DEVICE.....Can
technology improve sex? The makers of one device unveiled at the Consumer
Electronics Show are banking on it.
A VIBRATOR designed for
couples called We-Vibe is pushing the envelope at the world’s biggest tech
gathering in Las Vegas, which is warming to the notion of technology and sex.
Tristan Weedmark,
"sexology relations coordinator for" the Canadian-based maker of the
device, Standard Innovation, said millions of people have already tried the
device, which is based on research from the University of Guelph.
"It’s the only vibrator
which can be worn while making love," she told AFP. "It stimulates
the G-spot, the clitoris and the penis simultaneously."
This enables both a male and
a female to get the benefit of the stimulator, she said: "It enhances
sexuality instead of detracting from it."
Weedmark said that, even
though the device was designed for heterosexual couples: "It has been used
in the gay community with lots of success. You’re really limited by your own
imagination."
She said some two million
people have purchased the couples vibrator from online retailers in the US and
Europe and in Canada, where it is sold in pharmacies.
The device comes with a
remote control, which raises the question of who is in control of the love act.
Weedmark said this does not usually pose a problem: "You can take
turns."
The introduction coincides
with a new focus on sex at the world’s biggest technology trade event.
The gathering featured three
panel discussions including "Sex Never Gets Old," "Science Meets
Sexuality," and "Sex in Digital Times."
Standard Innovation’s
product development chief Grant Bechthold said it is appropriate for the tech
gathering to think about products for sex, which can appeal to aging baby
boomers who are finding their sexual experiences changing.
"There’s a lot of
science that goes into our products," Bechthold said. "We use the
same principles of design and engineering as all the other firms here."
Company chief executive
Danny Osadca said the firm’s goal "is to apply the same high-level
thinking and processes found in traditional consumer electronics to advance the
future of sexual health." (RelaxNews)
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