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Amazon acquires Roomba-maker iRobot in $1.7 billion deal

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Amazon devices are listening, watching and will soon be cleaning up after you.

The e-commerce giant will acquire iRobot — best known for its robotic vacuum Roomba — under a $1.7 billion all-cash deal, the latest step in its push into the home. From fitness wearables to streaming devices to its Alexa digital assistant, Amazon has advanced a lineup of devices under an ecosystem that ties consumers more tightly to the company and its services. Last year, it introduced Astro, a $1,000-plus robot meant to ferry around small items and keep its cameras peeled for intruders.

The deal announced Friday also is a continuation of Amazon’s business strategy to expand market share in different product categories through acquisitions. It snapped up Ring, which makes video doorbells and other smart-home technology, in February 2018, and before that Blink, which makes connected cameras and doorbells for the home. It also stunned the grocery industry in 2017 when it announced the purchase of Whole Foods Market, a deal valued at $13.7 billion.

(Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

The next generation of home robots will be more capable — and perhaps more social

The move comes just two weeks after Amazon announced it would buy the primary care provider One Medical for $3.9 billion as part of a major expansion of the tech company’s health-care ambitions. The tie-up, one of its largest acquisitions ever, gives Amazon a physical network of health-care offices and providers and bolsters its existing health-care portfolio, which includes an online pharmacy and Amazon Care, a virtual and in-home urgent care service.

Amazon’s $61-a-share offer represents a 22 percent premium over Thursday’s closing price of $49.99. On Friday, iRobot stock surged nearly 19.1 percent to close at $59.54.

“We know that saving time matters, and chores take precious time that can be better spent doing something that customers love,” said Dave Limp, senior vice president of Amazon Devices. “Over many years, the iRobot team has proven its ability to reinvent how people clean with products that are incredibly practical and inventive.”

Founded in 1990 by roboticists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, iRobot offers an array of automated vacuums and mops, as well as air purifiers and handheld vacuums. Its signature Roomba, which retails for as much as $1,000, learns the contours and corners of floors and can detect objects, offering connectivity to WiFi-networks and smartphones and can be summoned by voice-activated smart home devices. The company began trading on the Nasdaq in 2005.

While a top name in home robotics, iRobot has had a rocky year. On Friday, it reported second-quarter revenue of $255.4 million, a 30 percent drop from the year-ago period. It reported a net loss of $43.4 million for the three-month period ended July 2.

The company also plans to shift certain non-core engineering roles to lower-cost regions as part of a cost-reduction plan, and lay off 10 percent of its workforce, roughly 140 employees, according to the earnings report.

The company has withdrawn the 2022 financial forecast that it issued in May and, citing “ongoing disruptions and uncertainty that could impact the company’s outlook,” it suspended providing all other guidance about future performance.

iRobot’s products, which map out the floor plans of its customers’ most intimate spaces, will augment Amazon’s suite of products that function by surveilling the home, and the people inside of it.

What began as a microphone in a speaker has evolved into a growing genre of devices meant to make domestic life more enjoyable. Last September, at the company’s annual fall press event, Amazon unveiled a 15-inch wall-mounted version of its Echo Show screen that watches and listens to your home, and a number of other products and services that all monitor consumers in some way to anticipate their needs.

The growth of such technology highlights consumers’ increasing tolerance for sensors and cameras trained on their daily routines. That evolution has drawn criticism from privacy advocates and concerned consumers. It also underscores how tech giants view the home as yet another platform for an array of services and a goldmine of personal data.

Amazon will acquire iRobot’s net debt under the terms of the deal, which will require approval from regulators and the robot-maker’s shareholders. Colin Angle will stay on as iRobot’s chief executive.

Amazon shares fell 1.2 percent Friday to close at $140.80, giving it a market value of $1.4 trillion.

Last week, the Seattle-based giant reported its second consecutive quarterly loss — of $2.03 billion, or 20 cents per share — driven by a $3.9 billion write-down tied to its investment in electric vehicle start-up Rivian Automotive, the Associated Press reported. But Amazon also recorded a better-than-expected $121.2 billion in revenue during the second quarter.

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Amazon wants to map your home, so it bought iRobot

When I spoke to iRobot’s Colin Angle earlier this summer, he said iRobot OS — the latest software operating system for its robot vacuums and mops — would provide its household bots with a deeper understanding of your home and your habits. This takes on a whole new meaning with the news today that Amazon has bought iRobot for $1.7 billion.

From a smart home perspective, it seems clear Amazon wants iRobot for the maps it generates to give it that deep understanding of our homes. The vacuum company has detailed knowledge of our floor plans and, crucially, how they change. It knows where your kitchen is, which your kids’ rooms are, where your sofa is (and how new it is), and if you recently turned the guest room into a nursery.

This type of data is digital gold to a company whose primary purpose is to sell you more stuff. While I’m interested to see how Amazon can leverage iRobot’s tech to improve its smart home ambitions, many are right to be concerned with the privacy implications. People want home automation to work better, but they don’t want to give up the intimate details of their lives for more convenience.

This is a conundrum throughout the tech world, but in our homes, it’s far more personal. Amazon’s history of sharing data with police departments through its subsidiary Ring, combined with its “always listening (for the wake word)” Echo smart speakers and now its thorough knowledge of your floor plan, give it a pretty complete picture of your daily life.

The Roomba j7 has a front-facing, AI-powered camera that can identify objects in your home.

Each of iRobot’s connected Roomba vacuums and mops trundles around homes multiple times a week, mapping and remapping the spaces. On its latest model, the j7, iRobot added a front-facing, AI-powered camera that, according to Angle, has detected more than 43 million objects in people’s homes. Other models have a low-resolution camera that points at the ceiling for navigation.

All this makes it likely this purchase isn’t about robotics; if that’s what Amazon wanted, it would have bought iRobot years ago. Instead, it probably picked up the company (for a relative bargain — iRobot just reported a 30 percent revenue decline in the face of increasing competition) to get a detailed look inside our homes. Why? Because knowing your floor plan provides context. And in the smart home that Amazon is making a major play for, context is king.

“We really believe in ambient intelligence — an environment where your devices are woven together by AI so they can offer far more than any device could do on its own,” Marja Koopmans, director of Alexa smart home, told me in an interview last month. Ambient intelligence requires multiple data points to work. With detailed maps of our homes and the ability to communicate directly with more smart home devices once Matter arrives, Amazon’s vision of ambient intelligence in the smart home suddenly becomes a lot more attainable.

Astro — Amazon’s “lovable” home bot — was likely an attempt at getting that data. The robot has good mapping capabilities, powered by sensors and cameras that allow it to know everything from where the fridge is to which room you are currently in. Clearly, Amazon already had the capability to do what iRobot does. But for a thousand dollars and with limited capabilities (it couldn’t vacuum your home) and no general release date, Astro isn’t getting that info for Amazon anytime soon.

Amazon’s Astro robot is capable of mapping your home.

Ring’s Always Home Cam has similar mapping capabilities, allowing the flying camera to safely navigate your home. That product has further reach than Astro, as it only costs $250 and has a very clear security focus. But it’s still not available to buy.

So, what iRobot brings to Amazon is context at scale. As Angle told me in May, “The barrier to the next level of AI in robotics isn’t better AI. It’s context,” says Angle. “We’ve been able to understand the utterance ‘go to the kitchen and get me a beer’ for a decade. But if I don’t know where the kitchen is, and I don’t know where the refrigerator is, and I don’t know what a beer looks like, it really doesn’t matter that I understand your words.” iRobot OS provides some of that context and, as it’s cloud-based, can easily share the information with other devices. (Currently, users can opt out of Roomba’s Smart Maps feature, which stores mapping data and shares it between iRobot devices.)

A view of a Roomba j7’s map and AI-powered camera capabilities.

With context, the smart home becomes smarter; devices can work better and work together without the homeowner having to program them or prompt them to do so. Angle used the example of a connected air purifier (iRobot, so now Amazon, owns Aeris air purifiers). The air purifier could automatically know which room it was in using the iRobot OS cloud. “It would [know] ‘I’m in the kitchen. It’s okay to make more noise. And there are a lot of sources of pollutants here.’ Compared to its role in a bedroom, which would be different,” says Angle.

Amazon now owns four smart home brands (in addition to its Alexa platform, anchored by its Echo smart speakers and smart displays): home security company Ring, budget camera company Blink, and mesh Wi-Fi pioneers Eero. Add in iRobot and Amazon has many of the elements needed to create an almost sentient smart home, one that can anticipate what you want it to do and do it without you asking. This is something Amazon has already started to do with its Hunches feature.

But consumer trust is a major roadblock. Amazon will need to do a lot more to prove it’s worthy of this type of unfettered access to your home. Today, for many people, more convenience just doesn’t feel worth the tradeoff.

Photography by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

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Amazon is buying iRobot for $1.7B – TechCrunch

Amazon this morning announced plans to acquire iRobot for an all-cash deal valued at $1.7 billion. The home robotics firm, best known for pioneering the robotic vacuum, was founded in 1990 by  MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab members Colin Angle, Rodney Brooks and Helen Greiner. Twelve years after its founding, the company introduced the Roomba, a brand that has since become synonymous with the branding, selling more than 30 million units as of 2020.

Brooks and Greiner have gone on to found and lead several other companies, while Angle has remained on-board as CEO — a position he will maintain post-acquisition.

“Since we started iRobot, our team has been on a mission to create innovative, practical products that make customers’ lives easier, leading to inventions like the Roomba and iRobot OS,” CEO Colin Angle said in a release. “Amazon shares our passion for building thoughtful innovations that empower people to do more at home, and I cannot think of a better place for our team to continue our mission. I’m hugely excited to be a part of Amazon and to see what we can build together for customers in the years ahead.”

Amazon, too, has been aggressively tackling the robotics space in the decade since it acquired Kiva Systems, though the Amazon Robotics division is focused solely on its warehouse/fulfillment play. More recently, the company has made small steps into the home with the launch of Astro, a cheery ‘bot that lacks the Roomba’s single focus.

iRobot CEO Colin Angle, Image Credits: (Photo by Paul Marotta/Getty Images for TechCrunch)

“We know that saving time matters, and chores take precious time that can be better spent doing something that customers love,” Amazon Devices SVP Dave Limp said in the release. “Over many years, the iRobot team has proven its ability to reinvent how people clean with products that are incredibly practical and inventive—from cleaning when and where customers want while avoiding common obstacles in the home, to automatically emptying the collection bin. Customers love iRobot products—and I’m excited to work with the iRobot team to invent in ways that make customers’ lives easier and more enjoyable.”

Amazon and iRobot have had an increasingly close partnership over the past several years, through Roomba’s embrace of Alexa functionality and use of AWS servers. Angle, too, has often spoken about Roomba — and home robots generally — as a kind of connective tissue for the smart home. “The home of the future is a robot,” he noted in an interview with TechCrunch. “And the vacuum cleaners and the other devices are hands and eyes and appendages of the home robot. Ultimately, this smart home of the future isn’t controlled by you cell phone. If you have 200 devices, you’re not going to turn them on by pulling out your cell phone. We need a home that programs itself, and you just live in your home, and the home does the right thing based on understanding what’s going on.”

The company has, however, found difficulty recapturing the Roomba’s success — but not for lack of trying. It has experimented with several different home robot services, from cleaning gutters and pools to mopping floors and mowing the lawn. The latter arrived in the form of Terra, which has been put on indefinite hold during the pandemic. That news came in April 2020, alongside word the company had laid off 70 employees, comprising around 5% of its global workforce.

Amazon’s home robot, Astro

During a Twitter Spaces last month Angle told me with regards to finally launching Terra, “What we said in the latest call is that we are working on non-floor-cleaning robots. Interpret that as you will.” Having the tremendous resources of Amazon behind it will no doubt accelerate its ability to launch non-Roomba systems. The company was founded on such experimentation, as well, having built everything from baby dolls to military machines before hitting gold with Roomba.

The company spun off its military contract wing in 2016 as Endeavor, which went on to be acquired by FLIR systems in early 2019. A year prior, iRobot spun out the telepresence robotics startup, Ava. iRobot has made its own acquisitions, as well, purchasing connected air purifying company Aeris late last year, in a bid to diversify its in-home presences.

Image Credits: Amazon

The acquisition is pending the standard regulatory scrutiny. The companies will have to convince regulators — among other things– that they are maintaining the proper privacy safeguards. Amazon’s acquisition of Ring has raised all manner of red flags for advocacy groups, and its ownership of a the world’s most popular in-home robot will almost certainly raise eyebrows. Recent versions of the Roomba have increasingly sophisticated sensors built-in for building 3D maps of users homes.

The deal ranks among Amazon’s largest during what’s been an especially active moment for the retail behemoth. It follows recent massive deals for OneMedical and MGM. If it closes, the acquisition could represent a watershed moment for home robotics. For a decade, Roomba (and the army of robot vacuums that have followed) has been the only truly mainstream home robot, as names like Anki, Jibo and Kuri have failed to reach mainstream consumers. With its acquisition of iRobot, Amazon is no doubt hoping it can do for the home what it’s succeeded in accomplishing with industrial robotics.

A decade after its acquisition of Kiva, Amazon Robotics is almost universally recognized as the warehouse and fulfillment robotics space amid a pandemic-fueled boom. Can its purchase of iRobot do the same for the home?

 

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The best Amazon deals on Apple, iRobot

— Recommendations are independently chosen by Reviewed’s editors. Purchases you make through our links may earn us a commission.

Black Friday and Cyber Monday 2021 went by in a flash, but thankfully, there’s still plenty of deals leftover on Amazon. If you didn’t get a chance to do some shopping during the yearly savings events, don’t panic. We’ve got you covered with tons of bargains from the online retailer you can still take advantage of below, and will continue to update this post with the best of Amazon’s Cyber Week offerings all day long.

Whether you’re looking to scoop up some of the best Christmas gifts or simply treating yourself, prepare to save. Some of the steals at Amazon today include an Oculus headset with a $50 Amazon credit and the internet’s favorite hair styling tool for just $22.28—more than half off.

At Reviewed, our team of product experts spends all year testing out the best of the best. Below, you’ll find hundreds of still-live Amazon Cyber Monday 2021 deals on some of our favorite brands, including Apple, Nespresso, Eufy, Revlon, Samsung and so many more. Our experts spend all weekend finding the best prices on the best products, so let us do all the research for you. 

Tackle your holiday shopping with deals and expert advice delivered straight to your phone. Sign up for text message alerts from the deal-hunting team at Reviewed.

Amazon’s not the only retailer we’re watching. You can check off even more items on your holiday shopping list and save big with Cyber Week deals across top retailers, including Best Buy, Target and Walmart’s deals. 

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  1. iRobot Roomba j7+ (7550) Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum at Amazon for $649 (Save $200.99)
  2. Oculus Quest 2 at Amazon for $299 (Get a $50 Amazon credit with code OCULUS50)
  3. Beats Studio Buds True Wireless Noise Canceling Earbuds at Amazon for $99.95 with coupon code BYZPPJADUODB (Save $50 and get a $10 Amazon credit)
  4. Crest 3D Whitestrips Teeth Whitening Kit at Amazon for $29.99 (Save $10)
  5. New Apple AirPods Pro at Amazon for $179 (Save $70) 
  6. Lenovo Flex 3 Chromebook 11.6-Inch Laptop at Amazon for $196.89 (Save $123.10)
  7. eufy by Anker BoostIQ RoboVac 11S at Amazon for $137.98 (Save $92.01)
  8. Revlon One-Step Hair Dryer and Volumizer Hot Air Brush at Amazon for $22.28 (Save $37.71)
  9. Cuisinart Multiclad Pro Stainless Steel 12-Piece Cookware Set at Amazon for $249.95 (Save $420.05)
  10. SodaStream Sparkling Water Maker with CO2 and DWS Bottle at Amazon for $50.99 with on-page coupon (Save $49) 
  11. Winix 5500-2 Air Purifier with True HEPA at Amazon for $159.99 (Save $90)
  12. Apple Watch Series 7 (GPS, 41mm) at Amazon for $379 (Save $20)
  13. PlayStation Plus 12-Month Membership at Amazon for $39.99 (Save $20)
  14. LG OLED C1 Series 55-Inch Alexa Voice Remote Control Built-In 4k Smart TV at Amazon for $1,296.99 (Save $203)
  15. All-new Kindle Paperwhite at Amazon for $104.99 (Save $35)

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When is Amazon Cyber Monday 2021? 

Most people consider Cyber Monday to start on, well, Monday November 29th. Amazon’s Cyber Monday sale kicked off on Saturday, November 27, and is expected to last through (and possibly beyond, for some deals) Monday night around midnight EST.

When does the Amazon Cyber Monday sale begin?

The Amazon Black Friday sale ended on Friday, November 26, with Amazon Cyber Monday deals rolling out on Saturday, November 27. In some cases these are the same deals rebranded, in other cases we’ve seen new deals on different products. 

Following the Amazon Black Friday and Cyber Monday weekend of sales, we expect to see discounts on select items throughout the holiday season—however, with shipping delays and stock shortages expected, we recommend shopping early to ensure you get all the holiday gifts on your list this year. 

When does Amazon’s Cyber Monday sale end?

Officially, Amazon’s Cyber Monday sale will end at 11:59pm tonight, though we historically see Amazon continue similar price drops in the days and weeks that follow—sometimes dropping a few items even lower. We’ll continue to update the prices as they change today and into tomorrow.

Amazon Black Friday vs Cyber Monday: which deals are better? 

Technically Amazon Cyber Monday deals roll out as soon as Black Friday ends on November 26, we expect to see significant overlap in Amazon Black Friday and Cyber Monday markdowns. The main thing to be aware of is some items, like iPads, MacBooks, and especially AirPods, are beginning to sell out or become backordered, meaning they may not ship until well after Christmas and the holiday season.

Both waves of great deals will be exclusively available online, so be sure to secure your Amazon Prime membership ahead of time to enjoy fast and free shipping.

Are Amazon Cyber Monday sales  available online? 

Yes. Amazon Cyber Monday sales are exclusively available online. Most will be available on the website, though you can also find some exclusive sales by asking Alexa on an Alexa-enabled WiFi speaker like the Echo Dot. Just ask Alexa for the latest deals to see what is being offered.

Will the Playstation 5 be on sale for Cyber Monday at Amazon?

Amazon had some PS5 consoles available November 27 at their normal retail price (the lowest price you can expect to see it for a long time) and has said that they may potentially return at various times throughout the week. PS5 deals sell out in mere minutes, so you’ll need to just keep checking that link to see if you can get one. You’ll need to be a Prime Member, but it could be your best shot of getting a PS5 this holiday season.

Will the iPad be on sale on Cyber Monday?

You can save about $50 on the 11-inch iPad Pro at Amazon right now, but we aren’t seeing extensive discounts on iPads or non-Amazon tablets during Amazon’s Cyber Monday sale.

What are the best deals from the Amazon Cyber Monday 2021 sale? 

To date, we’ve seen massive Amazon Cyber Monday deals on air fryers, headphones, home goods and more—including tons of products from some of our favorite brands, like Apple, Zojirushi, Sony, Instant Pot, Bose, iRobot and Shark. Whether it’s a new tablet with hours of battery life, a fitness tracker for monitoring your heart rate, or some new headphones, Amazon pretty much has it all.

Every day Amazon adds even more sales to their lineup of Cyber Monday 2021 deals. Be sure to bookmark this page and check back frequently to scoop the hottest Amazon discounts on must-have items this holiday season.  

Does Amazon have special Cyber Monday deals for Amazon Prime members? 

Yes. During the holiday shopping season, Amazon Prime members have early access to select holiday deals and can even earn up to 25% back on select Amazon purchases with an Amazon Prime Card and an eligible Prime membership. Meanwhile, Prime members can get their holiday gifts quicker with access to free and fast shipping, with millions of must-have items available for same-day delivery. If you aren’t already an Amazon Prime member, don’t worry—you can always sign up.

There’s more where this deal came from. Sign up for Reviewed’s Perks and Rec newsletter and we’ll keep ’em coming every Sunday through Friday.

The product experts at Reviewed have all your shopping needs covered. Follow Reviewed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok or Flipboard for the latest deals, product reviews and more.

Prices were accurate at the time this article was published but may change over time.



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