Where it shows up
1 category
The heaviest concentration is in Commercial (1). On this route, category distribution is the fastest clue for whether Coco App is a baseline utility or a more selective differentiator.
Coco App appears across 1 tracked robots, concentrated in Commercial. Start here when the job is understanding why this connectivity matters, then sweep the live roster without scrolling through 1 oversized cards.
Connectivity labels only matter when they change deployment risk. Compare dependency, range, and setup friction before treating them as buyer-facing wins.
Where it shows up
The heaviest concentration is in Commercial (1). On this route, category distribution is the fastest clue for whether Coco App is a baseline utility or a more selective differentiator.
What it tends to unlock
Remote access, orchestration, and software maintenance, ecosystem fit across apps, fleets, and smart-home layers, and faster rollout of updates, telemetry, and support workflows.
What to verify
Real protocol support, not just marketing labels, offline behavior, pairing friction, and network dependency, and whether the stack stays useful when the vendor service changes. Top manufacturers here include Coco Robotics (1).
Evidence sources
Official references
Use the structure first: which categories lean on Coco App, which manufacturers repeat it, and what usually ships beside it.
| # | Name | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Commercial | 1 robot |
| # | Name | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Coco Robotics | 1 robot |
| # | Name | Shared robots |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameras | 1 robot |
| 2 | Cellular | 1 robot |
| 3 | End-to-end neural networks on NVIDIA Jetson Orin NX; trained via NVIDIA Omniverse, Isaac Sim, and Cosmos synthetic data pipelines | 1 robot |
| 4 | GPS | 1 robot |
| 5 | IMU | 1 robot |
| 6 | Solid-state LiDAR | 1 robot |
Reading note
This page is strongest when you use the rankings to orient the market and the directory below to verify individual profiles. The goal is faster comparison, not another endless essay stack.
The old card wall is replaced with a featured first-click strip and a dense inventory table so the route behaves like a serious directory.
This route now uses a shortlist-first browse model: open the clearest live profiles first, then sweep the full inventory in a dense table instead of burning through one oversized card after another.
Ready now
1
Public price
0
Official links
1
Featured now
1
How to scan this directory
Best first clicks
These robots score highest on readiness, public detail quality, and image clarity, making them the fastest way to understand how Coco App shows up in practice.
Image pending
Commercial · Coco Robotics
Coco 2 is the next-generation fully autonomous delivery robot from Coco Robotics, a Venice Beach–based startup founded at UCLA in 2020. Unlike its predecessor which relied on remote human drivers, Coco 2 operates with full autonomy using end-to-end neural networks trained on millions of real-world city miles. The robot navigates sidewalks, bike lanes, and roads where permitted, reducing delivery times by up to 50% compared to the prior generation. Built around NVIDIA Jetson Orin NX edge computing and solid-state LiDAR, Coco 2 reaches speeds up to 21 km/h (13 mph) with a 32 km range per charge. It features a multi-compartment cargo area that fits up to four 18-inch pizza boxes or six separate customer orders, a 360-degree turn-in-place design, and a swappable battery. The robot is fully submersible for flood conditions and compatible with snow tires for winter operation. Coco powers deliveries through Uber Eats, DoorDash, and Wolt, serving over 3,000 merchants across US cities including Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, and Jersey City, as well as Helsinki, Finland. The company plans to scale to thousands of robots globally through 2026 with expansion into Europe and Asia.
Public price
Price TBA
Not available for consumer purchase;…
Battery
32 km (20 mi) range per charge
Charge Not disclosed (swappable battery)
Shortlist read
Active in the catalog; verify the latest media and rollout details.
Compact mobile scan: status, price, standout context, and links stay visible without sideways scrolling.
Coco Robotics · Commercial
Price
Price TBA
Standout
Battery · 32 km (20 mi) range per charge
Quick answers
The short version of what this label means in the ui44 catalog, where it matters, and how to compare it without over-reading the marketing copy.
Coco App currently appears on 1 tracked robots across 1 manufacturers. That makes this route useful for both deep research and fast shortlist scanning, not just one-off editorial reading.
The strongest concentration is in Commercial (1). Category mix is the fastest clue for whether this component behaves like baseline plumbing or a more selective differentiator.
1 of the 1 tracked profiles are currently marked Available or Active. That means the label has live market relevance here, but you should still open the profiles with public pricing or official links first before treating it as a clean buyer signal.
Start with readiness, official source quality, and the standout spec column in the inventory table. On component routes, those three signals usually remove weak profiles faster than reading every descriptive paragraph.
The strongest shared-stack signals here are Cameras (1), Cellular (1), and End-to-end neural networks on NVIDIA Jetson Orin NX; trained via NVIDIA Omniverse, Isaac Sim, and Cosmos synthetic data pipelines (1). Use those pairings to branch into adjacent component pages when one label is too narrow for the decision.
0 matching robots currently expose public pricing. That is enough to create directional context, but not enough to treat one price bracket as the whole market. Use the directory to find the transparent profiles first, then widen the sweep.
Start with Coco Robotics (1). Repetition across manufacturers is often the clearest signal that the component is part of a stable market pattern rather than a one-off marketing callout.
The original long-form component research is still here, but collapsed so the main route can prioritize hierarchy and scan speed.
The baseline explanation of what Coco App is, why it matters, and how to think about it before comparing implementations.
Coco App is a connectivity component found in 1 robot tracked in the ui44 Home Robot Database. As a connectivity technology, Coco App plays a specific role in enabling robot perception, interaction, or operation depending on its implementation in each platform.
Component Type
Used By
1 robot
Manufacturer
Category
Available Now
1 robot
Connectivity components define how a robot communicates with other devices, networks, and cloud services. Connectivity determines whether a robot can receive software updates, stream data, integrate with smart home systems, and be remotely controlled.
In the ui44 database, Coco App is categorized under Connectivity components. For a comprehensive explanation of all component types, consult the components glossary.
A robot's connectivity stack determines its ecosystem compatibility and long-term value. Limited connectivity can mean the robot operates in isolation, cannot be updated, or requires specific hub hardware.
Broad connectivity support means more smart home platform integrations
Enables over-the-air updates that improve the robot over time
Allows remote monitoring and control from anywhere
Used in 1 robot across 1 category — Commercial, indicating specialized use across the robotics industry.
Wireless connectivity uses radio frequencies to transmit data between the robot and other devices. The robot's firmware manages protocol switching and connection prioritization automatically.
Wi-Fi
High-bandwidth local network access for data-heavy tasks like video streaming
Bluetooth
Direct device-to-device pairing for initial setup and nearby peripherals
Zigbee / Z-Wave
Low-power mesh networking for IoT device coordination
Cellular (4G/5G)
Operation beyond home Wi-Fi range for outdoor or commercial robots
Coco App Integration
Implementation varies by robot platform and manufacturer. Each robot integrates Coco App differently depending on system architecture, use case, and target tasks. Integration with other onboard connectivity modules and the main processing unit determines real-world performance.
Deeper technical framing, matched technology profiles, and the longer use-case treatment for Coco App.
Beyond the high-level overview, understanding the technical foundations of connectivity technologies like Coco App helps buyers and researchers evaluate implementations more critically.
Wireless connectivity relies on electromagnetic radiation at specific frequency bands regulated by international standards bodies.
For robotics, latency is often more critical than raw bandwidth.
Robot connectivity has evolved from simple serial cables to sophisticated multi-protocol wireless systems.
Early robots: basic infrared remote control or proprietary radio links
Standardized protocols (Wi-Fi, Bluetooth) dramatically improved interoperability
IoT-specific protocols (Zigbee, Z-Wave, Thread) enabled efficient smart home integration
Matter standard (2022): unifying smart home communication under a single application layer
Wireless connectivity faces inherent challenges in home environments.
Key application domains for connectivity technologies like Coco App.
Connectivity allows robots to communicate with other smart home devices — thermostats, lights, locks, cameras, and appliances. A well-connected robot can serve as a mobile hub or coordinator for your smart home, executing routines that involve multiple devices across different rooms.
Wi-Fi and cellular connectivity enable users to monitor and control their robot remotely via smartphone apps. This is particularly valuable for security robots, pet-monitoring robots, and home assistants, allowing owners to check in, receive alerts, and issue commands from anywhere.
Network connectivity is essential for receiving firmware and software updates that improve the robot's capabilities, fix bugs, and patch security vulnerabilities. Robots without reliable connectivity may become outdated quickly and miss important safety updates.
Some robots offload computationally intensive AI tasks to cloud servers via network connections. This allows smaller, more affordable robots to access powerful AI capabilities like advanced natural language processing, image recognition, and complex decision-making that would be impossible with on-device hardware alone.
In commercial and industrial settings, connectivity allows multiple robots to coordinate their activities, share maps, divide tasks, and avoid interfering with each other. This fleet management capability requires reliable, low-latency communication between robots and a central coordination system.
Visit each robot's detail page to see which capabilities are available on specific models.
Manufacturer mix, specs context, price context, category overlap, and adjacent components worth branching into next.
Coco App spans 1 robot category — from consumer to research platforms.
Technologies most often paired with Coco App across 1 robot.
Browse the full components directory or see the components glossary for detailed explanations of each technology.
110 other connectivity technologies tracked in ui44, ranked by adoption.
79 robots
35 robots
31 robots
8 robots
8 robots
5 robots
5 robots · 1 also use Coco App
4 robots
Browse all Connectivity components or use the robot comparison tool to evaluate how different connectivity configurations perform across specific robot models.
Robot connectivity is evolving rapidly as the smart home ecosystem matures and new wireless standards emerge. Supporting the right mix of protocols is a strategic decision for manufacturers.
Wi-Fi 6/7 adoption
Better performance in dense device environments typical of modern smart homes with dozens of connected devices
Matter protocol
Unified smart home standard backed by Apple, Google, Amazon, and Samsung — simplifying cross-platform integration
5G expansion
Opening new possibilities for outdoor robots, delivery platforms, and commercial service robots beyond home Wi-Fi
Industry Adoption Snapshot
Coco App is adopted by 1 robot from 1 manufacturer in the ui44 database, providing a data-driven view of real-world deployment patterns.
Platform compatibility, voice integration, and AI capabilities across robots with Coco App.
The long-form buyer, maintenance, and troubleshooting material kept available without forcing it into the main scan path.
If Coco App is an important factor in your robot selection, here are key considerations to guide your decision.
Wi-Fi version
Dual-band (2.4/5 GHz) is preferred for reliability in congested environments
Smart home integration
Does it work with your existing ecosystem (Alexa, Google Home, HomeKit)?
Range & reliability
Important for large homes, multi-floor coverage, or outdoor robots
Data privacy
Does the robot require cloud connectivity to function, or can it operate locally?
A component is only as good as its integration. Check how the manufacturer has incorporated Coco App into the overall robot design and software stack.
Review what other connectivity technologies are paired with Coco App in each robot — see the related components section.
Make sure the robot's category matches your use case. Coco App serves different roles in different robot types.
Consider the manufacturer's reputation for software updates, support, and component reliability.
Compare Before You Buy
Use the ui44 comparison tool to evaluate robots with Coco App side by side.
Connectivity components are generally among the most reliable parts of a robot, as they consist entirely of solid-state electronics with no moving parts. However, the evolving nature of wireless standards and smart home ecosystems means that connectivity capabilities can become outdated even while the hardware continues to function perfectly.
Wireless radio hardware (Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee modules) is extremely durable under normal operating conditions. These components typically outlast the useful life of the robot itself.
Connectivity components require minimal physical maintenance. The primary ongoing concern is software-level maintenance: keeping firmware updated, managing Wi-Fi network changes (new router, changed password), and maintaining compatibility with evolving smart home platforms.
Connectivity is an area where future-proofing requires particular attention. Wireless standards evolve: Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7 offer significant improvements over older standards, and a robot purchased with Wi-Fi 5 may not benefit from a new router upgrade.
For the 1 robot in the ui44 database using Coco App, we recommend checking the individual robot pages for manufacturer-specific maintenance guidance and support documentation. Each manufacturer has different support policies, update frequencies, and warranty terms that affect the long-term ownership experience of their connectivity technologies.
Connectivity issues can make even the most capable robot frustrating to use. Wi-Fi drops, Bluetooth pairing failures, and smart home integration problems are among the most commonly reported issues. The good news is that most connectivity problems stem from network configuration rather than robot hardware, making them resolvable without manufacturer support.
Likely Causes
Resolution
Likely Causes
Resolution
Likely Causes
Resolution
For model-specific troubleshooting, visit the individual robot pages for the 1 robot using Coco App. Each manufacturer provides model-specific support resources and diagnostic tools for their connectivity implementations.
What to do next
This page should hand you off to the next useful comparison step, not strand you at the bottom of a long detail route.
Widen the layer
Open the full connectivity workbench when Coco App is only one part of the decision and you need the broader market map.
Side-by-side check
Move from label-level research into direct robot comparison once you know which profiles are documented well enough to trust.
Adjacent signal
This is the most common neighboring component on robots that already use Coco App, so it is the fastest next branch if you need stack context.