Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

iRobot’s robot lawn mower might be called Terra

Add as a preferred source on Google

Some people just aren’t mowing their lawns this year, but for lots of homeowners, it’s a regular chore. And if some neighborhood kids are used to getting $20 to do it for you, well, they may soon be out of a paycheck.

Updated on 6-30-2016 by Lulu Chang: iRobot files trademark application for “Terra.” 

Recommended Videos

Roomba-maker iRobot is one step closer to bringing its robotic lawn mower to market, as the company has filed a trademark application for a “robotic lawnmower” named “Terra.” In a statement, the company remained tight-lipped on the lawn mower’s future, saying only, “iRobot is constantly working to develop new practical robotic solutions that are designed to improve people’s lives, both inside and outside of the home. While the company is exploring the lawn mowing category, it is company policy not to discuss further specifics at this time.”

This news comes nearly a year after iRobot was granted a waiver to proceed as planned by the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC typically doesn’t allow unlicensed “fixed outdoor infrastructure” to transmit low-power radio signals.

Back in April of 2015, iRobot filed for the waiver, which it needed because the mower will use wireless beacons that will act as boundaries and will communicate with the robot, ensuring the device doesn’t wander into the street or start cutting your neighbor’s lawn. The beacons operate in the 6,240-6,740 megahertz range, the same range the National Radio Astronomy Observatory uses to view the spectral signature of methanol in space. The NRAO wanted the vacuum company to use a geolocation feature to keep the beacons from interfering with that.

Instead, regulators waived the rules after determining that the iRobot’s proposed limitations on height and signal strength should make the beacons safe. The company also said it would restrict the beacons to residential areas, according to Reuters.

“The FCC’s assessment agrees with our analysis that the technology will not have a negative impact on radio astronomy,” said iRobot’s spokesman in a statement.

The beacon technology is what would set the iRobot RLM apart from other robotic lawn-care devices. Right now, mowers like the RS 630 from Robomow can cut the grass based on schedules, but users are required to place wires around their yard to create boundaries for the robot.

Don’t expect to see an iRobot lawn mower by summer’s end, though. The technology is just one of the technologies the company is evaluating as “part of a long-term product exploration effort in the lawn mowing category,” said the spokesperson.

Jenny McGrath
Former Senior Writer, Home
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
EcoFlow DELTA 3 Ultra Plus Review: Portability meets serious firepower
EcoFlow Delta 3 Ultra power station

See at Amazon

Quick Review

Read more
Amazon’s new Fire Sticks are turning sideloading into a thing of the past
Vega OS blocks regular Fire Stick sideloading, which means buyers lose a major reason tinkerers liked the device.
Lamp, Person, Adult

Amazon's new Fire Sticks are starting to close off one of the device's biggest unofficial perks, installing apps from outside Amazon's Appstore.

The change comes with Vega OS, Amazon's newer Linux-based Fire TV software. Amazon introduced the Fire TV Stick 4K Select as the first Fire TV Stick to run Vega OS, and its developer site says future Fire TV Sticks will use the platform. Older Fire Sticks ran Fire OS, an Android-based system that gave users more room for outside apps and tinkering.

Read more
GEME Terra 2 review: Can an indoor composter actually reduce kitchen waste?
The GEME Terra 2 makes composting accessible and genuinely rewarding, but you must deal with one crucial indoor woe.
Geme Terra 2 composter

View at Geme

For households trying to reduce food waste, indoor composters promise something appealing: the ability to turn kitchen scraps into usable compost without maintaining a traditional outdoor composter.

Read more