Lex Fridman Podcast - Colin Angle: iRobot
Episode Date: September 19, 2019Colin Angle is the CEO and co-founder of iRobot, a robotics company that for 29 years has been creating robots that operate successfully in the real world, not as a demo or on a scale of dozens, but o...n a scale of thousands and millions. As of this year, iRobot has sold more than 25 million robots to consumers, including the Roomba vacuum cleaning robot, the Braava floor mopping robot, and soon the Terra lawn mowing robot. 25 million robots successfully operating autonomously in people's homes to me is an incredible accomplishment of science, engineering, logistics, and all kinds of entrepreneurial innovation. This conversation is part of the Artificial Intelligence podcast. If you would like to get more information about this podcast go to https://lexfridman.com/ai or connect with @lexfridman on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Medium, or YouTube where you can watch the video versions of these conversations. If you enjoy the podcast, please rate it 5 stars on iTunes or support it on Patreon.
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The following is a conversation with Colin Angle.
He's the CEO and co-founder of iRobot, a robotics company that for 29 years has been creating
robots that operate successfully in the real world.
Not as a demo, or on a scale of dozens, but on a scale of thousands and millions.
As of this year, iRobot has sold more than 25 million robots to consumers, including the Roomba vacuum cleaning
robot, the Brava floor mopping robot, and soon the Terra lawn mowing robot.
29 million robots successfully operating autonomously in real people's homes.
To me is an incredible accomplishment of science, engineering, logistics, and all kinds of
general entrepreneurial innovation. Most robotics companies fail.
I-Robot has survived and succeeded for 29 years. I spent all day at I-Robot, including
a long tour and conversation with Colin about the history of I-Robot, and then sat down
for this podcast
conversation that would have been much longer if I didn't spend all day learning about
and playing with the various robots in the company's history.
I'll release the video of the tour separately.
Colin, Irohbot, its founding team, its current team, and its mission has been and continues
to be an inspiration to me and thousands of engineers who are working hard to create AI systems
that help real people.
This is the Artificial Intelligence Podcast.
If you enjoy it, subscribe on YouTube, give it 5 stars on iTunes, support it on Patreon,
or simply connect with me on Twitter.
At Lex Friedman spelled F-R-I-D-M-A-N.
And now here's my conversation with Colin Engel.
In his 1942 short story, Runaround, from his Irobat collection, Asimov, proposed the three laws of robotics in order don't harm humans, obey orders, protect yourself. So two questions. First, does the
room of follow these three laws? And also, more seriously, what role do you hope
to see robots take in modern society and in such a profound understanding of the world a robot
lives in, the ramifications of its action and its own sense of self, that it's not a
relevant bar, at least it won't be a relevant bar for decades to come.
If Rumba follows the three laws, I believe it does, it is designed to help humans not
hurt them.
It's designed to be inherently safe.
We designed it to last a long time. It's not through any AI or intent on the robots part.
It's because following the three laws
is aligned with being a good robot product.
So, I guess it does, but not by explicit design.
So then the bigger picture, what role do you hope to see robotics, robots take in our,
what's currently mostly a world of humans?
We need robots to help us continue to improve our standard of living. We need robots because the average age of
humanity is increasing very quickly and simply the number of people young enough
and spy enough to care for the elder growing demographic is inadequate.
And so what is the role of robots?
Today the role is to make our lives a little easier,
a little cleaner, maybe a little healthier.
But in time, robots are gonna be the difference
between real gut-runching declines in our ability
to live independently and maintainer
standard of living and a future that is the bright one where we have more control
over our lives can spend more of our time focused on activities we choose and
so honored and excited to be playing a role in that journey.
So you give me a tour. It showed me some of the long history. It's now 29 years
that I robot has been at it creating some incredible robots. You showed me
Pac-Bot. You showed me a bunch of other stuff that led up to Rumba, that led to Brava and Tara.
So
Let's skip that incredible history in the interest of time because we already talked about it. I'll show this incredible footage. You mentioned
elderly and robotics and society. I think the home is a fascinating place for robots to be. So where do you see
I think the home is a fascinating place for robots to be. So where do you see robots in the home?
Currently, I would say, once again,
probably most homes in the world don't have a robot.
So how do you see that changing?
Where do you think is the big initial value
ad that robots can do?
So I robot has sort of over the years
narrowed in on the home, the consumers home as the place where
we want to innovate and deliver tools that will help a home be a more automatically maintained
place, a healthier place, a safer place, and perhaps even a more efficient place to be.
And today, we vacuum we mop soon,
we'll be mowing your lawn, but where things are going
is when do we get to the point where the home,
not just the robots that live in your home,
but the home itself becomes part of a system that maintains itself and plays an active role
in caring for and helping the people live in that home.
And I see everything that we're doing as steps along the path toward that future.
So what are the steps? So if we can summarize some of the history of Rumba,
the you've mentioned, and maybe you can elaborate on it,
but you mentioned the early days,
we're really taking a robot from something that works either
in the lab or something that works in the field
that helps soldiers do the difficult work they
do to actually being a hands of consumers and tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of
robots that don't break down over how much people love them over months of very extensive
use.
So that was the big first step.
And then the second big step was the ability to sense the environment, to build a map,
to localize, to be able to build a picture of the home that the human can then attach
labels to in terms of giving some semantic knowledge to the robot about its environment.
Okay, so that's like a huge, too big, huge steps.
two big huge steps.
Maybe you can comment on that, but also what is the
the next step of
Making a robot part of the home. Sure. So the goal is to make a home that that
takes care of itself takes care of the people in the home and
gives the user an experience of just living their life in the home is somehow doing the right thing, turning on and off lights, when you leave, cleaning up the environment.
And we went from robots that were right in the lab, but we're both too expensive and not sufficiently capable to ever do an acceptable job of anything other than being a toy or a curio in your home to something that was both affordable and sufficiently effective to drive, you know, be it above threshold and drive purchase intent.
Now, we've disrupted the entire vacuuming industry.
The number one selling vacuums, for example, in the U.S., are rumbo.
So, not robot vacuums, but vacuums, and that's really crazy and weird.
And we need to pause that.
I mean, that's really crazy and weird and it is we need to pause it. I mean, that's incredible. That's that's
incredible that a robot is is the number one selling thing that does something
Yep, something as essential as vacuuming. Yeah, so we're we're congratulations
I still it's kind of fun to say but they just because this was a a
Crazy idea that that just started
You know in a room here. We're like, you think we can do this?
So, hey, let's give it a try.
But now the robots are starting to understand their environment.
And if you think about the next step, there's two dimensions.
I've been working so hard since the beginning of Iroba
to make robots are autonomous,
that they're smart enough and understand their task
enough that they can just go do it without human involvement.
Now what I'm really excited and working on
is how do I make them less autonomous?
Meaning that the robot is supposed to be your partner, not this automaton that just goes
and does what a robot does.
And so that if you tell it, hey, I just dropped some flour by the fridge in the kitchen. Can you deal with it?
Wouldn't it be awesome if the right thing just happened based on that utterance?
And to some extent, that's less autonomous because it's actually listening to you, understanding
the context and intent of the sentence, mapping it against its understanding of the home it lives in, and knowing what to do.
And so that's an area of research.
It's an area where we're starting to roll out features.
You can now tell your robot to clean up the kitchen
and it knows what the kitchen is and can do that.
And that's sort of 1.0 of where we're going.
The other cool thing is that we're starting to know where stuff is.
And why is that important?
Well, robots are supposed to have arms, right?
Data had an arm, Rosie had an arm, Robbie the robot had an arm.
I mean, robots are, you know, the are physical things that move around in an environment.
They're supposed to like do work.
And if you think about it,
if a robot doesn't know where anything,
where anything is, why should it have an arm?
But with this new dawn of home understanding
that we're starting to go enjoy,
I know where the kitchen is. I might in the future know where the refrigerator is. of home understanding that we're starting to go enjoy,
I know where the kitchen is.
I might in the future know where the refrigerator is.
I might, if I had an arm, be able to find the handle,
open it and even get myself a beer.
Obviously that's one of the true dreams of robotics
is to have robots bringing us a beer while we watch television.
But I think that that new category of tasks
where physical manipulation, robot arms is a just a popery of new opportunity and excitement.
And you see humans as a crucial part of that. So you kind of mentioned that, and I personally find that a really compelling idea,
I think full autonomy can only take us so far, especially in the home. So you see humans as helping
the robot understand or give deeper meaning to the spatial information. Right. It's a partnership.
Right, it's a partnership. The robot is supposed to operate according to descriptors that you would use to describe
your own home.
The robot is supposed to, in lieu of better direction, kind of go about its routine which ought to be basically right and lead to a home maintained in a way
that it's learned you like, but also be perpetually ready to take direction that would activate
a different set of behavior actions to meet a current need to the extent it could actually
Perform that task
So I got to ask you. I think this is a fundamental and fascinating question because I robot has been a successful company and a rare
successful robotics company
So Anki Gibo may feel robotics with a robot curry
sci-fi works, rethink robotics.
These are robotics companies that were founded
and run by brilliant people.
But all very unfortunately, for at least for us
roboticists, all went out of business recently.
So what do you think they didn't last longer?
Why do you think it is so hard
to keep a robotics company alive?
You know, I say this only partially ingest that back in the day before Rumba,
you know, I was a high tech entrepreneur building robots. But it wasn't until I became a vacuum cleaner salesman that we had any success.
So the point is technology alone doesn't equal a successful business.
We need to go and find the compelling need where the robot that we're creating can deliver clearly more value to the end user than
it costs.
And this is not a marginal thing where you're looking at the skin and like, it's close,
maybe we can hold our breath and make it work, it's clearly more value than the cost of the robot to bring
in the store. And I think that the challenge has been finding those businesses where that's true
true in a sustainable fashion. You know, when you get into entertainment style things, you could be the cat's meow one year, but 85% of toys, regardless of
their merit, fail to make it to their second season. It's just super hard to do so.
And so that's just a tough business. And there's been a lot of experimentation around
what is the right type of social companion, what is the right robot in the home that is doing something other than tasks people do every
week that they'd rather not do.
And I'm not sure we've got it all figured out right.
And so that you get brilliant robot assists with superesting robots that ultimately don't quite have that magical user experience
and thus the value-benefit equation remains ambiguous.
So you are somebody who dreams of robots changing the world.
What's your estimate? Why, how big is the space of
applications that fit the criteria that you just described where you can really demonstrate an obvious
significant value over the alternative non-robotic solution?
Well, I think that we're just about none of the way to achieving the potential of robotics at
home. But we have to do it in a really eyes wide open, honest,
fashion. And so another way to put that is the potential is
infinite, because we did take a few steps, but you're saying
those steps are just very initial steps. So the Rumba is a hugely successful product, but
you're saying that's just the very, very beginning. That's just the very, very beginning.
It's the foot in the door. And you know, I think I was lucky that in the early days of
robotics, people would ask me, when are you gonna clean my floor?
It was something that I grew up saying,
I got all these really good ideas,
but everyone seems to want their floor clean.
And so,
maybe we should do that.
That you're good ideas.
Earn the right to do the next thing after that.
So the good ideas have to match with the
desire of the people and then the actual cost has to like the business, the financial aspect has
to all amassed together. Yeah, I, I, um, during our partnership back a number of years ago with
Johnson Wax, they would explain to me that they would go into homes and just watch how people lived and try to figure out
what were they doing that they really didn't really like to do but they had to do it frequently enough top of mind and understood as a burden. Hey, let's make a product or come up with a solution to make
that pain point less challenging. And sometimes we do certain burdens so often in society that we actually don't even realize
like it's actually hard to see that that burden is something that could be
removed. So it does require just going into the home and staring at how do I
actually live life? What are the pain points? Yeah and getting those insights is
a lot harder than it would seem it should be in retrospect.
So how hard on that point, and one of the big challenges of robotics is driving the
cost to something, driving the cost down to something that consumers, people would afford.
So people would be less likely to buy a Rumba for cost $500,000,
right, which is probably sort of what a Rumba would cost
several decades ago.
So how do you drive, which I mentioned is very difficult,
how do you drive the cost of a Rumba
or a robot balance such that people would want to buy it. When I started building robots, the cost of the robot had a lot to do with the amount
of time it took to build it.
And so that we would build our robots out of aluminum, I would go spend my time in the
machine shop on the milling machine cutting out the parts and so forth.
And then when we got into the toy industry,
I realized that if we were building at scale,
I could determine the cost of the robe
instead of adding up all the hours to mill out the parts,
but by weighing it.
And that's liberating.
You can say, wow,
the world has just changed as I think about construction in a different way.
The 3D CAD tools that are available to us today, the operating at scale where I can do tooling and injection mold, an arbitrarily complicated part, and the cost is going to be basically the weight
of the plastic in that part is incredibly exciting and liberating and opens up all sorts
of opportunities.
And for the sensing part of it, where we are today is instead of trying to build skin,
which is like really hard.
For a long time, I spent creating strategies
and ideas around how could we duplicate the skin
on the human body because it's such an amazing sensor.
The, instead of going down that path,
why don't we focus on vision?
And how many of the problems that face a robot
trying to do real work could be solved
with a cheap camera and a big-ass computer. And Moore's Law continues to work
the cell phone industry, the mobile industry is giving us better and better tools that can run
on these embedded computers. And I think we passed an important moment maybe two years ago where you could put machine vision capable processors
on robots that consumer price points.
And I was waiting for it to happen.
We avoided putting lasers on our robots to do navigation,
and instead spent years researching how to do vision-based
navigation because you could just see
where these technology trends were going
and between injection molded plastic and a camera
with a computer capable of running
machine learning and visual object recognition, I could build an incredibly
affordable, incredibly capable robot and that's going to be the future.
So you know, on that point with a small tangent but I think an important one,
another industry in which I would say the only other industry in which there is automation
actually touching people's lives today is autonomous vehicles.
What the vision you just described of using computer vision and using cheap camera sensors,
there's a debate on that of LiDAR versus computer vision.
And sort of the Elon Musk famously said that LiDAR is a crutch that really in camera
in the long term camera only is the right solution, which echoes some of the ideas you're
expressing. Of course, the domain in terms of its safety criticality is different.
But what do you think about that approach in the autonomous vehicle space? In general,
do you see a connection between the incredible real world challenges you have to solve in
the home with Rumba? I saw a demonstration of some of them, corner cases, literally,
and autonomous vehicles. So there's absolutely a tremendous overlap
between both the problems, you know, a robot vacuum and autonomous vehicle are trying to solve,
and the tools and the types of sensors that are being applied in the pursuit of the solutions.
applied in the pursuit of the solutions. In my world, my environment is actually much harder
than the environment in automobile travels.
We don't have roads.
We have t-shirts.
We have steps.
We have a near infinite number of patterns and colors
and surface textures on the floor,
especially from a visual perspective. Yeah, visually it looks, it's really tough, is an infinitely
variable. On the other hand, safety is way easier on the inside. My robots, they're not very heavy,
my robots, they're not very heavy, they're not very fast.
If they bump into your foot, you think it's funny.
And autonomous vehicles kind of have the inverse problem
and so that for me saying vision is the future,
I can say that without reservation
for autonomous vehicles. I think I believe what
Elon's saying about the future is ultimately going to be vision.
Maybe if we put a cheap lighter on there as a backup sensor, it might not be the worst idea in the world. So the space so much higher. It's much higher. That's much more careful thinking through
worst idea in the world. So the stakes are much higher. So the stakes are much higher.
That's much more careful thinking through how far away that
feature is. Right. And but I think that the primary
environmental understanding sensor is going to be a
visual system. Visual system. So on that point, well, let me
ask, do you hope there's an Iroba robot in every home in the world one day?
I expect there to be at least one Iroba robot in every home.
You know, we've sold 25 million robots. So we're in about 10% of US homes, which is a great start.
US homes, which is a great start. But I think that when we think about the numbers of things that robots can do, you know, today I can vacuum your floor, mop your floor, cut your lawn,
or soon we'll be able to cut your lawn. But there are more things that we could do in the home. And I hope that we continue using the techniques
I described around exploiting computer vision
and low cost manufacturing that will be able to create
these solutions at affordable price points.
So let me ask on that point of a robot never home,
that's my dream as well.
I'd love to see that.
I think the possibilities there are indeed
infinite positive possibilities.
But in our current culture,
no thanks to science fiction and so on,
there's serious kind of hesitation,
anxiety, concern about robots,
and also a concern about privacy.
And it's a fascinating question to me
why that concern is amongst a certain group of people
as intense as it is.
So you have to think about it
because it's a serious concern,
but I wonder how you address it best.
So from a perspective of vision sensors,
so robots and move about the home and sense the world,
how do you alleviate people's privacy concerns?
How do you make sure that they can trust
I robot and the robots that they share their home with?
I think that's a great question.
And we've really leaned way forward on this
because given our vision as to the role
the company intends to play in the home,
really for us, maker break is can our approach be trusted to protecting the data and the privacy
of the people who have our robots? And so we've gone out publicly for the privacy manifesto,
stating we'll never sell your data. We've adopted GDPR, not just where GDPR is required, but globally.
not just where GDPR is required, but globally,
we have ensured that any,
that images don't leave the robot. So processing data from the visual sensors
happens locally on the robot
and only semantic knowledge of the home with the consumers consent is sent up.
We show you what we know and are trying to go use data as an enabler for the performance of the
robots with the informed consent and understanding of the people who own those
robots. And we take it very seriously. And ultimately, we think that by showing a customer
that if you let us build a semantic map of your home and know where the rooms are,
well, then you can say, clean the kitchen.
If you don't want to robot to do that, don't make the map.
It'll do its best job cleaning your home, but I won't be able to do that.
And if you ever want us to forget that we know that it's your kitchen,
you can have confidence that we will do that for you. So we're trying to go and be a sort of a data 2.0 perspective company where we treat the
data that the robots have of the consumers home as if it were the consumers data and that
they have rights to it. So we think by being the good guys on this front, we can build the trust and thus be interested
to enable robots to do more things that are thoughtful.
You think people's worries will diminish over time?
As a society, broadly speaking, do you think you can win over trust, not just for the company, but just the comfort
of people have with AI in their home enriching their lives in some way?
I think we're an interesting place today. We're less about winning them over
and more about finding a way to talk about privacy in a way that more people can
understand.
I would tell you that today,
when there's a privacy breach,
people get very upset,
and then go to the store and buy the cheapest thing,
paying no attention to whether or not the products
that they're buying honor privacy standards or not.
In fact, if I put on the package of my Rumba, the privacy commitments
that we have, I would sell less than I would if I did nothing at all. And that needs to change.
So it's not a question about earning trust. I think that's necessary by not sufficient.
We need to figure out how to have a comfortable set of,
what is the grade A meat standard applied to privacy
that customers can trust and understand
and then use in their buying decisions.
That will reward companies for good behavior
and that will ultimately be how this moves forward.
And maybe be part of the conversation between regular people
about what it means, what privacy means.
If you have some standards, you can say,
you can start talking about who's following them,
who's not, have more.
Because most people are actually quite clueless
about all aspects of artificial intelligence
and data collection and so on. It would be nice to change that. For people to understand the good
that AI can do, and it's not some system that's trying to steal all the most sensitive data.
Yep. Do you think, do you dream of a rainbow with human level intelligence one day. So you've mentioned a very successful localization and mapping of the
environment, being able to do some basic communication to say go clean the kitchen. Do you see in your
maybe more bored moments, once you get the beer, to sit back with that beer and have a chat on a Friday night with
the Rumba about how your day went.
So true, your latter question, absolutely.
To your former question as to whether a robot can have human level intelligence, not in
my lifetime.
You can have you, you can have a great conversation, a meaningful conversation with a robot,
without it having anything that resembles human level intelligence.
And I think that as long as you realize that conversation is not about the robot and
making the robot feel good. That conversation is about
you learning interesting things that make you feel like the conversation that you had with a robot
is a pretty awesome way of learning something. And it could be about what kind of day your
pet had.
It could be about, you know, how can I make my home more energy efficient?
It could be about, you know, if I'm thinking about climbing Mount Everest, what should
I know?
And that's a very doable thing.
You know, but if I think that that conversation I'm going to have with the robot is I'm going
to be rewarded by making the robot happy.
Well, I could have just put a button on the robot that you can push in the robot would smile
and that sort of thing.
So I think you need to think about the question in the right way. And robots can be awesomely effective at helping people feel less isolated, learn more about
the home that they live in, and fill some of those lonely gaps that we wish we were engaged
learning cool stuff about our world. Last question.
If you could hang out for a day with a robot from science fiction, movies, books,
and safely pick, safely pick its brain for that day,
who would you pick?
Data.
Data from Star Trek.
I think that,
A, data's really smart. Data has been through a lot,
trying to go and save the galaxy, and I'm really interested actually in emotion and robotics,
and I think you'd have a lot to say about that, because I believe actually that a motion play is an incredibly useful role in doing reasonable
things in situations where we have imperfect understanding of what's going on.
In social situations when there's imperfect information.
In social situations also in competitive or dangerous situations that we have a motion for a reason. And so that ultimately,
my theory is that as robots get smarter and smarter, they're actually going to get more
emotional because you can't actually survive on pure logic
because only a very tiny fraction
of the situations you find ourselves
and can be resolved reasonably with logic.
And so I think data would have a lot to say about that
and so I can find out whether he agrees.
What, if you could ask data one question
that you would get a deep honest answer to,
what would you ask?
What's Captain Picard really like?
Okay, I think that's the perfect way to end the call and thank you so much for talking to me today.
I really appreciate it.
My pleasure. Thank you.