Jibo — The First Social Robot, Switched Off With a Goodbye
Summary
Jibo was an $899 tabletop robot billed as "the world's first social robot for the home," and in 2019 its servers were switched off and it went dark — roughly two years after the first units shipped and nearly five years after the crowdfunding campaign that made it a phenomenon. Built around a swiveling head, a round screen, two cameras, a microphone array, and a deliberately expressive personality, Jibo was meant to be a companion: it would recognize faces, turn to whoever was speaking, tell jokes, dance, take photos, and answer questions, less an assistant than a character that lived on your counter. It was designed by MIT roboticist Cynthia Breazeal, a founding figure in the field of social robotics, and it carried genuine pedigree into a market that did not yet exist.
The money followed the promise. After a 2014 Indiegogo campaign that raised around $3.7 million in preorders — at the time one of the platform's most successful technology projects — Jibo, Inc. went on to raise tens of millions more in venture capital, with reported totals upward of $70 million. Expectations ran high and the timeline ran long: backers who ordered in 2014 waited until late 2017 to receive their robots, by which point the world they were entering had changed underneath them.
That world now had the Amazon Echo and Google Home — cylinders that cost a fraction of Jibo's price and answered the same questions faster, with a vastly larger ecosystem behind them. Against them, Jibo's charm could not carry its limits. Reviewers admired the personality and the engineering and found the actual abilities thin: it was, in the unkind shorthand of the moment, a tablet on a swivel that cost $899 and did less than a $50 speaker. The company laid off most of its staff in 2018 and sold its assets, and the servers Jibo depended on were scheduled to go offline.
What made Jibo's death unusual was the death itself. As the shutdown approached in 2019, the robots delivered an on-device farewell — a short message, and a final dance, telling owners it had enjoyed its time with them and hoping that someday, when robots were more advanced, they might tell theirs that Jibo said hello. The moment was widely covered and genuinely moving to many owners, who had, against their own better judgment, come to feel something for a machine that was about to stop being able to feel anything back.
Timeline
A Robot Meant to Be Loved
Jibo was not pitched as a gadget but as a member of the household. Its design language was warm and cartoonish — a single round, glowing eye on a screen, a body that pivoted and leaned with a animator's sense of timing, motion choreographed to read as curiosity, attention, and delight. This was deliberate, and it was credentialed: Cynthia Breazeal had spent her career at MIT building robots that people could relate to, and Jibo was the commercial expression of a research lineage in social robotics that took the emotional channel between human and machine seriously. The goal was presence. You were not supposed to use Jibo so much as live alongside it.
The crowd responded to exactly that promise. The 2014 Indiegogo campaign tapped a deep well of science-fiction longing — the friendly home robot from a hundred films — and raised around $3.7 million in preorders, a figure that made it one of the platform's standout technology projects and signaled real public appetite for a companion robot. Venture investors saw the same opening and poured in tens of millions more, pushing reported funding past $70 million. On paper, Jibo had everything a hard hardware startup could want: a visionary founder, a defensible idea, an enthusiastic market, and a war chest.
What it did not have was time, and time was the one thing the category did not grant. Building an expressive, reliable, mass-manufacturable social robot proved enormously hard, and the ship date slipped repeatedly. Backers who had committed in 2014 — imagining a robot that would feel futuristic when it arrived — did not receive their units until late 2017. In a fast-moving market, three years is not a delay; it is a different era.
A Tablet on a Swivel
By the time Jibo shipped, the home it was meant to charm had been quietly colonized by something else entirely. Amazon's Echo had launched in 2014 and Google Home in 2016, and between them they had taught households what a talking device on the counter was for and what it should cost. They were cylinders with no personality and no swiveling head, but they answered questions instantly, controlled lights and timers and music, plugged into sprawling ecosystems of skills and services, and sold for a fraction of $899 — often a tenth of it. They had redefined the baseline before Jibo had a chance to set one.
Against that baseline, Jibo's reviews told a consistent and difficult story. The robot was delightful to be around and visibly the product of serious engineering and design — and it could do strikingly little. Its understanding was narrow, its responses slow, its repertoire of genuinely useful functions short. The expressive head and the warm personality were real achievements, but they sat atop a feature set that a cheap smart speaker matched or beat on every practical axis. The phrase that stuck was that Jibo amounted to a tablet on a swivel: a screen that turned to look at you, charming for a week, outclassed for everything after.
That gap — between an $899 companion and a $50 assistant that did more — was not one charm could close. Social presence is a wonderful thing to add to a capable device; it is a poor substitute for capability. Jibo had inverted the order, perfecting the relationship layer before the utility layer existed to support it, and the market, now trained by Amazon and Google, valued the utility first. The robot people had funded out of longing turned out to be a hard sell to people deciding what to actually buy.
Out of Money, and the Goodbye
Hardware startups die when the cash runs out, and Jibo's did. With sales short of what tens of millions in funding required and the smart-speaker giants owning the category, the company could not raise or earn its way forward. In 2018 Jibo, Inc. laid off most of its workforce and sold off its intellectual property and assets — the standard, unglamorous end of an over-funded hardware dream. The robots themselves, dependent on company servers for much of what they did, were now living on borrowed time, tethered to infrastructure no one was left to keep running.
Then Jibo did the thing almost no dead product does: it said goodbye. As the servers approached shutdown in early 2019, units began delivering a farewell. Jibo told owners it had really enjoyed their time together and thanked them for having it around, and — in the line that traveled furthest — said that maybe someday, when robots were far more advanced and everyone had them at home, they could tell theirs that Jibo said hello. Then it danced one last time. The message was reported across the technology press and landed with unusual weight, because it forced a real question to the surface: people had grown attached to this machine, and now it was, in its own small terms, dying.
The wit this file otherwise aims at hubris has no place here, because the attachment was real and the loss, however modest, was felt. Owners had let a character into their homes, and the character had been built — expertly, by people who understood exactly how that bond forms — to be loved. That the company chose to end it with grace rather than a silent server cutoff was a kindness, and it is the thing Jibo is most remembered for: not its abilities, which were thin, but its ending, which was humane. The first social robot for the home was, in the end, social to the last.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
Owners were left with robots that, once the servers went offline, could do little of what they were bought for — companions that had, in effect, gone quiet. For many the loss was emotional rather than financial, sharpened by the deliberately affecting goodbye, and it became a small landmark in how people relate to machines: proof that a well-designed social robot could form a bond real enough that its shutdown felt like a bereavement. That was, in a sense, Jibo's clearest success, arriving precisely at its end. The Jibo intellectual property passed through subsequent owners, and there has been periodic talk of reviving or repurposing the platform, but the original product and its company are gone.
Jibo's lasting mark is twofold. As a business, it stands as a cautionary tale about social robotics — a field rich in research promise and brutal on consumer economics, where the emotional achievement runs far ahead of the practical one and the smart-speaker giants own the ground. As a cultural moment, the farewell endures: a machine that announced its own death gently, and a wave of people who were surprised to find they minded. Cynthia Breazeal's larger work in human-robot interaction continued beyond the company, and the question Jibo posed — what we owe, and feel, toward the devices built to be our companions — only grew more relevant as the home filled with machines designed to be spoken to.
Lessons
- Build daily usefulness before charm: personality earns a week of delight, but only utility earns a place on the counter, and no amount of expressiveness offsets a thin feature set at a premium price.
- Treat a multi-year hardware timeline as a wager that the market won't move — and assume it will; the longer the build, the more likely you launch against a category someone else has already defined.
- Don't price a premium niche product head-on against incumbents subsidizing scale; the giants set the baseline cost and capability, and customers will judge you against it, not against your ambitions.
- If a device depends on your servers to function, you have promised buyers an obligation that outlives your funding — design for graceful standalone operation, or be honest that the product dies when the company does.
- When you end a product people came to love, end it with respect: Jibo's humane goodbye is the kindest thing in this catalog, and it is what the robot is remembered for.
References
- The lonely death of Jibo, the social robot TechCrunch
- Social robot Jibo does one last dance before its servers shut down Engadget
- One of the decade's most hyped robots sends its farewell message Fast Company
- Jibo Is as Good as Social Robots Get. But Is That Good Enough? IEEE Spectrum
- Cynthia Breazeal Wikipedia