"If you have a spare $7,999 (plus a $250 deposit), hate folding laundry, and happen to live in the Bay Area, one-and-a-half-year-old startup Weave has the robot for you: Isaac 0. It takes Isaac 0 around 30-90 minutes to fold a load of laundry, Weave says. That's all it does - it's stationary and needs a regular wall outlet - and it can't tackle large blankets, bed sheets, or inside-out garments."
"It's not fully autonomous either, with teleoperators on-hand to assist with trickier folds, though Weave says performance will improve over time. Weave joins a growing list of companies working to build chore-eliminating robots in the hopes that people will welcome them into their homes. This year's CES highlighted laundry as the ultimate use case, with demos from LG's CLOiD and SwitchBot's Onero H1."
Weave offers Isaac 0, a stationary laundry-folding robot priced at $7,999 plus a $250 deposit, available to Bay Area customers. The device folds a typical load in approximately 30–90 minutes and requires a standard wall outlet. Isaac 0 cannot handle large blankets, bed sheets, or inside-out garments. The unit is not fully autonomous and relies on teleoperators to assist with more complex folds, with expectations of gradual performance improvements. The product joins other companies targeting household chores and was part of a broader focus on laundry robots at CES, though practical readiness for everyday homes remains uncertain.
Read at The Verge
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