Technology

CES 2020: all the sex technologies on display

Boots for sex development firms are distributed in a maze of health and fitness items around the Sands Expo and Convention Center in Las Vegas.
 
There's no big flashing sign that you yell sex technology is here at the show. Sexual technology founder said that genitalia or the use of words such as "fuck" was forbidden.
 
A sign reads "Year of the Orgasm" at the Lioness booth. Lioness tries to enhance the orgasm of women through AI and data visualizations. The vibrator has sensors that monitor voltage, temperature and pressure and can be synchronized with an app to analyze health information.
 
 
 
In the app Klinger shows me where a woman orgasms in the diagram, noting that waves form a regular, repeating pattern. Lioness is the finalist for the CES Last Gadget Standing and the best digital health and wellness CES Engadget this year.
 
"We 're now on the map and that's awesome," she said.
 
Lioness is not the only sex enhancement organization remembered by CES.
 
 
Lora DiCarlo has unveiled two new CES items which have snacked two awards for creativity-Onda, a green G-spot massager, and Baz, a pink robotic clitoral stimulator. This time the company was not asked to return the awards.
 
Yellow and white drop the booth of the product. In broad white letters the sentence "The Pleasure is all Yours" decorates a wall. Awards sit on a wall, on one side, with the company's back story. Awards are held. Yellow stickers that say "# Gender Inequality Ends Here"
 
She 'd be shocked if CTA did not allow Sex Technology to return, says Lora Haddock Dicarlo, Lora DiCarlo's Founding and CEO.
 
 
DiCarlo said of the sex tech boots on the ground of the showroom, "It's all respectable and it doesn't objective or degrade women's bodies.
 
She doesn't have any trouble with sex technology not getting a show floor segment. Instead of being trapped in one corner when sex technology boots are spread all over the health and well-being sector, she said, it "helps to normalize sexuality because sexuality is normal."
 
 
Crave displayed its selection of vibrators in a brown pop-up trailer in another part of the health and well-being area. Signs containing phrases such as "Let no one treat you like salsa. You are guac, sweet girl. GUAC" are in the buckets in the area. A "Pleasure Manifesto" from the top says: "If we can talk about plaisir beyond the boards, we will carry it out from the shadows." Some vibrators of the business look like gold collars, showing that there is no mistake to be glad to wear an open sex product.

 






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