logo
Ecovacs Deebot X9 Pro Omni Combines Its Best Mopping And Vacuuming In One Bot

Ecovacs Deebot X9 Pro Omni Combines Its Best Mopping And Vacuuming In One Bot

Forbes13-05-2025

With an under-the-hood redesign, the X9 Pro is an impressive robovac
I know, I was just praising Ecovacs for delivering one of its more impressive mopping robovacs with the X8 Pro Omni, but the company just released a new version that combines the best parts of the X8 with the suction technology of their other high-end robovacs in one machine.
Ecovacs doesn't guarantee performance when standing the bot on its edge
Ecovac's latest and greatest flagship robovac (coming about a month after its other latest and greatest flagship bot…this company is prolific!) takes an upgraded Ozmo roller mop and adds a boosted vacuuming system to create an X-series robovac that's better than any other individual bot in the company's lineup.
I'm a big fan of roller mop technology. I first saw the technology applied in a robovac last year the Eufy S1 and instantly recognized how the tech could finally address the "dirty mop pad" issue of mopping robovacs.
The main issue at hand is simple—mops get dirty. Even if you have the bot go back and clean itself every 20 minutes or after each room, there's a non-zero amount of time when the robovac is mopping with dirty pads, essentially just redistributing dirt. Given, they are laying down fresh water as they go, so the bots are picking up some dirt as they move other dirt around but it's still problematic.
The mop has been reworked slightly for better performance
The Ozmo roller mop in the X9 is an evolution of the roller mop technology I saw last year. It's even an evolution over the X8 that I just saw last month. It applies considerably more downward pressure than your traditional mopping pads but it also cleans the roller as it rotates. The X9 has an improved roller comb that gathers debris as well.
Here to decimate dirt lodged in corners
The mop also has a neat trick where it extends out past the body of the X9, essentially squaring off the circle and reaching into edges where a roller mop that's stuck under the body of a circular robot couldn't reach. It does make the bot a bit whiny: that little motor extending and retracting isn't the quietest. Still, it's a small price to pay for every nook and cranny getting cleaned.
One note: while the X9 does regularly do a deep clean at the Omni station of the roller mop, you'll still need to get your hands dirty on occasion—there's still the small tray in the mopping unit that gets filled with slimy dirt after about a week or so of daily cleaning.
What's cool about the X9's upgraded wet mopping capabilities is that the bot can now raise the main brush and side brush when it detects a wet mess. So rather than driving into a spill and flinging it around or getting it sucked up into the vacuum portion of the bot, the X9 Pro Omni can clean it with just the roller mop. Lifting the wet mop so that you don't get carpets and rugs wet is practically standard at this point, but raising the dry cleaning components is rare. So rare that I've only seen it on one other bot—the Matic Robot (more on that in the coming days).
If it was just the roller mop that had gotten upgrades, the X9 would still be an impressive bot but Ecovacs pulled out the stops and added in their BLAST (Boosted Large-Airflow Suction Technology) system to improve the overall performance of the vacuum as well.
Possibly the first vacuum to be able to back up the claims made by its promo renders
BLAST is a combination of a redesigned on-demand 100W high-torque motor and SuperBoost battery. The motor takes advantage of an optimized airflow path to boost suction when needed (like on carpets and rugs). The battery delivers 50% higher discharge current but is also larger so that it lasts 2.5 times longer, all without heating up. What's interesting is that the overall suction of the X9 is actually lower at 16,600 Pa to the X8's 18,000 Pa. I'm actually OK with this since you don't really need all that suction on a regular basis for hard floors. You just need to be able to deliver increased suction and agitation when on carpet. The end result is that the X9 performs better on soft surfaces without sounding like a leaf blower or needing to recharge more often.
Other hardware has been improved as well, with third-generation ZeroTangle main and side brushes. Compared to the X8, you can see that the X9's brush is more robust. The side brush for the X9 is similar to designs I first saw on Roborock that uses two offset bristle arms instead of a multi-armed brush wheel. It's a small design shift but it means that the X9 is quieter and that there are little to no hair tangles.
Speaking of tangles, the X9 employs onboard AI to detect and avoid problematic items like shoes and cords. It will also use its AI to intelligently clean each room based on floor type and usage (like choosing to clean bathrooms last so as not to cross-contaminate). It will even figure out optimal paths based on previous blockages its encountered.
You can also (finally) add Ecovacs robots to your Apple Home using Matter. It's extremely helpful once you've set all the parameters you want in the Ecovacs app and you just want a single app to control things like scheduling.
Understated but effective
The X9 Pro is paired with Ecovac's Omni station—it's a great design that needs no upgrades. It washes and dries the mop with 145° hot air and needs little to no maintenance. Since roller mops use less water overall, you won't be filling up and emptying the reservoirs nearly as much as with a mop pad system. I'm sure that Ecovacs will make changes next calendar year but honestly, there's only so much more that can be done to improve the station at this point.
While it can be somewhat tiresome (if not impossible) to try and stay ahead of innovations in robovacs, the tech in the Deebot X9 Pro Omni is at the absolute top of the charts right now.
The Deebot X9 Pro Omni is on sale now on the Ecovacs site at a reduced introductory price of $1,299 ($1,599 MSRP).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meta in Talks for Scale AI Multi-Billion Investment
Meta in Talks for Scale AI Multi-Billion Investment

Bloomberg

time35 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Meta in Talks for Scale AI Multi-Billion Investment

Live on Bloomberg TV CC-Transcript 00:00Not exactly a household name. What do scale AI do. And how significant is the investment? Yeah, absolutely. Few people have heard outside of the world of technology and of course of this company, but it has grown in prominence. And now, of course, it's making headlines with this potential investment, 0 billion from META, as you say, one of the biggest private sector investments that we would have seen for years. So Scale AI it focuses on one of the three key components that you need to build out large language models, which is data. So you have energy chips and data, though those are the three main components that come together. And scale AI is squarely focused on data. So they train up, or at least they build out quality data that these models then feed in to train on and they hire PhDs and others to help work through that data and quantify it and tag it. So that's essentially the business model. They've also providing their own solutions into enterprise and have been pushing into defence as well. And I think what this deal tells us is a few things. One Meta of course, that Mark Zuckerberg is not going anywhere in terms of its investments around A.I.. They've pledged to invest at least $60 billion this year and 10 billion now for scale A.I.. If this, of course, comes to pass, so Meta is full bore on the focus on AI, particularly as well around data, it's a reminder that data is becoming a key battleground because along with energy and chips getting hold of the data, quality data is becoming increasingly difficult for these large language models. And so there is a fight on that spectrum as well. And then the third part of this, I think, in terms of what it tells us is defence technology Meta is increasingly working with the Pentagon, particularly further around things like virtual helmets and AI infused helmets for the military. And scale AI already has relationships with the Pentagon. So I think it's also a reminder that matter is getting closer in terms of defence technology as well. So on all three levels, I think those are the significance In terms of the deals that came through this company. Scale AI was valued at 14 billion USD back in 2024. You can imagine that that valuation is much higher now. Yeah. And also we've got London Tech Week kicking off today. What's the top of the agenda? Well, I was talking about data and energy and chips while chips will be front and center because Jensen Huang of nvidia will be giving the keynote speech at London Tech week later this morning alongside the Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Nvidia also expected to announce Jensen Huang some investments here in the UK around training the workforce to be able to use these A.I. applications. They've pledged to train about 100,000 people up until about 2030, investing in the R & D space as well in Bristol, Bristol here in the UK. So the focus is going to be on Jensen Huang has to say at that keynote speech and those investments and how the UK is trying to position itself in this AI race versus the US versus China and also as well versus their counterparts across the channel in Paris because France is also hosting Viva Tech, which is a big tech event and Jensen Huang will be going there as well. And France has been able to build out an AI ecosystem with tax cuts. That is something that arguably the UK government be looking for, which is desperate for growth. And there is one solution for this UK government. They hope to drive growth levels higher in the UK.

Tech shares climb after strong Nvidia results despite warning over rise of Chinese rivals
Tech shares climb after strong Nvidia results despite warning over rise of Chinese rivals

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Tech shares climb after strong Nvidia results despite warning over rise of Chinese rivals

Technology shares climbed on Thursday, buoyed by strong results from Nvidia, despite the AI chip company's boss issuing a warning about the rise of Chinese rivals. The Stoxx Europe tech index rose by 0.8% on Thursday following Nvidia's financial report, with the Dutch semiconductor equipment maker ASML rallying by 2.4%. In the US, futures for the tech-focused Nasdaq climbed 2%, and shares in Nvidia itself jumped 6% in pre-market trading. The boost to tech and artificial intelligence stocks came hours after Nvidia beat Wall Street forecasts, with quarterly revenues jumping 69% to $44bn (£32.6bn). The company also said it expected deals in the Middle East to start to fill a gap left by the loss of Chinese business. In April the US president, Donald Trump, said he was restricting AI chip exports to China, in effect barring Nvidia from selling its H20 AI chips to Chinese companies and blocking a major source of its revenue. Nvidia's chief executive, Jensen Huang, warned that Chinese rivals were benefiting from the void left by US firms forced to abandon the market due to US trade restrictions. 'The Chinese competitors have evolved,' Huang told Bloomberg Television. He added that Huawei, which had been blacklisted by the US government, had become 'quite formidable'. 'Like everybody else, they are doubling, quadrupling capabilities every year,' Huang said. 'And the volume is increasing substantially.' While the US government policy is meant to keep AI technologies out of the hands of Chinese actors, Huang said local companies are simply finding other options. 'You cannot underestimate the importance of the China market,' Huang said. 'This is the home of the world's largest population of AI researchers.' Nvidia said it expects to miss out on $8bn in revenue in the second quarter as a result of Trump's trade restrictions. Tech investors were also optimistic after a US trade court ruled against Trump's sweeping tariffs regime, in a move that could ultimately block the president's sweeping trade levies. But there is further uncertainty ahead, with the White House having already filed an appeal against the decision, issued by judges from the New York-based court of international trade. Meanwhile, shares in Tesla, another leader in artificial intelligence technology, rose 2.6%, after the company's chief executive, Elon Musk, confirmed that he would formally leave his role in the Trump administration. Musk has been leading the 'department of government efficiency' (Doge) since January, which ruthlessly cut state spending across a number of public departments and agencies. He said in April he would be stepping back after seeing Tesla's earnings plunge and failing to win a supreme court race in which he spent millions of dollars supporting a Republican candidate. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

How the Musk-Trump feud became an online battle like no other
How the Musk-Trump feud became an online battle like no other

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

How the Musk-Trump feud became an online battle like no other

What happens when the world's most powerful man and the world's richest man - both accomplished attention-seekers - clash on the internet? We're finding out in real time. This week, billionaire Elon Musk and President Donald Trump took to their respective social platforms to sling mud at the other after a fallout over federal spending. What started as a volley of barbs snowballed into a feud involving multiple social platforms and millions of onlookers, as everyone from big-name politicians to no-name meme accounts hurried to offer their takes and declare their allegiances. Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. The split could have profound real-world consequences, as both men show their willingness to leverage financial and political power to hit back at the other. It also illustrates how quickly a conflict can escalate when it is fanned by algorithmic feeds and the demands of the attention economy, which prizes outrage and relishes a high-profile feud. While Trump and Musk circle their wagons, drumming up support and smearing the other through posts on X and Truth Social, millions of smaller content creators stand to capitalize on the attention the feud generates. On Thursday afternoon, the number of active users on the X and Truth Social mobile apps both reached 90-day highs, according to preliminary estimates by Sensor Tower, a market intelligence firm. Between 2 and 6 p.m. Eastern time that day, the firm estimates that X usage was up 54 percent compared with the previous seven days, while Truth Social was up more than 400 percent, albeit from a much lower baseline. 'Public feuds like this drive social media engagement like crazy,' said Casey Fiesler, a professor of information science at the University of Colorado at Boulder who studies social media ethics. 'It's high-octane content because it's easy to meme and very algorithmically rewarded.' Musk, whose business empire includes X as well as Tesla, rocket company SpaceX and artificial intelligence start-up xAI, kicked off the fight on Tuesday when he posted on X to criticize a congressional spending bill backed by the president: 'This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination,' he wrote. The post was viewed more than 141 million times and sparked a flurry of commentary on X and elsewhere online. Gen Z internet personality Lil Tay, known for over-the-top posts flaunting luxury goods, got 2.8 million views on a reply clapping back at Musk for his former support of Trump, while far-right commentator Charlie Kirk referenced Musk's 'tweet heard around the world' in a post funneling viewers to Apple Podcasts to stream his talk show. Over the next two days, Musk continued to take shots at Trump on X, at one point posting a poll asking whether America needed a new centrist political party, while Trump told White House reporters that his and Musk's relationship was on the rocks. Then on Thursday, Musk escalated the back-and-forth by claiming in a post on X that Trump is implicated in the Epstein files, documents that allegedly contain the names of people who consorted with the late financier Jeffrey Epstein to sexually assault minors. The post exploded, drawing almost 200 million views in a day and stoking a second wave of content from politicians, creators and meme-makers. A post from an anonymous X user, liked by 192,300 people, mused: 'Who gets JD Vance in the divorce?' The vice president soon provided an answer, posting that Trump has 'earned the trust of the movement he leads.' On X, where Musk's changes to the platform's verification feature have blurred the lines between real public figures and paid subscribers, fake politicians joined the fray. 'Every time I smell a movement, I know you'll be next to it,' came a reply to Vance from an account for Rep. Jack Kimble - a fictitious congressman with more than 93,000 followers whose posts have often fooled social media users. Former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon seized the moment to make headlines with his podcast, in which he called for Trump to seize SpaceX and perhaps even deport Musk. Politics creators such as Philip DeFranco took to TikTok with beat-by-beat breakdowns of the feud, while Musk's estranged daughter Vivian Wilson posted to her Instagram stories a clip of herself laughing, with the caption, 'I love being proven right,' possibly in reference to past comments criticizing her father and Trump. In the Reddit community r/politics, self-styled sleuths conducted deep dives into Epstein-related court filings, at times linking to books and YouTube series that claim to investigate Epstein's celebrity accomplices. Far-fetched conspiracy theories floated around X as users speculated whether Trump and Musk could be secretly working together toward some noble end. Critics of Musk and Trump delighted in the affair. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York), who at 35 is a social media star in her own right, was stopped by a reporter outside the U.S. Capitol on Thursday and asked for her reaction to Trump and Musk's war of words. She was quick to spit an online catchphrase: 'Oh man, the girls are fighting, aren't they?' The clip spread quickly on TikTok, where it was boosted by left-leaning talking heads and news accounts. Academic research on online algorithms has shown that social feeds often prioritize content that elicits fear or rage. High-profile fights can boost the power and profiles of people involved, as with the infamous internet feuds between Kim Kardashian and Kanye West or influencers Trisha Paytas and Ethan Klein, said Fiesler. But trending conflicts are also a boon to the second-order creators, who jump to offer 'side takes,' playing off the argument of the day to drive traffic to their own products and profiles. A divisive court battle between actress Amber Heard and her ex-husband Johnny Depp, for instance, spawned its own media ecosystem, with creators and channels dedicated entirely to dissecting the feud - at times even falsifying or exaggerating information to keep viewers hooked. 'This [Musk-Trump feud] is half my TikTok feed right now,' Fiesler said. 'The more that people talk about it, the more people feel obligated to talk about it and take sides.' It's a dynamic the principals in this fight have long since mastered. Vance posted on X on Thursday a picture of himself with the popular podcaster and comedian Theo Von, with the tongue-in-cheek caption, 'Slow news day, what are we even going to talk about?' Musk reposted it, adding a 'laughter' emoji. Under Musk's ownership, X has lost advertisers and users turned off by his politics and lax approach to hate speech, with rivals such as Bluesky and Meta's Threads siphoning left-leaning users in particular. Now he risks alienating Trump loyalists. But in the meantime, even critics of his leadership of X acknowledged Thursday that it seemed to have 'the juice' - that is, it was driving the conversation - at least for the moment. 'A public blowup between the world's richest man and the president of the U.S. is hard for people to resist witnessing first-hand, even for those that may not regularly use X,' said Jasmine Enberg, vice president and principal analyst at eMarketer, a market research firm. 'That said, our media usage is so fragmented and we're being bombarded with the news from every channel that it's not likely to be significant or sustainable.' Truth Social, meanwhile, has become an increasingly important component of Trump's communication strategy, with the self-styled influencer-in-chief firing off a steady stream of posts - at times dozens a day - lauding his own actions or taking aim at rivals. White House employees and right-leaning creators then spread the posts to other platforms, broadening Truth Social's reach and influence even as the platform underperforms compared with X, Threads or Bluesky. (Sensor Tower estimates X has about 100 times more active users.) The Trump-Musk brouhaha exemplifies how online influencer culture has permeated politics, said Renée DiResta, a professor at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy and the author of 'Invisible Rulers.' 'Online beefing is not about winning - it's a kind of performance,' she said. The interactive nature of social media allows the audience to get in on the action. 'We pick sides, cheer for our champion and keep the fight going. We make memes - we can grab some attention for ourselves and help shape the fight if we make good ones.' But what might be harmless fun in the case of celebrity gossip, she said, has a darker side when the warring parties are among the world's most powerful people. In a striking example, a threat from Trump on Thursday to cancel government contracts with SpaceX prompted Musk to reply that the company 'will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately' - a move that would have severed NASA's only means of transporting astronauts to the International Space Station. A pseudonymous X user who had fewer than 100 followers at the time replied to Musk's post, urging him to 'take a step back' and reconsider. Within hours, Musk responded: 'Good advice. Ok, we won't decommission Dragon.' The online bedlam prompted sports commentator Darren Rovell to revisit a tweet he posted in 2016 that has since become a meme: 'I feel bad for our country. But this is tremendous content.' Related Content To save rhinos, conservationists are removing their horns Donald Trump and the art of the Oval Office confrontation Some advice from LGBTQ elders as WorldPride kicks off amid fears

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store