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The story I read was a sci-fi story when it was written, but now it would be considered normal everyday life, because we DO have cleaning robots. So, this would date it. Probably first written in the 60's or 70's. What I read was probably a reprint put into book form with other short stories. I read it in the mid to late 70's.

I don't think it was an Asimov story, but I am not sure about that. It probably did appear in Asimov's magazine but was not likely written by him. BUT!!! I could be wrong about that.

I am looking for a short story about a woman whose ring is sucked up by a cleaning robot and she has to get it back.

At the time it was a sci-fi story. So, it has to be an old story. The cleaning robot sucks up or picks up the woman's ring. It was her grandmother's ring or mother's ring. The story has her racing around trying to stop the robot from discharging the dirt it has collected down the chute.

Even though this story would be considered normal by today's standards. When it was written, humans could only dream of cleaning robots.

It all takes place in her house/apartment. She has her great grandmother's wedding ring. She can't read the inscription on the ring. something happens and she drops it on the floor. And a little cleaning robot zips out of its cubbie and snaps it up. It is heading back to the cubby. She rushes over to block the cubby. She tries to open the robot but can't. She thinks about waiting for it to power down but that will be years. She knows when it empties the debris goes into a massive recycling system. I believe that she thinks about doing a lost and found service ticket but realizes that is not likely to work. I think... she finally lets the robot go and gets on the phone and calls her mom to ask her what her great grandmother's name is.

Mine was a cheap book that contained multiple short stories. It was not a magazine. However, the story could have also appeared in a magazine.

I just need the name of the story and the author's name. It was likely Asimov, but not sure.

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    Hi Bob. Cleaning robots aren't science fiction any more - you can buy them from Amazon! Was this a robot of the sort Asimov wrote about? If not can you clarify what makes the story science fiction? Commented Jul 10, 2023 at 8:17
  • I believe that I read this story in an old issue of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, in the late 1970s or early 1980s. Commented Jul 10, 2023 at 14:25
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    @JohnRennie - If a story was science fiction when it was written, and the futuristic technology in the story has become a reality, would that make the story now be off-topic here? I wouldn't think so...
    – Basya
    Commented Jul 11, 2023 at 8:21
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    @Basya I didn't vote to close the question. I only asked that the OP clarify it. If the OP confirms Stanley's memory that it was published in Asimov I will vote to reopen. Commented Jul 11, 2023 at 8:30
  • This is a swell example of the dangers of AI/robots on a small scale.
    – releseabe
    Commented Jul 12, 2023 at 15:58

1 Answer 1

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This story is "Of Days Gone By", authored by Dian Girard, and appeared in the February 1980 issue of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine. The plot begins with a woman named Cheryl at work on her home computer researching her family's history. When she needs information that is not available on computer, she fetches her grandmother's wedding ring, hoping that the information will be on the ring's inscription. Then she drops the ring and the household vacuum robot - named Melvin - rushes out from its small living room garage and scoops up the fallen object. A brief duel follows, and Cheryl accidentally figures out how to open the machine, recovering her grandmother's ring and many other lost objects, including the vacuum cleaner's instruction card.

It indeed ends with her calling up a family member about the name, because she realizes she still can't make it out on the ring.

While this story would not count as science fiction today, when robot vacuum cleaners and online database searches are everyday happenings, it was sci-fi when it was published forty-four years ago.

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Here is a link to the issue on Luminist Archive:

https://s3.us-west-1.wasabisys.com/luminist/SF/ASI/ASI_1980_02.pdf

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  • Just read through. Cute read, and it's partially explained that one of the reasons she goes to so much trouble is that, after two years, the vacuum cleaner was as much a pet as a tool.
    – FuzzyBoots
    Commented Jun 20 at 20:17

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