DJI, the Chinese giant renowned for its world-class drones, is ready to clean house...literally. The company has officially launched its first robot vacuum cleaner, called Romo (not to be confused ...
A software engineer’s earnest effort to steer his new DJI robot vacuum with a video game controller inadvertently granted him ...
Then the internet erupted over an entirely different DJI device: The Romo robot vacuum. Thousands of Romo vacuums and their live cameras worldwide were reportedly hacked — and not by an evil ...
DJI's obstacle avoidance system could be just as useful on land as it is in the air. DJI, known for its dominance in the drone market, has entered the smart home world with a range of robot vacuums ...
The system seemed to open up a much wider network, rather than just his own vacuum. hundreds of devices. Then thousands. In reality, the interface he created ...
A DJI Romo vacuum owner wanted to connect his device to a PS5 controller. He ended up revealing a huge security flaw.
It’s been pretty common knowledge for a while now that DJI – a brand known for making the best drones – was gearing up to launch its first-ever robot vacuum cleaner. First came the rumours, then a ...
Reports confirmed that DJI has officially compensated software engineer Sammy Azdoufal for discovering a catastrophic backend vulnerability in the DJI Romo robot vacuum.
Software engineer Sammy Azdoufal only wanted to connect his DJI robot vacuum cleaner to a PlayStation 5 controller.
Drone-maker DJI has entered into a new category with the launch of its robot vacuum lineup. The DJI Romo uses two panoramic cameras along with three lasers to scan for objects while it is cleaning.
Azdoufal responsibly reported the issue to DJI rather than exploiting it maliciously. (AI generated image) What started as a fun weekend project to control a robot vacuum cleaner with a PlayStation 5 ...