Dreame's 'Living Next' Shows What Happens When Appliances Start Acting Like Robots
19 hour ago / Read about 8 minute
Source:TechTimes

After opening its San Francisco event with a rocket-powered concept car, Dreame shifted gears on Day 2 of DREAME NEXT. The focus moved from spectacle to something more consequential: how technology is reshaping everyday life inside the home.

The segment, titled "Living Next," is where Dreame's broader strategy begins to make practical sense. Because, unlike cars or AI infrastructure, the home is where consumers will first experience whether this ecosystem works.

Dreame

Dreame introduced more than 20 products during the Living Next sessions, spanning categories such as cleaning and cooking, air systems, and laundry.

There are washing machines that fold clothes, coffee machines that adjust output based on health signals, and air conditioning systems that physically reposition airflow depending on where you are in the room.

The common thread among them is behavioral automation.

Dreame is bringing its bionic robotic arm technology into full-scale deployment across multiple appliance categories. That includes air conditioners, range hoods, steam ovens, and dishwashers.

This matters because it changes the relationship between the user and the machine. Instead of static devices performing fixed functions, these systems can adapt physically, now capable of physical adaptation, move, adjust, and respond in real time.

You can see it in several of the flagship technologies unveiled:

  • Dual UltraExtend Arm (2nd Gen Flex Arm): Expands reach and precision in cleaning systems
  • EdgeHunter™ Mopping System: Targets corners and edges that typically require manual intervention
  • AirHydro Separation™ Technology: Improves airflow and filtration efficiency
  • Tri-Force Cleaning Solution: Combines steam, foam, and hot water into a unified cleaning process

They are engineered systems designed to solve very specific limitations that consumers already understand. And Dreame brought the legendary Dwyane Wade, three-time NBA champion and Hall of Famer, to help unveil the products.

Alongside its technology platforms, Dreame also introduced new product lines, including the L60 Series, Aero Ultra Steam, and Aero Pro Steam.

The company has built its reputation and much of its global growth on home tech systems. Dreame now operates in over 120 countries, serves more than 42 million households, and continues to scale rapidly across international markets. That foundation gives it an advantage most companies entering new categories don't have.

What Living Next ultimately shows is not just product expansion, it's a shift in how Dreame approaches the home itself. Across all announcements, a consistent pattern emerges: Core technologies (motors, algorithms, robotic arms), applied across multiple categories, unified by a shared interaction model.

This is the same logic Dreame is applying to cars, devices, and AI systems.

That's how day 2 of DREAME NEXT answers a question that the first day raised but didn't resolve: What does Dreame's vision look like when it's accessible to the consumer?

Dreame is still building toward a much larger ecosystem. But if that amazing ecosystem is going to succeed, it will most certainly start here.