After you’ve tried more than three or four robot vacuums (which I have), you become acutely aware of how hard it is to innovate within such a limited set of constraints.
Robot vacuums all tend to be around the same size and shape. The dust bin and the ports are usually in the same place. Maybe the app looks a little different, maybe one has better mapping capabilities. Maybe one has sacrificed a little suction power to have longer battery life.
Not so with the Powerbot R7065. Even from the unboxing, it looks different. It just looks cooler than any other botvac around (cool enough, in fact, to look like Darth Vader). I appreciated its novel design, but more than that I appreciated its efficiency, navigation capabilities, and suction power.
But first things first: The setup for this botvac was the worst of the ones I’ve tried. I felt like I was flying blind throughout the process. For example, the docking station has no indicator light. Is it on? Who knows! I crossed my fingers and put the Powerbot on its dock's power ports. But after an hour, the bot showed no signs of life, either.
It took a few minutes of fumbling, cursing, and an extra hour to find the emergency reset switch, flip it, and finally get the botvac charging.
The companion Samsung SmartThings app is also annoying. First, it kept kicking me out. Once you’ve managed to sign in, you have to go through a complicated rigmarole of inputting different passwords and using the remote to follow arcane instructions (“When ‘AP’ shows up on the display, hold the ‘Clock’ button for five seconds…”).

