Genius invention for seniors: this robot vacuum needs neither an app nor the internet
Fed up with his parents’ frustration with technology, an American engineer developed a premium device specially for seniors. Instead of forcing you onto a smartphone, a single press of a button is all it takes for flawless cleanliness — and all at an absolutely unbeatable price.
⚠ Latest notice from the manufacturer
“Demand has all but emptied our warehouse. The next larger batch won’t ship for several weeks. For first-time buyers we’re currently offering a one-off 65% discount – while stocks last.”
— Michael Brooks, inventor & owner of DustaPro
It started with a weekend at my parents’ place
Michael Brooks, 34, is a sensor-technology engineer from Seattle, Washington. For years he worked on distance and obstacle detection – on sensors like the ones used in spaceflight to navigate probes around obstacles. So he knows a thing or two about how a device can “see” without a human stepping in.
Last year he visited his parents for a weekend. His mom, 68, had bought an expensive brand-name robot months earlier. It sat in the corner – unused. “That thing drives me mad,” she said. Brooks sat down and tried to set it up.
It took me a full three-quarters of an hour to get that robot to finally connect to the Wi-Fi – and I build sensor systems for a living. That’s when I thought: how on earth is my mom supposed to manage this? She doesn’t want to install an app, create an account and type in a password just to get her floors clean. — Michael Brooks, inventor of the DustaPro
Three problems I kept seeing again and again
Brooks started looking more closely – at his parents, at their neighbors, at family friends. And it was the same everywhere. The expensive robots could do a lot, but they failed exactly the people who needed them most:
- The app won’t connect. Wi-Fi password, account, updates – every other attempt the connection drops. Anyone without a smartphone is shut out from the start.
- The controls are far too complicated. Draw zones, set schedules, calibrate maps. For someone who isn’t tech-minded, that’s a wall, not a help.
- The “learning” phase is a nuisance. First the device has to “get to know” the home for days, gets tangled in cables, snags on door thresholds – and in the end it’s back in the corner.
“These devices are built for tech fans,” says Brooks. “Not for my mom. And certainly not for someone who doesn’t own a smartphone at all.”
So I put the sensors from spaceflight into the vacuum
Brooks’s idea was simple: if a device can “see” its surroundings on its own, it needs no app, no map and no Wi-Fi. That’s exactly the technology he’s been working with for years. He transferred the principle of obstacle detection from spaceflight onto a small, lightweight device for the living-room floor.
The result: a robot vacuum that uses sensors to detect every obstacle and every bit of dirt on its own – in real time. It drives around chair legs, shoes and the sleeping dog, finds the trail of crumbs by the kitchen door and stops at the top of the stairs. All without anyone having to set anything up.
The core is deliberately kept simple – and that’s exactly why it works for everyone: No Wi-Fi. No app. No smartphone. No learning phase. Charge it, press one button, done.
One button. No app. No smartphone needed.
That was Brooks’s most important rule: if someone can charge a mobile phone, they must be able to operate the DustaPro too. There’s nothing to connect, nothing to program, nothing to download. Three steps, and it’s running:
Plug it into any mobile-phone charger via USB and charge overnight.
Place it on the floor, press the one button – that’s it.
Sit back – the sensors do the rest on their own.
What the sensors detect – and why it makes the difference
Because the DustaPro scans its surroundings on its own, it gets exactly to the places most people can no longer reach: under the sofa, the bed and the cupboards. It spots the dark corner, the trail of pet hair, the crumbs under the dining table – and heads straight there, instead of wandering around blindly.
- Real-time obstacle detection – drives around chair legs, cables and the dog, instead of getting stuck.
- Dirt detection – finds trails of crumbs and pet hair on purpose, instead of driving over them.
- Anti-fall protection – reliably stops at stairs and edges.
- Reaches everywhere – flat enough for the gap under the sofa.
- So quiet the dog stays put – under 60 dB, even during a phone call.
Brooks’s mom was the first to keep it
Brooks put the first working DustaPro in his mom’s living room. No app, no account, no setup – he pressed the button and went to make a coffee. When she came back, the floor was clean. A week later she gave away the expensive brand-name robot that had been sitting in the corner.
Since my hip operation I’ve struggled with my floors. My son had given me one of those expensive robots before – we never got it onto the internet. This one just runs. I press a button, nothing more. My place hasn’t been this clean in years. — Rosamond Krüger, 71
I don’t have a smartphone at all and so I never wanted a device like this. With this one I don’t need one. Unpack it, charge it, press the button – even I can manage that. Finally something made for us and not for the young ones. — Godafrid Eichel, 68
I’m glad it isn’t like the robot my son gave me last Christmas. Its manual was as thick as a novel, and we couldn’t get it connected to the internet. This one runs straight out of the box – just charge it. — Ermelinda F., Frankfurt
Who Brooks built the DustaPro for
Asked who his device is actually meant for, Brooks is clear:
Seniors and older parents – anyone who finds bending and lugging difficult and has no patience for fiddling with apps.
People without a smartphone – you simply don’t need one. One button is enough.
Tech skeptics – anyone who has ever despaired over setting up an app will never type in a password here again.
Pet owners – the sensors find pet hair on purpose, every day, without anyone having to lend a hand.
What does it cost – and why now?
Brooks deliberately decided against the usual brand-name mark-up. The DustaPro currently costs $69.99 with a 65% first-buyer discount – a fraction of what his mom paid for her unused brand-name robot. It also comes with free delivery and a 30-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked.
So you test it at home in your own time. If you don’t like it, it goes back free of charge – you take no risk. The offer runs while stocks last:
- Currently very limited stock in the dispatch queue
- The next larger delivery is several weeks away
- Once the promotional stock is gone, the full price applies again
Frequently asked questions
Do I need an app or a smartphone?
No. That’s exactly why the DustaPro was built. There’s no app, no account, no Wi-Fi. You press a single button – a smartphone is not needed.
Will I be able to set it up at my age?
Yes. If you can charge a mobile phone, you can do this too. Charge it, place it on the floor, press the button – that’s all there is to it. There’s nothing to connect and nothing to program.
How does it find the dirt without a map or app?
Through its sensors. The DustaPro scans its surroundings in real time, detects obstacles and dirt on its own and heads straight there – without you having to draw anything or run a “learning” phase first.
Does it get stuck on cables or stairs?
The obstacle detection drives around cables, chair legs and furniture, and the anti-fall protection reliably stops it at stairs and edges.
How loud is it?
Under 60 decibels – quieter than a normal conversation. Most customers let it run in the background, even during a phone call.
Is there a guarantee if it doesn’t suit me?
Yes. A 30-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked. You test it at home, and if it doesn’t suit you, it goes back free of charge.
In short
What: DustaPro – a robot vacuum with aerospace sensors, completely without an app, Wi-Fi or smartphone
Why now: 65% first-buyer discount ($69.99) while stocks last – next delivery several weeks away
Risk: 30-day money-back guarantee – if you don’t like it, you get the full purchase price back