Bangkok Post

Forget self-driving cars, here comes self-driving luggage

-

LAS VEGAS: Self-driving cars may take a while to arrive, but the self-driving luggage is here now.

Some of the technologi­es used in autonomous cars have been adapted in products unveiled at the 2018 Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas, to help travellers with the weighty problem of dealing with baggage.

The “robot luggage” from California-based startup Travelmate Robotics can be controlled with a smartphone app and can roll alongside its owner at speeds up to 11 kilometres per hour, navigating around obstacles.

“This is really a robot which follows you around,” said Travelmate Robotics founder and president Maximillia­n Kovtun.

Travelmate Robotics designed the device — which integrates elements of artificial intelligen­ce — to roll at a pace that matches that of the user, or it can be directed with the smartphone app in the same manner as a drone.

Priced at around $1,100, it is slated to roll out in February for the US market, and later in Europe and Japan.

A competing offering from ForwardX Robotics, a Chinese startup with offices in California, is designed to be used with facial recognitio­n, without need for a smartphone applicatio­n.

“It uses computer vision and a driving algorithm to have a clear path,” said founder Nicholas Chee, who showed a prototype at CES.

The ForwardX luggage also has gesture control technology and can be immobilise­d to protect against theft.

Chee said he expected the launch in mid2018 at a price under $1,000.

Both Travelmate and ForwardX say their devices comply with US safety regulation­s because their lithium-ion batteries, banned in checked luggage, can be removed.

Also shown at CES was an auto-following luggage from China-based 90FUN, which has been available in the Chinese market and is soon coming to America. It uses self-balancing technology from the personal transport maker Segway.

And finally for the weariest of travellers, a luggage product called the Modobag, which lacks artificial intelligen­ce but offers a sizeable perk instead: as a ride-on luggage which can carry its owner along with their clothes.

 ?? AFP ?? The ForwardX CX-1 suitcase is seen during the CES Unveiled event in Las Vegas on Sunday.
AFP The ForwardX CX-1 suitcase is seen during the CES Unveiled event in Las Vegas on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand