National Post

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Top devices to have around the home.

- Bob Tedeschi, The New York Times News Service

Grillbot

It’s a small, nasty job that’s too often forgotten until the food is ready to throw on the barbecue, but cleaning a grill can be a pleasure — as long as someone else is doing it. The US$130 Grillbot (all prices US) works like a miniature Roomba, but with more fearsome metal bristles. On a hot or cold grill, start the bot, close the lid and, 10 to 30 minutes later, the grate is clean enough to cook on. Some users have noted the bot’s tendency to shed bristles, but Ethan Woods, the company’s chief executive, says a new design has addressed the issue. Forgetful types will appreciate the device’s alarm, which sounds when the bot is left in a hot barbecue for too long.

Litter-Robot

Changing cat litter is the most dreaded entry on my children’s list of chores. The Litter-Robot may change that. It’s built with a sensor that knows when your cat has visited, and afterward the unit rotates like a giant cement mixer, to sift and deposit clumps into a waste tray. There are downsides: The LitterRobo­t is fairly big — about 72 cm high, 55 cm wide and 62.5 cm from front to back — so it may not fit easily in smaller apartments. At $389, it’s not cheap. And you need to keep it stocked with carbon filters and waste-tray liners.

Soloshot2

Filming oneself, for fun or work, is easy enough if you stand still. But for less-static pursuits — like sports, dance or just even romping in the yard with your toddler — filming and doing are mutually exclusive. The Soloshot2 is a $400 system made up of a robotic camera harness and a separate sensor that attaches to whatever you want to film. The harness points the camera in the direction of the sensor. With a range of 700 metres and a battery life of eight hours for the base and four hours for the sensor, the Soloshot2 can be used to videotape any activity, even your next synchroniz­ed swimming session (the sensor is waterproof). The only thing you need worry about is someone stealing your camera while you’re playing in the pool.

rockaRoo

A company based in Pittsburgh, 4moms, built the rockaRoo to track a baby’s weight and seat position hundreds of times per second, and replicate the rocking motion with a seat that pivots at the bottom. The motion includes “falling at the speed of gravity,” the company says, and the motor is quiet enough to allow napping or for the baby to hear whatever music parents wish to play over the device’s internal speakers. For parents of colicky or otherwise sleepless babies, this particular bot may be worth the $180 price. For this parent of older kids, it arrived around 12 years too late.

Robomow RS

Most household tasks can be blown off with few consequenc­es. Drag your feet on lawn-mowing duties, though, and things get wild. Robomow’s RS ($1,100 to $2,000) is among the latest entries in a category that’s attracting competitio­n. Setting up the mower can be a chore, as you must map out your yard with wires to define the Robomow’s boundaries. Once that’s done, though, the bot cuts as often as you like and returns to its charging dock when low on power. It’s electric, so noise is less of a problem than with convention­al mowers. One big question for Robomow and its competitor­s is long-term reliabilit­y. But analysts give the latest generation of robotic mowers good marks for reliabilit­y, and electric mowers generally require none of the annual maintenanc­e faced by owners of gas-powered mowers.

Kibo

The toy market is cluttered with robots that dance and make noise and then, if my children are any indication, collect dust once a child has grown bored with the toy’s schtick. Kibo is a different breed of bot, having emerged from a children’s technology lab at Tufts University. Designed for ages four to seven, it’s a learning tool disguised as a toy: Kids program the $230 robot using wooden blocks that form different commands. Kibo scans the sequence of the blocks and executes the commands, while also reacting to sounds, light and obstacles. Its components are so intuitivel­y designed that a child (or adult) can operate it without reading directions. The idea isn’t so much to get kids to understand programmin­g, but rather to use a self-programmed device to enhance playtime activities like storytelli­ng and role playing.

Robotis Mini

Robotis generated much attention for its Robotis-OP humanoid robot, which was praised for its sophistica­tion and versatilit­y, but which carries a $12,000 price tag. This year the company released a miniature version of that device, which loses some of the versatilit­y and durability of its bigger sibling but remains a technologi­cal wonder. Unlike the humanoid robot toys on the market, the $500 Mini is programmab­le and responds to touch, gesture and voice commands with fluidity and precision. Some owners have complained that putting the robot together is unduly difficult, and the company tacitly acknowledg­ed as much with video tutorials intended to help users through the hours-long assembly process. Another significan­t drawback, for now, is that you need an Android mobile device running Android software version 4.0 to control the Mini. The cheapest of these are around $150. An Apple version is in the works, the company says.

Neato Botvac

Vacuums constitute the biggest and most competitiv­e consumer-robotics category in the marketplac­e, and they’re getting better. The earliest models were criticized for their over-reliance on humans to maintain them. (“I had to constantly clean my cleaning robot,” Mr. Guizzo says.) Owners also had to drag the bots to their charging stations when the batteries died, and move furniture that the robots couldn’t squeeze beneath. The Neato Botvac (US$480 to $600) requires less cleaning than the earliest robotic vacuums, and it features good pickup power and a low profile that helps it sneak under couches. My favourite feature: When the battery is low, the Botvac returns to its charging station. When Dyson’s much-anticipate­d robot appears later this year, watch for similar features.

Scooba 450

No company has done more to popularize home robotics than iRobot, the maker of the Roomba vacuum, the Looj gutter cleaner, the Mirra pool cleaner and, this year, the Scooba 450 floor scrubber. The $600 device soaks the floor, spreads cleaner and scrubs and vacuums the dirty water before a final pass with a squeegee. One hiccup we had during our otherwise successful testing: The “Virtual Wall” accessory, which creates an infrared barrier to keep the Scooba out of specific areas, cast so much infrared light that in smaller spaces the robot was hesitant to scrub anywhere.

Droplet

Gardeners with day jobs and cluttered lives understand that watering plants is a classic problem. You want precise and regular watering; you’re more apt to deliver a massive dousing, only after the plants have begun tilting earthward for lack of moisture. At $300, Droplet is a pricey but reliable solution to the problem. Set the sprinkler in place, program the system on a computer or mobile device and connect it to your home’s Wi-Fi router, and the system takes over from there. Droplet checks weather data and points the sprinkler to specific pockets of your garden to deliver water where and when it’s needed. With a range of 10 metres in all directions, the units can manage bigger gardens and entire swaths of lawn with less wasted water.

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