A Q&A With iRobot's Colin Angle, The CEO Of The Only Consumer Robotics Company That Matters

colin angle irobot ceo
colin angle irobot ceo

iRobot

iRobot CEO and co-founder Colin Angle

iRobot's autonomous housecleaning robots are already in millions of homes around the world. Spare your sci-fi dreams of humanoid robots fetching your beers for now — this is the only consumer robotics company that matters today.

If you don't know the company name, you certainly know its products. To date, iRobot has sold 10 million housecleaning Roomba vacuums, saving its customers time and effort in one aspect of that thing we all hate so much: housework.

The company is built on much more than vacuums, however — its other consumer offerings will wash your floors, clean your pool, and even clear out your gutters.

iRobot also has an impressive business selling battle-tough bots to military and police — we profiled that side of its business here. These bots are used for a variety of applications, having been put to work in Afghanistan at the height of the war, and even in Fukushima, Japan after the reactor meltdown.

One of the people at iRobot's helm is its CEO and co-founder, Colin Angle, 46, who recently gave us some time for questions. Here are some takeaways from our conversation, and the full (lightly edited) interview appears below that.

  • iRobot is interested in eventually building robots to help the elderly lead more comfortable lives. We're rapidly aging as a society, so robots might be just the thing to step in and help us out in our twilight years.

  • Humanoid robots are not practical. Function is more important than form, so a robot's utility needs to come first.

  • The idea of a "robot uprising" is not really something to worry about. Long before humanity needs to worry about that, we're going to need to solve much more interesting problems. One is to answer the question "What is 'human?'"

  • The next generation of Roombas will use a superior navigation technology called vSLAM. They're going to navigate around your house more efficiently with help from low-cost cameras that will help them keep track of where they already have and haven't yet cleaned.

BUSINESS INSIDER: What got you interested in robotics?

COLIN ANGLE: A passion for building things, and to have those things be more than just a fantasy — to be quite practical.

"Star Wars" was the right movie for me. I watched the MSE-6 droid leading the stormtroopers where they needed to go when they were under attack, and that got my attention much moreso than C-3PO and R2-D2 because we could actually build that.

Robots had so much potential but none of it had been reduced to practice. We were going to make the robot industry real by ignoring all notions of what a robot was "supposed" to be — form that met function. It wasn’t about the "cool demo." I had lots of experience around cool demos, especially at MIT. I was interested in the longer term, playing in the space where robots could be in the consumer or commercial world.