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Laundroid the laundry-folding robot will take your (least-favourite) job

Tired of being pegged as our evil, job-taking overlords of the future, robots have extended an olive branch to humanity by offering to fold our laundry.

Finally, a reason to be excited about the rise of the machines

Laundroid's creators hope that it will one day be built into a system that not only washes, dries, sorts, and folds clothes, but actually puts them away too. (Kazumichi Moriyama/YouTube)

Prophets of techno-doom,get ready to change your machine-hating tunes.

Robots may one day takeour jobs,our partners, and even our lives,but it looks like they'llbe giving ussomething very precious in return: The gift of never having to fold laundry again.

A group of Japanese tech companiesand unveiled their forthcoming "Laundroid" machinethis week atthe 2015 Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologies (CEATEC) trade show in Japan.

In development by Panasonic, Daiwa House, andSeven Dreamerssince 2008, this large,full-service laundry robot can reportedly wash, dry, sort and then fold your clothes perfectly based on what its AI determines each garment to be.

"With a hypothetical bundle of clothes, each item demands different folding (we're going to say) techniques, so the machine needs to figure what that soft lump of cloth is, then prime it for folding," wrote Engadget's Mat Smith after seeing the Laundroid presentation atCEATEC.

"Because clothing is so malleable, it takes a higher degree of skill and dexterity for a robot to perform tasks with than, say, wood or metal," he continued. "However, as far as the on-the-rails demonstration on stage went, it was a success."

Indeed, video footage from the presentation suggests that a clean, folded shirt can be yours just five minutes after tossing a dirty one into the machine.

While five minutes per garment is certainly longer than it would take to just fold the darned clothes yourself, a full load put in at bedtime would be ready by the time you woke up seven hours later according to the presentation's hostess.

And it could do much more than that one day, according to its creators.

CNET reports thatLaundroidwas designed to be built into the project's"closet of the future" a high-tech robotic clothing systemthat would not only wash, dry, sort, and foldyour garments, but actually put them away for you too.

"The company has a roadmap stretching to 2020, in which it envisions a system fully integrated with your home," writes Tim Stevens of the CEATECpresentation. "You would dump dirty laundry into any of a number of chutes and, eventually, those clothes would magically reappear in the appropriate closet."

Many on Twitter clearly enjoy the idea of having this particular robot athome.

Sadly for them, and maybe for you, Laundroid won't be folding any human wardrobes just yet.

A press release from Panasonic states that it aims to launch pre-orders for the laundry-folding bot sometime in 2016, but Seven Dreamers reportedly indicated that consumer retail units likely won't be available until at least 2019 and that even then, they'll probably cost "about as much as a small car."