If you’ve ever wished mowing the lawn could be handled by a robot that actually knows what it’s doing, Litheli might have your new favorite gadget at CES 2026. The company’s Skope™ 800 AI-VISION Robotic Lawn Mower brings serious artificial intelligence to a task that has traditionally been loud, sweaty, and time-consuming.
Unlike older robotic mowers that require you to bury boundary wires or set up GPS-style base stations, the Skope 800 skips the hassle. You place it on the lawn, and it gets to work—mapping your yard, understanding boundaries, and figuring out how to mow efficiently using a multi-camera AI vision system.
It’s less “robot following instructions” and more “robot figuring things out on its own.” And honestly, that’s the kind of AI we want doing chores.

A Robot That Knows When to Get Out of the Way
Backyards are unpredictable. Kids run, dogs chase squirrels, lawn chairs move, and toys appear out of nowhere. That’s where the Skope 800’s AI vision really shines.
Instead of blindly following a preset path, the mower actively watches what’s happening around it. It can recognize and avoid more than 200 types of obstacles, adjusting its route in real time. If something crosses its path, it slows down, reroutes, or pauses—then picks up exactly where it left off once the area is clear.
That makes it especially appealing for families who like the idea of automation but worry about safety. The mower doesn’t demand a perfectly controlled environment—it adapts to the one you already have.
It also handles edges and corners better than many robotic mowers, meaning less follow-up trimming for you. Combine that with quiet, electric operation and zero emissions, and suddenly lawn care feels a lot more future-friendly.

One Battery, Many Jobs, Fewer Headaches
Powering all this intelligence is Litheli’s IPS™ (Infinity Power Share) battery ecosystem. The same battery that runs the Skope 800 can also power other Litheli tools—or even charge your phone or laptop in a pinch.
That might sound like a small detail, but it’s a big deal. Instead of buying and managing separate batteries for every device, users get a shared energy system that works across tools and scenarios. It’s cleaner, more efficient, and frankly just more convenient.
From a Nerd Bot perspective, this is the kind of CES tech we love: practical, quietly impressive, and designed to disappear into everyday life. Skope 800 just shows up, does the work, and gives you your weekend back.
If this is where AI-powered outdoor tech is headed, the future of lawn care isn’t about pushing harder. It’s about letting smart machines handle the boring stuff—so humans can enjoy the grass instead of cutting it.







