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Author Topic: Some of My Favorite Smart Home Products Are Getting Smaller Models  (Read 376 times)

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Offline Nairaland

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Some of My Favorite Smart Home Products Are Getting Smaller Models

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The only thing I didn’t love about the Mammotion Luba robot lawn mower I tested last summer was its size. It’s a hulking four-wheel-drive robot and I live in the city, where we don’t have huge lawns. Enter the Luba Mini, a halved version of the Luba meant for smaller lawns (and tighter budgets). In fact, if you paid attention this spring, miniaturized versions of some of my favorite technology were everywhere. These mini-me versions seem to be driven, according to the companies themselves, by two market needs. While smart home tech is incredible in terms of functionality and independence, it often comes at a steep cost. But it’s not just price driving the shrinking of our tech; many companies realized was that many folks wanted the automation even when they didn’t have an acre of lawn to mow or a wall of windows to clean. Here’s how a few of my favorite pieces of technology have shrunk themselves to become more accessible and affordable.

Mini lawn mowers


   

                    Yuka full size and minihttps://lifehacker.com/imagery/articles/01JVK7DY6V799ZS2AFFKQYXZYV/images-5.fill.size_1400x678.v1747636223.jpg 1400w, https://lifehacker.com/imagery/articles/01JVK7DY6V799ZS2AFFKQYXZYV/images-5.fill.size_2000x969.v1747636223.jpg 2000w" sizes="(max-width: 1408px) 100vw, 1408px">
           

           

                            Yuka full size on the left and mini on the right
                                        Credit: Amanda Blum
                   

   

Mammotion released mini models of both the Luba (AWD) and Yuka (2WD) robot mowers, and I’ve been testing them for the last month. In terms of size, they’re perfect for most suburban and urban lawns under ¼ acre and have almost the same functionality as the larger models. That's the point, according to Senior Product Manager David Cheng, who told me, "We weren’t just shrinking our existing models—we were filling a real gap in the market for homeowners seeking smart, perimeter wire-free lawn care that fits smaller outdoor spaces."

Mammotion’s mowers require an RTK tower, which is a highly accurate GPS method that allows for triangulation between the mower, the tower and satellites. Using your phone as a remote control, you walk the robot around the perimeter of your lawn to set up zones, and create pathways between zones so the robot can navigate on its own. The minis have a new benefit, which is the ability for them to map spaces on their own, without you walking them around. If your yard has clear borders, I found it worked as well as mapping the area on your own.   

The larger Yuka comes with a hopper for grass clippings, which you can teach to dump the clippings anywhere you like—the mini doesn’t have that option. Still, I didn’t find the hopper very usable on the large version, so no loss there.  

I did find the minis had trouble, regardless of which version of mapping you used, getting to some edges of the yard. If there were overhanging shrubs casting a long shadow, the AI would interpret that as a no-go zone, avoiding it altogether. Still, that was the only degradation of features I found between the models. The mini has another benefit: It’s a lot less conspicuous parked at the dock, given the size. While you can install a 4g chip in your robot and set up notifications in case someone grabs it and goes, you just know where someone has absconded with it to.  

The models use the same app, and the minis mowed as well as the original models. At a dramatically lower price point, this gives you an excuse to invest in a robot mower if the thing holding you back was how large or expensive they are.


   
   
                   
   

               

                   

                                               

                            Mammotion Luba full size robot mower
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Mammotion LUBA AWD 3000, Perimeter Wire Free Robotic Lawn Mower
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
           
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                            Mammotion Luba Mini robot lawn mower
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Mammotion Yuka 2000 robot lawn mower
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
            $1,999.00
                            at Amazon
                   

           

   

                   
   

               

                   

                                               

                            Mammotion Yuka mini robot lawn mower
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Mammotion YUKA Mini 500H Robotic Lawn Mower Reception 0.12 Acre, Max. 0.17 Acre, Ultrasense AI Vision+ RTK Positioning, Auto Mapping, App Control, 50% Slope, Cutting Height 2''~3.5'', 15 Mowing Zones
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
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                            Mammotion Yuka 2000 robot lawn mower
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Mammotion Yuka 2000 robot lawn mower
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
            $2,448.00
                            at Amazon
                   

           

   

       

  Smaller smart grills


   

                    The original Brisk It Originhttps://lifehacker.com/imagery/articles/01JVK7DY6V799ZS2AFFKQYXZYV/images-7.fill.size_1400x1054.v1747637087.jpg 1400w, https://lifehacker.com/imagery/articles/01JVK7DY6V799ZS2AFFKQYXZYV/images-7.fill.size_2000x1505.v1747637087.jpg 2000w" sizes="(max-width: 1408px) 100vw, 1408px">
           

           

                            The original Brisk It Origin
                                        Credit: Amanda Blum
                   

   


Last summer I tested all the smart grills on the market, and my favorite was the Brisk It Origin. Through the fall, winter, and this spring, I have used it extensively because it turns smoking (a merciless task that involves a lot of overnight grill babysitting) into a flawless, hands-off experience. You tell the grill what you want to make, and AI kicks in to tell the grill how to make it, and it will notify you when it's time to flip things over or add a baste; when it's done, the grill turns itself off.

You can, of course, edit the smoking program, create one on the fly, or just use the smoker manually as a grill. I went from someone who never rarely smoked on the grill to someone who does so once a week. On my recommendation, a BBQ devotee up the block added a Brisk It to their three-smoker lineup and revealed to me that it has become their favorite. Still, the original Brisk It clocks in just under $600 so I was excited to test the Zelos, a smaller, less expensive Brisk It with all the functionality of the Origin, albeit with less real estate.

My experience isn't that unique, according to Christopher Huang, CEO at Brisk It. "Over 70% of U.S. adults say they want to cook more at home, but cite time and effort as their biggest barriers...and while more than half of home cooks express interest in smart kitchen tech, only 15% actually use it regularly."


   

                    The original Brisk ithttps://lifehacker.com/imagery/articles/01JVK7DY6V799ZS2AFFKQYXZYV/images-8.fill.size_1400x861.v1747637164.jpg 1400w, https://lifehacker.com/imagery/articles/01JVK7DY6V799ZS2AFFKQYXZYV/images-8.fill.size_2000x1229.v1747637164.jpg 2000w" sizes="(max-width: 1408px) 100vw, 1408px">
           

           

                            the mini has about 80% of the space of the original, seen here. I fit a whole rack of ribs plus a tray of chicken, but couldn't fit two racks of ribs.
                                        Credit: Amanda Blum
                   

   

Even as a highly enthusiastic home cook willing to put in the time, I cannot deny how much utility I get out of smart home automation in the kitchen. A smart grill is out of this world, since the notifications and temperature reporting of the grill and food means I don't have to stand over the grill. Brisk It even helps control the stall that barbecued meats often experience. 

Last month, I set up the Zelos (a thirty-minute affair) and invited neighbors over. I was worried about the smaller grill space (the Origin has 580 inches of grill space to the Zelos' 450 inches). While I could fit more racks of ribs on the Origin, the Zelos accommodated a full rack, plus a whole tray of chicken thighs, and I used the upper rack to smoke an array of vegetables.

It didn't escape my attention that because the smaller grill uses less fuel (both are powered by pellets, although the control unit requires electricity), I'd be more likely to use it more often.

Again, the app experience is the same on both models, and is highly functional and, dare I say, pretty fun. The AI the program uses is great for finding new recipes, a function I find underwhelming in practice on other products. At a reduced price, the Zelos makes an awfully appealing Father's Day gift, since it will also free up Dad from watching the grill all day.


   
   
                   
   

               

                   

                                               

                            Brisk It Origin 940 Smart Smoker and Grill
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Brisk It Origin 940
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
            $849.99
                            at Amazon
                   

           

   

                   
   

               

                   

                                               

                            Brisk It Origin 580 Smart Smoker and Grill
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Brisk It Origin 580 A.I. Powered Grill
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
            $549.99
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            $599.99
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                            Brisk It Zelos Smart Smoker and Grill
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Brisk It Zelos-450 AI Powered and WiFi Grill
                   

                           


                           
               

   

       
            $449.99
                            at Amazon
                   

                    Amazon Prime
           

   

       

A smaller window-washing robot

In full disclosure, the only reason I haven't tested a Winbot, the window washing robot, is that I simply don't have the window real estate. The Winbot is about 13 inches square, and works by suctioning itself to your window and then putting it through a four-step wash process. I know people with Winbots, and if you have large square or rectangular windows, particularly those where some portion of the window is out of reach, it seems worthwhile. If you've got arched windows, though, the Winbot struggles with shapes that don't match the design of the robot itself, which has 90-degree angles. The Winbot also isn't for curved glass. These may seem like a lot of limitations, but I spent the winter in Arizona looking at a lot of glass patio doors, patio rooms, and walls of dusty windows and thought, "Ah...this is what the Winbot is for." 

Except now, there's a Winbot Mini, with an 8.5-inch square footprint. At that size, almost all my windows are fair game, so I'm excited to try it out. That was the point, according to Michelle Jones, U.S. spokesperson for ECOVACS, who said, "We saw an opportunity to bring the power of our larger window-cleaning robots to homeowners in the U.S. who have smaller or segmented window panes and don’t need a fixed cleaning station."

But Ecovacs also points to a more specific problem that a lot of smart tech products suffer from, in my opinion: By the time the company has worked out the tech, the solution is often overly complicated. Ecovacs recognized that, as well, and simplified the offering in the Winbot Mini. The Mini ditches the rubber bumpers of the larger model, but that means better edge-to-edge cleaning. The mini also gains more portability by not having a heavy station like the full size model.

What the mini lost seems like a worthwhile tradeoff for the price: The large Winbot has twice as many cleaning programs and more safety features (12 to the Mini's 9), but in both cases, what the Mini has seems sufficient. Priced around $250, the WinBot Mini feels like a luxurious piece of tech within reach for most folks.

[add to list https://www.amazon.com/ECOVACS-WINBOT-Window-Cleaning-Robot/dp/B0DR8W696Y]


   
   
                   
   

               

                   

                                               

                            Ecovacs Winbot W2 Pro Omni
                       

                   


                                           
                                   

                                   

                        Ecovacs Winbot W2 Pro Omni