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'Alexa, make my vibrator go insane': OhMiBod unveils smart sex toys you can control from afar

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Sex toy-maker OhMiBod has everybody buzzing at CES this year with its latest Bluetooth-connected pleasure devices. The wife and husband duo debuted a $119 new wearable vibrator that can vibrate and light up to the beat of whatever music you're listening to, and will soon pair with Amazon's Alexa for hands-free voice control. The device, called Esca, works with OhiMiBod's existing smartphone app, which allows you to tweak its vibration patterns – from custom tapping to the Tesla-inspired'Ludicrous mode' – or control your partner's experience from afar. At CES, OhMiBod also announced its new remote intimacy Apple Watch app, which uses biofeedback to control the massagers and can even sync vibrations with a person's heartbeat. At CES 2019, the wife and husband duo behind OhMiBod debuted a $119 new wearable vibrator called Esca (shown), which can vibrate to the beat of whatever music you're listening to, and will soon pair with Amazon's Alexa for hands-free voice control Unlike most popular apps, OhMiBod says its product'doesn't know anything about you.'


5 Things That Will Impact the Future of Software Testing

#artificialintelligence

In the past few decades, software testing has evolved in terms of both the tools used to perform different activities and the mindset of the people using those tools. There used to be only a handful of tools used in software testing, but now we have a plethora of tools to choose from, from proprietary to open source. Likewise, people have started thinking of testers as information brokers instead of gatekeepers, and there have been a lot of positive developments in the agile world that have contributed to significant changes in the processes that teams follow in their software development lifecycle. Advancements in technology are to thank for these evolutions. From the way we look at software, evaluate risks, think about complexity, design our test approach and strategy, and help to release a stable product to the customer, technology has definitely had an influence on how we test software, and that influence will only continue as technology advances.


Spotify finally gets serious about an Apple Watch app

Engadget

If you're an Apple Watch owner, you might be wondering why there's no Spotify app for your favorite wrist computer. Developer Andrew Chang aimed to remedy that oversight with his own app, Snowy. Back in February, though, Chang was contacted by Spotify, who thought that the app, then called Spotty, was too much like Spotify in its name and interface. However, the company must've been impressed with Chang's work. Now it's hired him to work on an official app.