The two companies are working together to leverage spatial data generated by iRobot’s robovacs
Google and iRobot have
announced they’re working together to improve smart home technology using
mapping data collected by iRobot’s robot vacuums. The two companies say the aim
is to make smart homes “more thoughtful” by leveraging the unique dataset
collected by iRobot: maps of customers’ homes.
iRobot’s latest Roomba,
the i7+, creates maps using a combination of odometry data (measuring how far
the robovac’s wheels move) and low-res camera imagery. The resulting maps can
be used to create custom cleaning schedules or to let users ask their Roomba to
vacuum specific rooms. An integration with Google Assistant lets customers give
verbal commands like, “OK Google, tell Roomba to clean the kitchen.”
Google and iRobot say
this data will be useful for other smart home devices. The maps could be used
to locate products like Wi-Fi-connected lighting, for example, automatically
assigning names and locations to lights in customers’ bedroom, kitchen, and so
on.
SPATIAL DATA WILL LET
USERS MAP THE LOCATION OF DEVICES IN THEIR HOME
iRobot CEO Colin Angle
told The Verge that the collaboration lays the foundations for future smart
homes. “This idea is that when you say, ‘OK Google, turn the lights on in the
kitchen,’ you need to know what lights are in the kitchen. And if I say, ‘OK future
iRobot robot with an arm, go get me a beer,’ it needs to know where the kitchen
and the refrigerator are.”
Google’s Michelle
Turner, director of the company’s smart home ecosystem, says the dream is not
just to create a smart home, but a “thoughtful home” that requires less input
from users and adapts to their wants and needs. “We think a thoughtful home has
context,” says Turner, “and that is something that iRobot has done an
exceptional job on.”
The idea of Google
collecting data about the physical layout of users’ homes will be justifiably
unsettling to some. Although Google doesn’t have as bad of a reputation for
data leaks and breaches as Facebook, it’s still had a number of serious lapses.
Just this month, for example, the company admitted it had exposed the personal
data of around 500,000 Google+ users, leading to the closure of the platform.
It also announced it was reviewing access to Gmail by third-party companies
after it was revealed that many developers were reading and analyzing users’ personal
mail for marketing and data mining.
Turner stressed that
any spatial information shared by iRobot would not be used in Google’s
lucrative ad-targeting business. “This data doesn’t help current Google
products,” says Turner. “This data is not getting fed into some larger morass
of Google information.”
iRobot has also said in
the past that it only wants to use spatial data collected by its devices to
make smart products easier to use. Maps of users’ homes created by the Roomba
i7+ are sent to the company’s servers via Wi-Fi, but the low-res images used to
make these maps (which mostly capture vague areas of light and shade) stay on
the device.
Angle stresses that
sharing this information is also voluntary. “If we can help the Google
ecosystem to have a better understanding of the home — with full permission of
the users, and the full ability to back out — then it might be that owning a
Roomba makes your smart home smarter,” he says. “Or even more thoughtful.”
source:
https://www.theverge.com/2018/10/31/18041876/google-irobot-smart-home-spatial-data-mapping-collaboration
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