Our homes are, as comedian George Carlin put it, just a place for our stuff. But what if, asks a new generation of startups, all that stuff could just…disappear?

Inventors, architects and designers all over the world have lately converged on ways to do just that. Their technology can make parts of apartments and homes, and all their contents, slide out of view at the touch of a button. Former researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ex-Apple and Tesla engineers toiling in San Francisco and a design and architectural firm in Spain are among those devising what can only be described as robotic furniture. And it’s already rolling off the factory floor and into the domiciles of students, church program directors and celebrity couples like Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The 28 Best Outdoor Summer Deals From REI’s Anniversary Sale

Just as bears emerge from hibernation and birds migrate in the spring,…

Roadside weed is found to halt the spread of breast cancer

A roadside weed with white flowers which was thought to be boring…

The Great AI debate explodes yet again as ‘godfather’ of the technology quits Google

The ‘godfather’ of artificial intelligence (AI) has tossed a grenade into the…

19 Last-Minute Gift Ideas for the Truly Desperate

How is it December already? The holidays are here, looming above and…