Andrew_OSU
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Medtronic gets FDA approval for new iPhone & Apple Watch connected diabetic therapy system...
appleinsideruser said:This is potentially life saving. Big news.
So yes. This is very good news, lifesaving news, but they are only playing catchup to what's been in the marketplace. -
Hands on: Roborock S8 Pro Ultra smart home vacuum & mop
twolf2919 said:Andrew_OSU said:
I also don't have any of those issues with my map. I haven't ever had to rebuild it and it still gets full coverage in my home. That's with my wife rearranging furniture and lots of dog/baby toys lying around. Im not sure why you are having such peculiar issues. My map has only gotten better as it collected more data and the rooms started to take better shape from the initial scans. I also have two floor-to-ceiling windows and a sliding door that never gave us any hassle. I'm so confused at why you're having these problems.
I draw issue with your insinuation that I didn't spend enough time with the S8, or the S7 for that matter. I've used the S8 for perhaps a couple months now and haven't had any issues you describe, but I did have a good experience with the S7.
For the mop question, it has the same bottom as the S7. You can't remove the entire mopping attachment, just the mop pad. At least on the S7 MaxV Ultra and the S8 Pro Ultra. They may be different the entry-level models.
With respect to my troubles with floor-ceiling windows: both the Roborock S5 Max and the S7 MaxV (which is not the base model - it's the Ultra minus the base) have trouble with those. My windows end a 1/4" above the floor with a 1/4" thick, 6" deep sill. I wish I could show you my map, but the robot basically thinks the room continues beyond the glass and always climbs onto the sill trying to get out. All the up/down movements from the sill has led to scuff marks, so I had to put an invisible wall on that section. A similar thing happens with the slider door tracks: the robot tries to get onto them and sometimes the wheel gets stuck in the groove and it can't get out.
With regards to the mop: on the S7 MaxV, there are two tabs on each side of the wate reservoir which allows you to slide out a half-elliptical piece of plastic that has the mop pad attached. You then slide the mop pad off that piece of plastic. Perhaps you consider the 'mop pad' to be both the cloth plus the piece of plastic? -
Hands on: Roborock S8 Pro Ultra smart home vacuum & mop
JP234 said:We have a Roomba, and have found it to be virtually useless. Can't get in corners, gets lost and spins around in a circle, vacuums the same spot over and over until we pick it up and move it. And it has never, ever been able to dock itself and charge. It has to be manually put back in place. It's the dustiest appliance we own, from disuse. Did I mention that it is loud and annoying when in use?
Maybe this ultra-expensive and HUGE alternative would perform better, but at $1,599, we'll just do as we have: get out the broom, dust mop, vacuum or Swiffer, and do it manually. The peace and quiet of manual cleaning is restful compared to motorized cleaning devices like this, or landscaping power tools.
You say this "expensive" and "huge" alternative, though as I state right at the beginning, Roborock has a range of choices. They have units for only a couple hundred dollars or the all-new S8 starts at $750 before getting up to the $1600 option. iRobot's Roomba line also has entry-level models up to an $1100 model with a very large docking station.
For what it's worth, the $1100 Roomba is actually $100 more than the equivalent Roborock S8+. Roborock then offers the $1600 S8 Pro Ultra with the empty, wash, fill station that iRobot doesn't even offer. None of them are capable of emptying the robot, cleaning the mop, and refilling it with new water. -
Hands on: Roborock S8 Pro Ultra smart home vacuum & mop
twolf2919 said:I was a very happy customer of the Roborock S5 Max. It did an excellent job cleaning and, more importantly, after initial setup never had an issue.
Two years later, I was wooed by the Roborock S7 MaxV's suction power - supposedly twice my S5's. I didn't want any part of the auto-emptying, auto-mop-cleaning dock since the former simply meant you'd have to start buying bags for the robot (cleaning out the onboard dust bin is simple and requires no bag) and the latter meant more mechanicals that could go wrong and, potentially, a stinky mop. Anyway, to each their own when it comes to the dock.
Robot reviews are great in that you get to see the features of a robot. But reviewers rarely spend enough time with the robot to give long-term feedback on these devices. The reviews for the S7 were great - just like this review for the S8. But they didn't help discover any of the shortcomings that reveal themselves over time.
For me, the S7 MaxV has been a lot more hassle than its predecessor. I really don' know why - it has a lot more sensors than the S5 did - but the robot gets lost or stuck on a regular basis. It usually happens after a few weeks - not right off the bat. I am pretty sure it's some sort of software bug: I've noticed that over time, the map starts deteriorating: it starts showing little non-existent artifacts (like dark grey dots and lines that the robot avoids but which don't exist as anything real in the house) - and walls that were previously pretty perpendicular to one another start skewing one direction or the other. As a result, the robot begins making nonsensical decisions about where to go - or try to go as the case may be. I've contact Roborock about this on numerous occasion, but their stock answer is that I should delete the map and let the robot recreate it. And this is what I'm forced to do periodically - and it's annoying as heck. Mostly because the earlier version of the Roborock had none of these issues, but also because my house is one of those "open concept" houses where some rooms - e.g. kitchen, dining room, family room - aren't distinct rooms as far as the robot is concerned. So you have to manually divide up the space in the app - a laborious activity in the app consisting of dividing and combining things successively. Then there are the floor-ceiling windows or sliders that, without manually creating "invisible walls" the robot constantly runs into (and gets stuck at when there's also a sliding door track). So it takes a good half hour of time every time I have to recreate the map because the Robot f*&ked up the map again :-(
I love the fact that the S7's mop works better than the S5's and that the quiet mode is indeed pretty quiet and lets us run the robot every day. I'm not sure that our all-hard floor house needed the extra suction power of the S7 - and combined with the map headaches I've been having, I would not have upgraded from the S5 had I known this up-front. I'm glad the reviewer thinks the S8 is a good upgrade from the S7 - he must have never had the mapping errors I saw - or he's recommending the S8 because they fixed them there?
Another question for the reviewer: in the video you seem to indicate that with the S8 you can only remove the cloth mop? In the S7 the whole plastic piece the mop attaches comes out - which is very helpful because it means you don't have to turn over the robot every time you want to put a new mop cloth on. When I mop with the S7, I put a new mop cloth on for every room I have it mop. If that's no longer possible with the S8, that's a definite negative - unless you get the S8 Ultra, which supposedly cleans the mop cloth for you.
I also don't have any of those issues with my map. I haven't ever had to rebuild it and it still gets full coverage in my home. That's with my wife rearranging furniture and lots of dog/baby toys lying around. Im not sure why you are having such peculiar issues. My map has only gotten better as it collected more data and the rooms started to take better shape from the initial scans. I also have two floor-to-ceiling windows and a sliding door that never gave us any hassle. I'm so confused at why you're having these problems.
I draw issue with your insinuation that I didn't spend enough time with the S8, or the S7 for that matter. I've used the S8 for perhaps a couple months now and haven't had any issues you describe, but I did have a good experience with the S7.
For the mop question, it has the same bottom as the S7. You can't remove the entire mopping attachment, just the mop pad. At least on the S7 MaxV Ultra and the S8 Pro Ultra. They may be different the entry-level models. -
Aqara begins rollout of Matter firmware for M2 hubs
bala1234 said:The need for a 'hub' defeats the purpose of thread/matter IMHO. I don't want to add any more devices/apps to my network than what I really intend to add. I just added a nanoleaf (thread) light bulb to my fledgling smart home and it was quick and painless (may be the bulb could be little brighter). No need for new apps or bridges. Just directly add to whatever smart home app you are currently using. And that is how it should be.
Matter only works with Thread, Wi-Fi, and Ethernet and right now, there are VERY few Thead-enabled accessories on the market, especially sensors. There are no presence sensors with Thread, maybe one or two contact sensors, a single motion sensor, and not a lot else. Unless you plan on waiting a few years for devices to become available, you need to rely on ones that are Zigbee with a bridge as Bluetooth ones will never work with Matter.
I totally agree hubless is convenient but they can often be more expensive than their low-cost, hub-based counterparts and availability just isn't there yet for all the necessary devices for a good smart home. Maybe one day!