The new Roborock has “little legs” that go up to 8.5cm

China has conquered the robot vacuum cleaner market. With almost 20% market share, Roborock is the brand that leads the segment and has just announced new products for 2026. The most notable is the Roborock Saros 20, its new high-end robot vacuum cleaner that comes with a chassis that allows it to overcome a hitherto insurmountable obstacle: the steps. The robot vacuum cleaner and climber With the Roborock Saros Z70the brand surprised us with a robotic arm that picked up the things we left lying on the floor. The Saros 20 abandons this idea but has new legs with which it can climb slopes of up to 8.5cm. Technically, Roborock was not the first to have this idea because Dreame showed a robot that climbs stairs a few months ago, but it was a concept, not a commercial product. The particularity of the Saros 20 is in its AdaptiLift 3.0 chassis, which combines lifting wheels with what Roborock calls a “climbing arm”. Of course, there is an important detail and that is that can climb a 4.5cm step followed by another 4cm stepso it does not adapt to any type of unevenness or conventional stairs, whose rise is usually about 17-20cm. Thanks to its elevating chassis, it can also clean carpets up to 3cm high. There is more. It has the StarSight 2.0 intelligent navigation system, capable of detecting up to 200 types of obstacles, including the smallest ones, and has a suction capacity of 35,000 Pa. Regarding scrubbing, it has two rotating mops with the FlexiArm system to reach corners. In addition, the Saros 20 Sonic model has the VibraRise scrubbing system which generates up to 4,000 vibrations per minute. The charging base washes the mops with hot water at 100ºC and dries them afterwards. The two models will be available in 2026 at a still unknown price. New robotic lawnmower and more Roborock also renews its range of lawnmower robots with the new RockMow X1 LiDAR. It has four-wheel drive, which allows it to climb slopes of up to 80% and 8cm steps. The navigation system combines LiDAR and visual SLAM so as not to depend on satellite signal. It allows you to adjust the cut between 4 and 9 centimeters and can cut up to 2,000 square meters per day. Roborock has also renewed its Qrevo Curv series with the new Qrevo Curv 2 Flow. The main novelty is that instead of two rotating mops it has a roller for scrubbing that cleans itself as it rotates. It also extends 10mm to reach the wall. Finally we have the Roborock F25 ACE Proa vacuum cleaner and scrubber with a broom-type design that can be tilted up to 180 degrees to reach under furniture without problem. It comes with a self-cleaning base that washes and dries the rollers at 95ºC to eliminate bacteria. Like the rest of the products, it will be available this year, but we still don’t know what its price will be. Images | Roborock In Xataka | Roborock QV 35A, analysis: this robot vacuum cleaner costs half as much as its older brothers, but who would have thought

We have found tools 300,000 years ago in China. And they put up legs what we believed on the paleodieta

Imagining humans diet of tens of thousands of years is to think, almost automatically, in the Paleodieta. For years we think that ‘paleo diet’ consisted of Eat, above all, meatbut more and more studies have put on the table that our ancestors They were not as carnivorous as we thought. And, from time to time, tools appear that support that Vegetable diet in antiquity. The last? Chinese tools with at least 300,000 years old. The discovery. In an article published in Scienceresearchers detail a series of 35 wood tools found at the Gantangqing archaeological site, located in southwest China. Using methods such as Electronic spin resonance On sediment minerals attached to tools, researchers have been able to date with a 95% confidence this set of tools in a segment between 250,000 and 361,000 years. This collection includes Tools of all kindsas large sticks to dig two hands, hooks and some smaller supplies, and researchers detail that they all have clear manufacturing marks such as rounded ends, more sharp parts and other polished surfaces. Collectors. The hunt was present at the time and was of great importance, obviously, but we have already commented that there is more and more evidence about the relevance of the collection and the Vegetable diet before the agriculture. The estimate is that these tools did not serve for hunting, but to process plant foods. The analysis of both the waste that presents the tools and the use brands indicate that they were designed to excavate and collect grounds and tubers and roots. Hook -shaped tools, for example, could have served to cut the smallest roots and tools to clean vegetables in a precise way. Contrast. Almost as interesting as the tools themselves is precisely that collecting purpose. The reason is that in Western Eurasia and in Africa they had already been found Wooden tools Of that age, but the enormous difference is that most tools were hunting while the Gantangqing repertoire, apart from more diverse, specializes in that plant collection. Importance beyond diet. Although they are tools of the last years of the Paleolithic inferior in which rock tools were more than established, but there was the hypothesis that, in East Asia the rocks were less abundant than in other regions and populations depended largely on organic tools. And that need forced the elaboration of the tools made from wood. And, above all, the discovery puts on the table that cognitive abilities of the population of Southeast Asia and its ability to create advanced tools was comparable to that of European and African contemporaries. In the end, it is always curious to verify how a “simple” discovery, as a tool of tens of thousands of years ago, allows to establish a connection with the diet of that population, their skills compared to those of other areas and how they raffled difficulties to continue advancing. And also how the stone that We always associate the Paleolithic He was not the only protagonist in the technological evolution of the species. In Xataka | About 3 million years ago our ancestors already used tools that they themselves manufactured

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