View allAll Photos Tagged Roomba

I got home from the dance, jumped in the shower and put on some comfy jammies. Headed downstairs for a snack and a movie and the kids don't know what they want. Bella the pup is fascinated with the rain (I don't blame her), Hammie the litttle guy in the hampster ball seems to be entrhalled by the TV and what I am going to put on....and ofc the roomba is just happily chugging along, lol. I put the Wonder Woman for me and the little critters and fell asleep in the chair.

Long exposure of the Roomba (vacuum cleaner) doing its thing. The orange light kicks on when the battery starts to die. I left this one open for about 13 minutes. That's why you can see more of the room. The purple spot is the infrared barrier.

 

Made it to Explore! Highest: #62

16-35mm 2.8L + Camera Crane + 5D Mark II + Long Shutter + Roomba + Random LED Lights

Roomba on legs. (Comes with a Dyson-esque vacuum cleaner.)

Picture of our cat Sparrow that was taken in August, 2019. At that time, we had only had this Roomba for a month and a half. I gave the Roomba to my husband for Father’s Day that year.

Seriously, if you don’t have one, get one. They don’t complain, procrastinate, or forget (all outcomes which resulted in MY previous attempts to vacuum). The Scooba isn’t bad either.

Inspired by Max-Arthur, the amazing Roomba-surfing cat, who became an Internet sensation recently when his owner Helen Arnold decided to kit him out with an awesome shark costume! Click here to see videos of him chasing a duckling around her house.

 

 

This is a pretty small water change, usually they involve 10 times that many buckets and many more cuts and tears.

Just minding his business, Freddie was blind sided by Roomba the robot vacuum cleaner. It was not a pretty sight.

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

16-35mm 2.8L + Camera Crane + 5D Mark II + Long Shutter + Roomba + Random LED Lights

about 10 minutes of roomba-ing stacked in Photoshop

Inspired by Max-Arthur, the amazing Roomba-surfing cat, who became an Internet sensation recently when his owner Helen Arnold decided to kit him out with an awesome shark costume! Click here to see videos of him chasing a duckling around her house.

 

 

3 X 300sek + HDR = roomba-art

Display in front of a Vacuum Cleaner shop in downtown Bothell, WA. I think this is the Roomba's grandfather. The barber shop is next door, both are closed due to COVID-19.

 

This was shot with a Kodak Vest Pocket Autographic camera with a Rapid Rectilinear lens. I built new bellows for the camera, this was my first test roll through it. The film is Ilford HP5+ from a bulk roll of 46mm (127 film) I bought during their ULF sale. I developed it in Beerenol (Rainier Beer).

A fully autonomous vacuum for your plants.

for the evil Roomba to finish its rounds in the living room so he can lay on the couch :-)

 

He knows EXACTLY where the virtual wall is. The Roomba cannot pass the virtual wall :-)

11 minute exposure of my roomba painting the floor. The LED on its back was fading from blue to red.

168 pages and some six hours later, I've got a 13' x 9' rasterbation — that's from floor to ceiling — of one of my favourite illustrations ever on my wall. I made a big print of it from a tiny JPG found on the illustrator's website on a colour laser at a print shop in Palo Alto. It's a sequel to the old one I had on my wall in Ann Arbor.

 

I found this girl in a magazine some time ago - the illustrator is Stella Im Hultberg. I'd love to have the original as well, but unfortunately it was sold all the way back in '06.

 

The lighting right now is really dim; that's a 13-second exposure.

made by a roomba

 

Camera was mounted to the ceiling using an tripod + duct tape. Each photo was a 30" exposure at ISO 800, with an 18mm lens at f/4.5. It was about 40 minutes worth, and then I stacked the images in Photoshop.

 

The spiral in the middle is where the roomba started. As the battery lost power, it fades to red.

High resolution image of the now twice flown and twice landed #SpaceX #Falcon9 first stage, which most recently carried the #BulgariaSat1 satellite to orbit. This is the rocket entering the Port Canaveral channel Thursday morning (June 29, 2017) atop the drone-ship "Of Course I Still Love You", and of particular note, it is sitting atop a piece of equipment that stablilizes the rocket after landing. It has been called the "roomba", "octo-grabber", and "Optimus Prime".

 

This is a merge of 4 images, creating an effective resolution of 5580x9540. (Image by Michael Seeley / We Report Space)

2 minute exposures done over 40 minutes. The grain is caused from having to up one of the images exposures in post editing since my battery died and I was unable to adjust my camera for a good exposure of the room.

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

Her arch enemy the Roomba is hard at work. She’s launching sneak attacks then retreating to the high places. Barley was used when I was a child to say you were safe in a game of tig. It’s thought it may derive from Parley but its usage goes back a very long way.

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

Content not Quality

(I wish there had been better light.)

 

My husband bought us a roomba to help with pet hair and litter issues on our floors. The big little fella is loud and random but will prove to be useful. Most cats kept a respectful distance, although Curiosity and Vidalia were drawn to it. Gumbo, being Gumbo, ignored the noise and sat in the middle of the living room. . . the main photo is the very first bump of the roomba. Gumbo, meet the roomba. The rest of the photos are in chronological order. Seems the "randomness" of the roomba had a bent toward tracking Gumbo, lol. Isn't Gumbo remarkable?

 

Interesting Gumbo Fact: As you can tell, Gumbo is not fazed by much, but it took the loss of his sight to reach this point in his life. Back when Gumbo could still see (although it must have been like looking through a kaleidoscope given the cellular debris in his orbits), the world tended to be a more fearful place.

 

[SOOC, f/1.4, ISO 400, shutter speed 1/80, +2 EV]

Photos from the early morning return of the now twice launched and landed #SpaceX #Falcon9 first stage to Port Canaveral aboard the drone-ship "Of Course I Still Love You". This follows the successful launch of the #BulgariaSat1 payload. (Photos by Michael Seeley / WeReportSpace)

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

June 2014: Even more followup: I should have added this years back. The couple who took the apartment opened the restaurant Commune which is on the corner of the building. It's a really nice place and so happy that we had a tiny hand in it opening.

 

july 8, 2009 - A pre-post-script: we listed it on craigslist back in january and had about 6 serious viewings by people. although we weren't vetting people per se, because we were showing it for our very nice landlord there was an element of trying to find someone good for the building. an initial couple who we liked a lot and wanted to have the apartment turned out to not have enough proof of income which was sad. the couple who took it finally seemed pretty nice and loved the how huge the kitchen was. one of them was a chef. i guess we should check back and see how it's going. we just heard that a friend of a friend took the apartment next to this one that was also available. nice. the roomba (in the bottom-ish right corner) still kinda works. i need to take it apart completely and clean it out and i'm sure it'll be fine. if you were ever curious - yes, they are awesome. you need one.

 

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We hate to give it up, but we're moving, and our great one bedroom apartment in Windsor Terrace (Brooklyn, NY) is for rent! This is a very large one bedroom, almost 1000 sq feet. There's a large eat-in kitchen, and a huge living room/dining room. The bedroom is 16 x 10, and is far down the hall from the other rooms (that's been great for having guests). The broker we used 2 years ago mentioned that the living room/dining room are so big, one of them could be used as the bedroom, and the actual bedroom could be used as a nursery/office/second bedroom. The closet space is amazing. There's a large bedroom closet, with a ton of deep storage space ABOVE the closet. Bathroom also has built-in storage space (as well as a large cabinet). There's a closet in the hallway that also has extra storage space above it. The kitchen, measuring 19 x 8, has a huge pantry for storage (we keep our bikes and air conditioners in there, as well as food and tons of other things), and many cabinets. The apartment was completely redone before we moved in two years ago--repainted, wood floors redone, all new appliances, and is in great shape. It's a really beautiful apartment too, with carved Victorian woodwork separating the living and dining rooms, beautiful old fireplace and wooden mantle (fireplace isn't operational), and 10 ft high ceilings. The building is clean, nice neighbors, and the ONLY good landlord we've ever had! Besides this being a great apartment, we've loved this location as well. We are right next to the Fort Hamilton subway station on the F line which has been really handy, and the best part--only 3 short blocks from Prospect Park! The neighborhood is quiet and extremely safe, and is just 1 or 2 stops from different locations in Park Slope. And if you've ever been to Park Slope, you know there are many reasons to visit, but few to actually live there. Our landlord isn't raising the rent--it will continue to be $1875 a month. No broker or other fees of any kind for this apartment, just a security deposit. Stop by our open house this Sunday, January 4th, between 12-3 to check out this great apartment. Write me for address!

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

There are so many indicators that this is a dog house! Pillows placed in strategic positions, an interior gate, the occasional dry bone that one steps on barefoot in the middle of the night, cats who stay behind the gate or on high surfaces when the dogs are milling around, water dishes, folded feeding towels stacked in a corner, dog pics as wallpaper on all the computers, cliickers and leashes hanging on the key holder, a fridge full of raw meat and ziplocks containing tiny pieces of meat and cheese, and, last but not least, sandy, messy floors. The sandy floors used to be the bane of my existence but now I have a robotic floor cleaning team and I can cross dirty floors off the list. Roomba sweeps and picks up the sand daily, Braava damp mops daily with a microfiber cloth and every couple weeks with a Swiffer mopping cloth and Scooba does the heavy mopping once a week with either water of white vinegar. My floors are immaculate at all times now and I love the feel of walking barefoot on clean floors.

 

Daily Dog Challenge 688. "A Dog Lives Here" Most of us have things in our homes that show that a dog lives there in some way or another. Take a picture of your dog with something that tells everyone that a dog lives in your house!

 

Our Daily Challenge: REPEAT

Just bought one of those robotic vacuums. Unfortunately I must have bought a dud, all it does is flash and bleep.

 

Pentax 645D

Pentax FA645 35mm

 

Chris Willson

 

Visit the website: www.TRAVEL67.com

 

Check out the blog: TRAVEL 67 The Blog

 

Stay up to date with workshops and events: Chris Willson Photography on Facebook

Part of a "Roomba Art" picture series produced by Tobias Baumgartner, Marcus Brandenburger, Tom Kamphans, Alexander Kroeller, and Christiane Schmidt of the IBR Algorithm Group and Braunschweig University of Technology.

 

We had a swarm of seven Roombas, each with a differently colored LED on top. The roombas are operating at the same time -- can you spot the collisions?

 

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