Lume: The robotic lamp that folds your clothes is the future of home automation

The robot should solve a problem so seamlessly users barely notice it's there
Aaron Tan describes the philosophy behind Lume's design as invisible automation for everyday household tasks.

En los márgenes de la vida cotidiana, donde el tiempo se pierde en tareas repetidas sin fin, un roboticista de Stanford ha propuesto una respuesta discreta: una lámpara que dobla ropa. Syncere.ai presentó Lume, un dispositivo de mesita de noche que combina iluminación ambiental con brazos robóticos capaces de plegar prendas sin que el usuario apenas lo advierta. Más que un gadget, Lume encarna una filosofía de automatización doméstica que apuesta por la invisibilidad y la utilidad concreta frente a la espectacularidad de los robots humanoides.

  • El tiempo que el hogar consume en tareas menores —doblar ropa, ordenar, repetir— sigue siendo uno de los grandes ladrones silenciosos de la vida moderna.
  • Lume irrumpe en ese espacio con una propuesta provocadora: brazos robóticos que emergen de una lámpara de noche y pliegan prendas con precisión mecánica, imitando el movimiento humano.
  • El vídeo publicado por Aaron Tan en X desató una mezcla de asombro e incredulidad, poniendo en debate si los robots domésticos deben ser visibles o fundirse con el mobiliario.
  • Con un precio de 2.000 dólares y envíos previstos para el verano de 2025, Lume se posiciona como una plataforma en evolución, con futuras actualizaciones que añadirán funciones como el masaje.
  • La apuesta de Syncere.ai señala un giro en la robótica del hogar: abandonar la ambición generalista para centrarse en resolver una sola tarea incómoda, de forma tan natural que casi pase desapercibida.

El verano acumula ropa limpia en pilas que nadie quiere doblar. Aaron Tan, roboticista de Stanford y fundador de Syncere.ai, decidió atacar ese problema desde un ángulo inesperado: una lámpara de mesita de noche llamada Lume que, cuando detecta prendas sin doblar sobre la cama, despliega brazos robóticos y las pliega con precisión.

La filosofía detrás del dispositivo es la invisibilidad. Tan no quiere que el usuario piense en el robot; quiere que simplemente encuentre la ropa doblada. Los brazos de Lume imitan el movimiento humano para adaptarse a distintos tamaños y tipos de prendas, resolviendo lo que Tan identifica como el principal obstáculo de la automatización textil: la variabilidad de las formas.

Cuando Tan publicó un vídeo del dispositivo en funcionamiento, la reacción fue de fascinación y extrañeza a partes iguales. La imagen —una lámpara que cobra vida y dobla ropa con calma mecánica— parecía sacada de una película de ciencia ficción cercana.

Lume ya está disponible para reserva a 2.000 dólares, con distribución prevista para el próximo verano. Pero la empresa deja claro que esto es solo el comienzo: futuras actualizaciones de software añadirán funciones como el masaje, convirtiendo la lámpara en una plataforma expandible. Syncere.ai parece estar probando si los hogares aceptarán robots que se camuflan entre los objetos cotidianos, ocupándose en silencio del trabajo pequeño y tedioso que separa la vida que uno imagina de la que realmente vive.

Household chores eat time. In summer especially, when everyone would rather be anywhere else, laundry sits in piles—waiting to be folded, waiting to be put away. A Stanford roboticist named Aaron Tan and his company, Syncere.ai, have built something to change that: a lamp called Lume that folds your clothes.

The device sits on your nightstand, doing what lamps do—casting light across the room. But when it detects unfolded laundry on the bed, it transforms. Robotic arms extend from the base. They move like human arms, bending and creasing fabric with enough precision to handle different garment sizes and styles. You leave the clean, dry clothes on the mattress. Lume folds them. You put them away.

Tan's philosophy, shared with the tech publication TBPN, centers on invisibility. The robot should solve a problem so seamlessly that users barely notice it's there. "The main obstacle to folding clothes is their shape," Tan explained. "What we have here mimics the human arm, so we can adapt to different sizes of clothing, items, and styles." This approach marks a shift in domestic robotics—away from humanoid robots walking through shopping malls in China, away from general-purpose machines, toward something narrower and more useful: a tool designed for one specific, repetitive task that most people dislike.

The concept arrived publicly when Tan posted a video on X showing Lume in action. The footage looked like something from a near-future film—laundry appearing on a bed, a lamp's arms activating, fabric being folded with mechanical precision. It was simple and strange at once.

Lume is available for pre-order at two thousand dollars. Shipping begins next summer. The company has already signaled where this is heading: future software updates will add massage functions, suggesting the robotic arms will eventually do more than fold. The lamp is a platform, not a finished product. As the technology matures and distribution expands, Syncere.ai appears to be testing whether households will accept robots that hide in plain sight, performing the small, tiresome work that fills the gaps between the life you want and the life you actually live.

The main obstacle to folding clothes is their shape. What we have here mimics the human arm, so we can adapt to different sizes of clothing, items, and styles.
— Aaron Tan, founder of Syncere.ai
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why a lamp? Why not just a robot that sits in the corner?

Model

Because it has to live somewhere. A lamp already belongs on your nightstand. You're not adding furniture; you're replacing something you already have.

Inventor

But two thousand dollars is expensive for a lamp.

Model

It's not a lamp. It's a solution to a problem people spend hours on every week. The price is for the engineering—the arms, the sensors, the software that understands fabric.

Inventor

What happens when it encounters something it can't fold?

Model

That's the real question. Tan says it mimics the human arm, but human arms have decades of learning behind them. The robot will fail sometimes. That's why it's a prototype.

Inventor

Do you think people will actually want this in their homes?

Model

People want their time back. If this works reliably, yes. But it has to be reliable. One failed fold, one piece of clothing damaged, and the trust breaks.

Inventor

What comes after laundry?

Model

That's what the massage function signals. Once you have robotic arms that understand fabric and movement, you can teach them other things. The lamp is just the beginning.

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