The Kingdom Technologies robot mower can mow up to 70,000 square meters of lawn in a week, using movement patterns modeled on those of humans. As a result it does not mow some areas twice and miss others out entirely. Boundary wires do not need to be laid. Instead, work areas can be comfortably defined by using a Web app. The autonomous robot relies on satellite navigation to ensure that it always knows where it is going, and that is where precise positioning plays a crucial role.
To test the performance of the technology the company fitted out some of its robots with a standard Global Navigation Satellite System (GNNS) receiver and others with precise positioning technology. GNSS is a collective term and includes inter alia GPS and Galileo, the satellite navigation system of the European Union. In a first experiment the autonomous helpers had to follow a predefined path, in a second to head for the charging point. Precise positioning technology proved superior: using a standard GNSS signal the robot deviated from its predefined path by up to half a meter; using the Telekom and Swift solution the deviation was less than five centimeters. Docking at the charging point was much more precise too.