THE QUIET REVOLUTION ROLLING THROUGH OUR HOMES
The future of cleaning has arrived, polite, precise and surprisingly elegant. Here, we review the Ecovacs Deebot T80 Omni robotic cleaner.
The future of cleaning has arrived, polite, precise and surprisingly elegant. Here, we review the Ecovacs Deebot T80 Omni robotic cleaner.
We’ve quietly slipped into the age of automation. The robots haven’t taken over; they’ve just moved in. They clean our floors, make our coffee and lock our doors. They don’t argue, they don’t forget and the best of them don’t even need us at all.
That quiet efficiency is what struck me when I began testing the Ecovacs Deebot T80 Omni. It wasn’t the novelty of a robot vacuum (we’ve all seen them scuttle around in circles) but the sheer intelligence of it.
It moved through rooms like it knew them, mapping and memorising every contour, the furniture and the rugs. It vacuumed, mopped, rinsed itself clean, then returned to base to recharge – telling me where it was off to.
The first time I used it, I couldn’t find it. Turns out, it had taken itself out to the back deck. That’s taking cleaning seriously. And speaking of serious cleaning, one of my favourite things about it is seeing it happily clean under my teenagers’ beds. Believe me, no human would want to go there.
The Deebot T80 Omni doesn’t need gimmicks or noise to prove its worth. Its genius lies in its calm and capable nature. It doesn’t bump into walls, fall down stairs or get snagged on cables; it glides with purpose.
The machine’s AIVI 3D navigation system “sees” its environment and adjusts in real time, a low-key kind of intelligence that makes everything feel considered.
Its mopping system uses what Ecovacs calls OZMO Roller technology, applying 16 times the pressure of traditional mops. It scrubs rather than wipes, rinsing itself clean as it works, while the suction power quietly pulls out whatever the broom missed.
And it’s clever enough to lift its mop when it moves over carpet; no soggy rugs, no streaky patches. And it even washes and dries its own mop.
The design is as elegant as the engineering. The docking station, which in most robotic cleaners is an afterthought, has a clean, white aesthetic.
What makes it feel truly modern, though, isn’t the technology itself; it’s what that technology represents. Help is no longer about people doing more for us; it’s about systems that think for themselves and quietly removing friction from daily life.
That’s luxury now, not extravagance, but absence. Absence of effort, of noise, of time wasted.
I set the Deebot off every morning while I work. It hums softly in the background, unobtrusive and assured, then returns to its base like a butler excusing itself after service. There’s something wonderfully civilised about that.
I love hearing that low, steady hum. It’s not the sound of housework; it’s the sound of progress: calm, precise, and, if I’m honest, a little bit satisfying as it’s one less job I know I have to do.
The author tested the Ecovacs Deebot T80 Omni in her home for a fortnight. The model is available exclusively at Harvey Norman, RRP $2,299.
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At least for people who carry the APOE4 genetic variant, a juicy steak could keep the brain healthy.
Must even steak be politicised? The American Heart Association recently recommended eating more “plant-based” protein in a move to counter the Health and Human Services Department’s new guidelines calling for more red meat.
Few would argue that eating a Big Mac a day is good for you.
On the other hand, growing evidence, including a study last month in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggests that eating more meat—particularly unprocessed red meat—can reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s in the quarter or so of people with a particular genetic predisposition.
The APOE4 gene variant is one of the biggest risk factors for Alzheimer’s.
You inherit one copy of the APOE gene from each parent. The most common variant is APOE3; the least is APOE2.
The latter carries a lower risk of Alzheimer’s, while the former is neutral. A quarter of people carry one copy of the APOE4 variant, and about 2% carry two.
APOE4 is more common among people with Northern European and African ancestry. In Europe the variant increases with latitude, and is present in as many as 27% of people in northern countries versus 4% in southern ones. God smiled on the Italians and Greeks.
For unknown reasons, the APOE4 variant increases the risk of Alzheimer’s far more for women than men.
Women’s risk multiplies roughly fourfold if they have one copy and tenfold if they have two. Men with a single copy show little if any higher risk, while those with two face four times the risk.
What makes APOE4 so pernicious? Scientists don’t know exactly, but the variant is also associated with higher cholesterol levels—even among thin people who eat healthily.
Scientists have found that cholesterol builds up in brain cells of APOE4 carriers, which can disrupt communications between neurons and generate amyloid plaque, an Alzheimer’s hallmark.
The Heart Association’s recommendation to eat less red meat may be sound advice for people with high cholesterol caused by indulgent diets.
But a diet high in red meat may be better for the brains of APOE4 carriers.
In the JAMA study, researchers at Sweden’s Karolinska Institute examined how diet, particularly meat consumption, affects dementia risk among seniors with the different APOE variants.
Higher consumption of meat, especially unprocessed red meat, was associated with significantly lower dementia risk for APOE4 carriers.
APOE4 carriers who consumed the most meat—the equivalent of 4.5 ounces a day—were no more likely to develop dementia than noncarriers. (
The study controlled for other variables that are known to affect Alzheimer’s risk including sex, age, physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption and education.)
APOE4 carriers who ate the most unprocessed meat were at significantly lower risk of dying over the study’s 15-year period and had lower cholesterol than carriers who ate less. Go figure. Noncarriers, however, didn’tenjoy similar benefits from eating more red meat.
The study’s findings are consistent with two large U.K. studies.
One found that each additional 50 grams of red meat (equivalent to half a hamburger patty) that an APOE4 carrier consumed each day was associated with a 36% reduced risk of dementia.
The other found that older women who carried the APOE4 variant and consumed at least one serving a day of unprocessed red meat had a cognitive advantage over carriers who ate less than half a serving, and that this advantage was of roughly equal magnitude to the cognitive disadvantage observed among APOE4 carriers in general.
In all three studies, eating more red meat appeared to negate the increased genetic risk of APOE4.
Perhaps one reason men with the variant are at lower Alzheimer’s risk than women is that men eat more red meat.
These findings might cause chagrin to women who rag their husbands about ordering the rib-eye instead of the heart-healthy salmon.
But remember, the cognitive benefits of eating more red meat appear isolated to APOE4 carriers.
Nutrition is complicated, and categorical recommendations—other than perhaps to avoid nutritionally devoid foods—would best be avoided by governments and health bodies.
Readers can order an at-home test from any number of companies to screen for the APOE4 variant.
The Swedish researchers hypothesize that APOE4 carriers may be evolutionarily adapted to carnivorous diets, since the variant is believed to have emerged between one million and six million years ago during a “hypercarnivorous” period in human history.
The other two APOE variants originated more recently, during eras when humans ate more plants.
APOE4 carriers may absorb more nutrients from meat than plants, the researchers surmise. Vitamin B12—low levels have been associated with cognitive decline—isn’t naturally present in plant-based foods but is abundant in red meat.
Foods high in phytates (such as grains and beans) can interfere with absorption of zinc and iron (also high in red meat), which naturally declines with age. So maybe don’t chuck your steak yet.
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