The company plans to push all the other smart abilities down to every one of its connected robots. But if you already own one of Neato's Botvac Connected line, take heart. Only the D7 will support "No-Go", at least at first. They're virtual versions of the magnetic strip barriers the company sells separately (though models have a few in the box). For instance if there's a particularly troublesome corner where the robot tends to get confused and stuck, mark it off as off limits. Specifically you'll have the ability to cordon off sections of your home you'd like the Botvac D7 to always avoid. What is new in the Neato Botvac D7 Connected are improved mapping functions. Neato robots will support the automation platform IFTTT. Likewise you can instruct the Botvac Connected to clean or stop cleaning by typing cues into Neato's Facebook Messenger chatbot.
Instead the Botvac D7 is meant as an evolutionary improvement over Neato's already advanced top-tier robot vacuum, the $700 Botvac Connected, which already leaps into action when you speak to the Amazon Alexa and Google voice assistants. Those rival products will sport digital cameras for that purpose and stream live video while you're away. Billed as the most sophisticated vacuum cleaner Neato has ever envisioned, it also has the biggest sticker price Neato has asked potential owners to pay.įor that massive pile of cash, the Botvac D7 won't serve double duty as a remote home sentry the way the Miele Scout RX2 and Bosch Roxxter are planned to. At IFA 2017 in Berlin, Neato revealed the $799 (£799 or about AU$1,011) Botvac D7 Connected. Neato's smart robot vacuums seem so brainy it's often scary, but the company's latest flagship just might take the cake. The Neato Botvac D7 Connected on display at IFA 2017.