couldn’t imagine life without them anymore

    • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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      16 hours ago

      rely? no

      find it a useful assist? yes

      the Roomba can:

      • get under couches that my other vacuums cannot

      • deal with 90% of the average mess (dog hair and miscellaneous crumbs) without my input

      • pick up the little bits that you can never manage to sweep into a dust pan

      • do this within about 10-20% of the time it would take me to do it myself

      things it cannot do:

      • vacuum carpets

      • get into corners

      • deal with large messes

      typically, I will sweep crumbs and crap out of corners into the middle of a room. I do this all the way around this level of the house in under two minutes, which includes picking up the large clumps of fluffy dog hair that have accumulated along the walls and tossing them in the garbage and putting the broom back. I can then run the Roomba, and the only thing left to do after is brush/vacuum the carpets & rugs well.

      I also like the mopbot thingy because that definitely takes less time than doing it myself

      • Agent641@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Same, I have a Roborock and it cleans my house 3 times a week, mops and vacuums. I still need to vaccums in corners and narrow spots occasionally but the bot does 95% of the work for me

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      17 hours ago

      If the apartment/house layout is good for the roomba, it is a great tool. It doesn’t replace vacuuming and floor washing, but it does reduce the dirtness on the floor.

    • 🔰Hurling⚜️Durling🔱@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Don’t have a roomba (shark owner) and me and my two other vacuum cleaners depend on my robot vacuum to help pickup both my godwn retriever and corgi hair on a daily basis.

    • 0000@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      It makes my life easier for sure. I just start it when I head outside for work, errands, etc, and it’s done by the time I get back home.

  • manxu@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    It would be easy enough to force vendors to make the URL the device connects to, configurable and to publish the API the device is using. Two minuscule changes that can prolong the life of devices by decades.

    • lemming741@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      That would make the husk of the company truly worthless, and I’m not sure private equity will allow that.

    • dust_accelerator@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 day ago

      To be fair, many roombas have a mini DIN connector somewhere, which opens up the possibility for external control - what I plan to do when mine stops working due to server shutdown. However, getting replacement parts will get more and more tricky as time goes by.

      I just had to through out a mostly functional airfryer because the drawer rail disintegrated and the replacement part is no longer manufactured. The oldest one I could get was a “new” version with more plastic and a slightly bigger size, so it didn’t fit by about 5%.

      It really should be illegal, there is no logical reason for 500 slightly different models and inoperability of basic functions (drawers, APIs, …) aside from malignant greed and planet destruction.

      • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Gods, I fucking hate this so much. I’ve got a ninja blender that the lid seal is broken, and the lid alone is like 50-70% of the cost of a whole new unit. It’s ridiculous how impossible it is to find replacement parts for simple things anymore.