Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Democratic Bill Would Double The Overtime Pay Premium

    June 3, 2026

    Home Buying Timeline: What Happens at Each Stage

    June 3, 2026

    You May Be Experiencing ‘Betrayal Trauma’ Because Of Trump. Here’s Why.

    June 3, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Democratic Bill Would Double The Overtime Pay Premium
    • Home Buying Timeline: What Happens at Each Stage
    • You May Be Experiencing ‘Betrayal Trauma’ Because Of Trump. Here’s Why.
    • The AI Perception-Reality Gap
    • How travelers can get money back
    • What Ireland and Germany Can Teach Us About Birthright Citizenship
    • There's a fake Barefoot Investor. And he's everywhere.
    • Jill Biden Makes Incredibly Bold Claim About The 2024 Election
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    SBM Global News
    Demo
    • Home
    • Top Stories
      • Politics
    • Business
      • Small Business
      • Marketing
    • Finance
      • Investment
    • Technology

      How to make the Startup Battlefield Top 20 — and what every company gets regardless

      June 2, 2026
      Read More

      SISGAIN TECHNOLOGIES – Company Profile

      June 2, 2026
      Read More

      Erin Brockovich takes aim at data center secrecy

      June 1, 2026
      Read More

      IntuitionLabs – Company Profile – AllBusiness.com

      May 31, 2026
      Read More

      Founders seize on Indian court ruling to revive criticism of Google’s ad business

      May 30, 2026
      Read More
    • Lifestyle
      • Travel
    • Feel Good
    • Get In Touch
    SBM Global News
    Demo
    Home»Technology»How iRobot lost its way home
    Technology

    How iRobot lost its way home

    By Staff WriterDecember 15, 20255 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email
    #image_title
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    There’s something painfully American about the arc of iRobot, the company that taught your vacuum to navigate around the furniture. Founded in 1990 in Bedford, Massachusetts by MIT roboticist Rodney Brooks and his former students Colin Angle and Helen Greiner, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Sunday, punctuating a 35-year run that took it from the dreams of AI researchers to your kitchen floor and, finally, to the tender mercies of its Chinese supplier.

    Brooks, the founding director of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab and the robotics field’s resident provocateur, spent the eighties watching insects and having epiphanies about how simple systems could produce complex behaviors. By 1990, he’d translated those insights into a company that would eventually sell over 50 million robots. The Roomba, launched in 2002, became the rare gadget that transcended its category to become a verb, a meme, and, to the amusement of many, a cat-transportation device.

    The money soon followed, with the company raising $38 million altogether, including from The Carlyle Group, before going public in a 2005 IPO that raised $103.2 million. By 2015, iRobot was flush enough to launch its own venture arm, prompting TechCrunch to wryly declare that “robot domination may have just taken another step forward.” The plan at the time was to invest $100,000 to $2 million in up to 10 seed and Series A robotics startups each year. It was the kind of move that marks a company’s arrival, the moment when you’re successful enough to fund the next generation’s dreams.

    Then Amazon came knocking. In 2022, the corporate giant agreed to acquire iRobot for $1.7 billion in what would have been Amazon’s fourth-largest acquisition ever at the time. In a press release announcing the tie-up, Angle, who’d been CEO since the company’s inception, spoke about “creating innovative, practical products” and finding “a better place for our team to continue our mission.” It seemed like a fairy tale ending — the scrappy MIT spinoff absorbed into the Everything Store’s sprawling empire.

    Except European regulators had other ideas. Indeed, amid threats they would block the deal — they believed Amazon could foreclose rivals by restricting or degrading access to its marketplace — Amazon and iRobot agreed to kill the deal in January 2024, with Amazon paying a $94 million breakup fee and walking away. Angle resigned. The company’s shares nosedived. It shed 31% of its workforce.

    What followed afterward was a slow-motion collapse. Earnings had been declining since 2021 thanks to supply chain chaos and Chinese competitors flooding the market with cheaper robot vacuums. The Carlyle Group, which provided a $200 million lifeline back in 2023, ultimately just prolonged the inevitable. (Carlyle finally sold that loan last month — presumably at a discount, though it didn’t specify either way.)

    Now it’s over, at least, the version of iRobot that existed previously. Shenzhen PICEA Robotics, iRobot’s main supplier and lender, will take control of the reorganized company. According to a release issued by iRobot on Sunday, the restructuring plan allows iRobot to remain as a going concern and “continue operating in the ordinary course with no anticipated disruption to its app functionality, customer programs, global partners, supply chain relationships, or ongoing product support.”

    Techcrunch event

    San Francisco
    |
    October 13-15, 2026

    It also vowed to “meet its commitments to employees and make timely payments in full to vendors and other creditors for amounts owed throughout the court-supervised process.”

    What this means for customers longer term is another question, one iRobot was eager to answer when we reached out to the company. “To be clear, today’s news has no impact on our business operations or our ability to serve our customers – which continues to be our top priority,” said spokeswoman Michèle Szynal in an emailed statement to TechCrunch. “We remain focused on delivering intelligent home innovations that make consumers’ lives better and easier.  Our products are not changing.”

    In its release, iRobot similarly promises to keep supporting existing products during restructuring; at the same time, its legal disclosures acknowledge the inherent uncertainties of bankruptcy — whether suppliers stick around, whether the process goes as planned, whether the company survives at all.

    Demo

    As The Verge noted in a story about iRobot’s struggles last month, even if iRobot eventually collapses and takes its cloud services down with it, customers’ Roomba vacuums won’t become useless pucks. The physical controls should keep working — a Roomba owner could still jab the button to send it off to vacuum or tell it to head home.

    What Roomba owners would lose is everything that make the devices feel futuristic, including app-based scheduling, the ability to tell it which rooms to clean, and voice commands barked at Alexa while sprawled on the couch.

    Update: This story has been updated with comment from iRobot.

    View original article here

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Reddit
    Previous Article72-Key Pride Elite Gandhinagar expands Gujarat Presence of Pride Hotels Limited
    Next Article AI is bad at being cool

    Related Posts

    How to make the Startup Battlefield Top 20 — and what every company gets regardless

    June 2, 2026
    Read More

    SISGAIN TECHNOLOGIES – Company Profile

    June 2, 2026
    Read More

    Erin Brockovich takes aim at data center secrecy

    June 1, 2026
    Read More
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    Former FBI, CIA Head Has ‘Serious Concerns’ With Trump Cabinet Picks

    December 28, 2024435

    Emirates to operate next-gen A350 on the third daily service to Cape Town

    January 14, 2026256

    AAVE Price Prediction: Target $215-225 by Mid-January 2025 as Technical Indicators Signal Bullish Momentum

    December 15, 2025240

    Ventive Hospitality Joins Green Fins: Strong ESG Lift

    February 17, 2026211
    Don't Miss
    Politics

    Democratic Bill Would Double The Overtime Pay Premium

    By Staff WriterJune 3, 20265 Mins Read

    House Democrats plan to introduce a bill this week that would double the premium employees…

    Read More

    Home Buying Timeline: What Happens at Each Stage

    June 3, 2026

    You May Be Experiencing ‘Betrayal Trauma’ Because Of Trump. Here’s Why.

    June 3, 2026

    The AI Perception-Reality Gap

    June 3, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Demo
    About Us

    Small Business Minder brings together business and related news from around the world in one place. Follow us for all the business news you'll need.

    Facebook X (Twitter)
    Our Picks

    Democratic Bill Would Double The Overtime Pay Premium

    June 3, 2026

    Home Buying Timeline: What Happens at Each Stage

    June 3, 2026
    Most Popular

    Former FBI, CIA Head Has ‘Serious Concerns’ With Trump Cabinet Picks

    December 28, 2024435

    Emirates to operate next-gen A350 on the third daily service to Cape Town

    January 14, 2026256
    © 2026 Small Business Minder
    • Home
    • Get In Touch

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. To get the most from our site, please disable your Ad Blocker.