The point I'm making is, this robot is being sold on the idea of some magical do-all machine around your house, when the reality is far different.
The problems I stated are really some of (but not all) the key problems that need to be solved in order for it to do as the advertising suggests. To put the problem into perspective, with billions of dollars man could send people to the moon, but is still unable to solve some of these fundamental robotics problems with similar funding.
I agree though, if this is ever to be a consumer product then it needs a massive reduction in scope and price drop (depending on what problem it solves). It's hard to think of a problem that is as commonly shared and simplistic in scope as hoovering without being a gimmick though.
You've got cooking which is basically automated through meal prep (e.g. microwave meals or even fast food services). You've got cleaning clothes - but the scope is enormous. Dusting and putting small items back in their correct location may be the only real possibility.
It only needs to be able to do juuust enough work to justify its cost (obviously not true yet).
Roomba is, for example, an even more limited device, but since it does one thing well enough to justify a $500-$900 price.
Talking about all the myriad of things it can't do is just pointless.