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Throughout the last three or four years, as it became clear that the combination of computer vision, robotics and AI will produce the robot butler, there was a monumental debate going on: will these non-human helpers be humanoid, or made in a substantially different form?
Adherents of each viewpoint brought forth their own arguments; for one, that since all home appliances and tools are made for humans to use, a humanoid design will make more sense. But then, others point out that the non-humanoid equipment version of robot helpers can have their own tools built in.
I couldn’t resist writing about this new unveiling of a state of the art robotic home installation that gives us a “third way” – thinking about the assistive robot as being essentially disguised, the way some makers dress up a hydroponic cabinet as a piece of furniture.
Enter Lume: the map that does chores for you.
The fundamental idea here is that this assistant does its work on the sly, unobtrusive, and that a humanoid design would be too ostentatious, too conspicuous.
Watch the video, posted by Aaron Tan on X, and you’ll see the “scoop” light shields of Lume turn into helping hands, while the robot quietly moves from the head of the bed to the foot, and starts folding clothes. Then, hilariously, you see Lume putting on a record for its master and mistress to dance to, which I would think would be one of the last things to automate in the days where you can choose either digital music or the old analog platter.
And, if you don’t need something done and just want light, Lume can provide that, too. The demo video shows humans being all comfy with Lume quietly, protectively standing by, in its own way, looking on.
It shouldn’t be any surprise that the company making Lume, Syncere, was founded not in 1897 or 1979, but in 2025. After all, when could you actually build something like this? Not in 1999 or 2002, that’s for sure.
Headed by Tan and co-founder Angus Fung, Syncere imagines a world where robot helpers are seen and not heard. Or, rather, not seen or heard.
“The vision behind Syncere is simple,” the founders write on the landing page. “Robots should serve without disrupting the home. Lume doesn’t look like a machine—it blends into your space, complements your style, and respects your attention.”
Citing experience at Tesla, Figure, Stanford, and Waterloo, the founders tout not only their acumen, but an abiding sense of what’s in store in the future. Our homes, it seems, will soon be filled by this type of automation: happy lamps, helpful brooms and dustpans, capable doormats, and intelligent flatware. The list goes on. It would be interesting to have GPT’s image generation tech create a Disney version of all of this, like Beauty and the Beast’s Lumiere, a colorful character that now seems like a prescient harbinger of the early twenty-first century. (From public interviews, it turns out that Tan actually originally got the idea from the same cartoon film.)
I say “early” because we’re at the beginning of the second quarter-century, and Lume is here.
Lume is getting some attention.
“Automating housework has been a dream going back at least as far the invention of the dishwasher and its 1893 debut,” writes Jared Newman at Fast Company. “Although most of the current robot revolution has focused on the workplace and the prospect of working side-by-side with a humanoid, the response to Syncere’s video and that of Figure’s humanoid folding towels last month has shown there’s a lot of interest in domestic robots that could take over tedious chores most people hate.”
Amanda Hacio, at TechXplore, having interviewed Tan, goes over some of the safety elements:
“The technology behind Lume uses imitation and reinforcement learning to teach the robot how to fold clothes based on human behavior. Safety is also embedded directly into the design through compliant motor controls, 360-degree awareness, fabric on joints to avoid pinch points, and mechanical shutters that conceal its sensors when not in use.”
So yes, robot helpers are officially here.
What will we have by 2050? That’s really anyone’s guess. We talk about the “hockey stick” projection of technology in this era, and now, we’re really seeing it. Stay tuned.
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