(Warning: this process is very loud!) This saves you from having to pull out the bin after every few runs and empty it yourself. This turns the charging base for your robot into a motorized emptying station that sucks out the dirt from its bin. It also means you don’t have to tidy up before the robot runs, as it can navigate around shoes, socks, and other common clutter. Robot vacuums with AI avoidance are much less likely to get stuck when cleaning, meaning you’re more likely to come home to a clean floor. These models use cameras (worth noting) to see objects in their path and decide how to approach them. This adds some souped-up smarts to your robot, helping it “intelligently” avoid clutter (and a potential poop apocalypse if it encounters pet waste). Every bot I’ve tested struggles around the legs of my swivel armchair, so I create a no-go zone there. These are also useful for keeping it out of areas where it gets stuck. Mapping can also add “virtual” no-go zones - digital walls to prevent your bot from going where you don’t want it to. Using variations on a technology called simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM), the bot will map your home to make sure it doesn’t miss spots and allow you to tell it where you want it to go (in the app or with a voice assistant). A robot that can map your house allows for precision cleaning and avoidance (crucial if you have delicate objects or areas in your home).
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