SwitchBot K20+ Pro Modular Home Robot at CES


Earlier this year, we reviewed the SwitchBot S10, a vacuuming and wet mopping robot that uses a water-integrated docking system to autonomously manage both clean and dirty water for you. It’s a pretty clever solution, and we appreciated that SwitchBot was willing to try something a little different.

At CES this week, SwitchBot introduced the K20+ Pro, a little autonomous vacuum that can integrate with a bunch of different accessories by pulling them around on a backpack cart of sorts. The K20+ Pro is SwitchBot’s latest effort to explore what’s possible with mobile home robots.


A small white robot vacuum sits underneath a wheeled platform attached to a dock.SwitchBot’s small vacuum can transport different payloads on top.SwitchBot

What we’re looking at here is a “mini” robotic vacuum (it’s about 25 centimeters in diameter) that does everything a robotic vacuum does nowadays: It uses lidar to make a map of your house so that you can direct it where to go, it’s got a dock to empty itself and recharge, and so on. The mini robotic vacuum is attached to a wheeled platform that SwitchBot is calling a “FusionPlatform” that sits on top of the robot like a hat. The vacuum docks to this platform, and then the platform will go wherever the robot goes. This entire system (robot, dock, and platform) is the “K20+ Pro multitasking household robot.”

SwitchBot refers to the K20+ Pro as a “smart delivery assistant,” because you can put stuff on the FusionPlatform and the K20+ Pro will move that stuff around your house for you. This really doesn’t do it justice, though, because the platform is much more than just a passive mobile cart. It also can provide power to a bunch of different accessories, all of which benefit from autonomous mobility:

A series of images showing a small white robot vacuum underneath a wheeled platform attached to a variety of different accessories.The SwitchBot can carry a variety of payloads, including custom payloads.SwitchBot

From left to right, you’re looking at an air circulation fan, a tablet stand, a vacuum and charging dock and an air purifier and security camera (and a stick vacuum for some reason), and lastly just the air purifier and security setup. You can also add and remove different bits, like if you want the fan along with the security camera, just plop the security camera down on the platform base in front of the fan and you’re good to go.

This basic concept is somewhat similar to Amazon’s Proteus robot, in the sense that you can have one smart powered base that moves around a bunch of less smart and unpowered payloads by driving underneath them and then carrying them around. But SwitchBot’s payloads aren’t just passive cargo, and the base can provide them with a useful amount of power.

A diagram showing how the FusionPlatform can provide power and connectivity to payloads.A power port allows you to develop your own payloads for the robot.SwitchBot

SwitchBot is actively encouraging users to “to create, adapt, and personalize the robot for a wide variety of innovative applications,” which may include “3D-printed components [or] third-party devices with multiple power ports for speakers, car fridges, or even UV sterilization lamps,” according to the press release. The maximum payload is only 8 kilograms, though, so don’t get too crazy.

A concept image showing two robots, one carrying a tablet and one carrying drinks, approaching a bathtub.Several SwitchBots can make bath time much more enjoyable.SwitchBot

What we all want to know is when someone will put an arm on this thing, and SwitchBot is of course already working on this:

A transparent sheet covers a SwitchBot while still showing the shape of a one armed robot on top of it.SwitchBot’s mobile manipulator is still in the lab stage.SwitchBot

The arm is still “in the lab stage,” SwichBot says, which I’m guessing means that the hardware is functional but that getting it to reliably do useful stuff with the arm is still a work in progress. But that’s okay—getting an arm to reliably do useful stuff is a work in progress for all of robotics, pretty much. And if SwitchBot can manage to produce an affordable mobile manipulation platform for consumers that even sort of works, that’ll be very impressive.



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