IRobot Makes Learning Robot More Affordable
When you think of iRobot, you probably think of floor cleaning or military robots. But they also have a set of robots aimed at education. The Root robot — an acquisition the company made in 2019 — originally targeted classrooms and cost about $200 each. A new version costs about $130 and is a better fit for home users.
The original version — Root rt1 — is still available, but the rt0 version has several missing features to hit the desired price. What’s missing? Apparently, the rt1 can stick to a whiteboard using magnets, but that feature is missing on the rt0. There are also no “cliff” sensors or color scanner.
On the plus side, there is a new $20 option that allows either version of the robot to mount Lego creations. Usually, the robots can draw with a marker underneath and retract it on command. The rt1 can also erase the marker. With the Lego base, though, you can use that same mechanism to actuate something like the catapult in the video.
The robots can be coded using something that looks like Scratch or using text-based coding. The editor — you can even simulate it online for free– has three levels, depending on the student’s ability to read and code. In addition, there are many free exercises and activities.
For $130, these seem as though they’d be easily hackable as a robot platform. Of course, you want this for your kids and we wouldn’t say otherwise.
Educational robots are not a new idea. If you want to stick with iRobot for the big league stuff, you can also get a Roomba that doesn’t suck.
7 thoughts on “IRobot Makes Learning Robot More Affordable”
🖤 iRobot. Providing service parts for really old units to keep them going. Much much more reliable than my ZA1 ever was too.
Props to the guy who said to use a crevice nozzle to vacuum out the dust bin too!
One thing they don’t tell you until you buy it though — it only works with iOS…
I dan – I’m with iRobot and just want to clarify that Root works with Android/chrome and there is a Android app available in the Play store now.
Wow, when I was a kid I wanted a Heathkit Hero robot so bad. Way too expensive back then.
That was pretty much the definition of anything Heathkit.
These days we’re spoiled for choice with all the cheap modules and parts coming from China.I always wanted a Terrapin Turtle. I used the transmission from a broken Big Trak and a pair of relays connected to the parallel port of a Netronics ELF II. It worked but it was not very accurate and it didn’t have any method to lift or lower the drawing pen. Forty years later I built this: https://github.com/russhughes/turtleplotbot3
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