Lovers separated by distance can see and talk to each other using the internet - but what about sharing a smooch?
The Kissinger is a gadget that's been knocking around university research labs for the last few years and aims to let couple kiss each other through the internet.
It's a brightly-coloured smartphone holster with an inviting plastic pad attached to the bottom. You lock lips with the pad and it transmits the sensation through to an identical holster and an identical pad that's nestling your partner's phone wherever that may be.
"Kissing is the most direct and universal expression of intimacy and affection," explained Emma Yann Zhang, who worked on the prototype.
"It's a way for us to bond and maintain intimacy in our relationships," she told an audience at the Love and Sex with Robots congress as Goldsmiths, University of London.
"Also, it’s stress reducing; when we engage in this kind of intimate physical touch, we have a lower level of blood pressure."
The Kissinger works with pressure sensors and actuators that record and transmit the your kiss to the receiving device, which recreates it for the person on the other end through an app that also features videocalling.
Kissenger is 'a real-time mobile kiss messenger' .. enhancing social relationship capabilities in the age of digital communication!💋🤖 #LSR16 pic.twitter.com/2sJMm6JTGh
— Vin Sharma📚🎥📸📻💻 (@vinsharma) December 19, 2016
The creators admit that there's still a way to go when it comes to accurately creating a long-distance makeout session. For starters, the pad isn't mouth-shaped (although the actuators are lined like lips) and there's no simulation for a tongue.
But the creators insist that it's already helping to get people accustomed to machine-based touching. And, moreover, that it's not being used in an overtly sexual way.
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