Samsung Unveils Home Robot That Can Open Doors: A New Category Emerges
The electronics giant is betting that consumers want more than a vacuum. They want a robot that can navigate their homes like a person would.
Image credit: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Samsung has introduced a home robot that combines the familiar floor-cleaning capabilities of a Roomba with something genuinely new: the ability to open doors. The product, first reported by TechCrunch, represents a category that simply did not exist a year ago.
What exactly can this robot do?
At its core, the Samsung robot is a vacuum. It maps your home, avoids obstacles, and cleans floors in the way that millions of robot vacuums already do. The difference lies in what Samsung calls "limited manipulation," a technical way of saying the robot has a physical mechanism that lets it interact with door handles.
Think of it as the difference between a car that can drive itself on the highway and one that can also park itself in a garage. The cleaning function is table stakes. The door-opening capability is what makes this something new.
Why does door-opening matter?
The limitation of every robot vacuum on the market today is containment. Close a bedroom door, and your vacuum cannot clean that room until you open it. This creates a fundamental tension: robot vacuums promise autonomy, but they require human intervention to access much of a typical home.
Samsung's approach addresses this directly. A robot that can open doors can, in theory, clean an entire home without anyone needing to prepare the space first. Consumer Reports provided independent confirmation of the product's capabilities, noting the novelty of this product category.
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