Kissing device lets you send a long-distance smooch
The device is a prototype and Samani says it will not be commercialised until "all the ethical and technical considerations are covered". He adds: "I am not interested in sexual uses for it." How romantic – but also strangely reminiscent of the 1983 Steve Martin comedy The Man With Two Brains, in which Martin's crazed neurosurgeon character falls in love with a disembodied brain in a glass jar – so much so that he sticks a pair of lips to the container.
Kissenger is not the first gadget aimed at transmitting long-distance smooches. A French-kiss simulator arrived in May 2011 courtesy of the Kajimoto Lab at the University of Electro-Communications in Tokyo, Japan. Looking like a cross between a breathalyser and a hamster's water bottle, it featured a straw that, when rotated by the holder's tongue, moved a similar straw in a machine elsewhere, thereby transmitting the French-kissing tongue motion.
Like most commentators, US broadcaster CNN was unimpressed. The researchers' idea of recording celebrity tongue motions for all to experience was not particularly well received. "I think that approach is too much and I find it kind of creepy," says Samani. "You don't need to transmit all the parameters of a kiss. The main aim is to improve long-distance relationships. We've taken several steps to minimise the creepiness."
By Paul Marks