Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Consumer Electronics Devices

Robots: The Next Home Assistants

At CES 2020, many robot announcements were made with a focus around education, service, and emotional care or support. Last week, Samsung introduced two separate robot form factors: A tennis ball sized robot called Ballie. Ballie has a camera and is designed to patrol the home. It can serve as a fitness assistant, prompting consumers to get active, it can also interact with other devices in the home. For example, Ballie can instruct a smart vacuum cleaner to clean up messes throughout the home. In addition to Ballie, Samsung also revealed the Bot Chef. These are robotic arms that hang from the ceiling and help with tasks in the Kitchen, such as adding ingredients to a pot or stirring the content within a pot.

     

Samsung's Ballie (Source: cnbc.com)                                          Samsung's Bot Chef (Source: cnet.com)

In addition to these announcements from Samsung, robots have been in the news from other companies throughout the quarter. Shine has launched an Indiegogo campaign for a robot that cleans toilets in the home and helps to address malfunctions that may occur, by sending alerts of the problem (perhaps a leak) and the potential solution to the user’s mobile device.

The development of robots for use as in-home assistants has been challenging for smart home device manufacturers. Several appliance manufacturers including Panasonic, Bosch, and LG have introduced robots in the past, but none made it to market. In 2019, Anki stopped production of its home assistant robot “Vector,” one of the first home assistant robots to make it to market. Robots that have single use cases such as vacuum cleaners have experienced some market success, indicating the potential for market success for products that perform repetitive or less desirable tasks around the home. While kitchen bots such as the Bot Chef are useful, device manufacturers must be mindful of the creativity and emotional attachment often involved in meal preparation. A product that automates the process too much may be undesirable.

For multifunctional home assistant robots, a primary challenge involves training them to operate in different home environments. Toyota Research Institute is attempting to use VR to help robots perform tasks more precisely. It involves having a human teacher see what the robot is seeing live and annotate proper instructions to the robot about how to perform the task properly. This will help accelerate the training of the robot. 

We will continue to watch the impact on robots on the consumer market.  Parks Associates hosts insightful panel discussions on major technology trends at its annual CONNECTION Summit at CES and CONNECTIONS conferences. CONNECTIONS US will be held May 19 – 21 in San Francisco, CA.  

Further Reading:

More Press Releases

Thursday, Jul 11, 2024

Parks Associates: After a pandemic peak, familiarity with and ownership of EVs have decreased

Six million US Internet households own an EV New research from Parks Associates’ consumer study o...

View More

Tuesday, Jul 09, 2024

Parks Associates announces new Broadband Market Tracker, annual research service tracking 25+ residential ISPs in the US and Canada

Space X’s Starlink service has an estimated US 1.3 million residential subscriptions, creating new m...

View More

Tuesday, Jun 25, 2024

Parks Associates: Average spending on streaming services drops from $90 to $64 per month

Parks Associates presents research at StreamTV Show This week, Parks Associates will share new re...

View More