Augmented reality is Bhabhi Ka Bhaukal (2023) Part 2 Hindi Web Seriesslowly seeping into our everyday lives. It's not just for snaps and video games anymore. Case in point: a new kids toothbrush with AR.
SEE ALSO: The 14 most mind-blowing items from Michael Wolff's tell-all Trump book excerptFrench company Kolibree announced at CES 2018 a smart toothbrush that uses AR to make brushing teeth fun for kids.
The device is paired with a motion-tracking app that uses your smartphone's front-facing camera to put your kid right in the middle of the fun. It comes with a phone stand, so your kids don't have to worry about holding up a phone while they brush.
Kids can choose from 15 different games, featuring pirates, princesses, monsters, and a whole cast of fantasy characters.
In one version, kids are tasked with shooting a monster who is spreading cavities across the land. As it runs around the screen, the child in turn moves the toothbrush around her mouth to shoot it.
The toothbrush also allows parents to monitor their children's brushing habits. They'll see how many times a day their kids are brushing, how fast, and for how long.
Oh, and you don't need to stress about over-brushing: The app can only be used three times per day.
Another interesting feature: It teaches kids to brush. The Magik toothbrush app offers kids guidance on where to brush, how thoroughly to brush, and how long to stay in each spot.
This is not Kolibree's first go at a smart toothbrush. The company released Ara, a toothbrush that uses artificial intelligence to track oral health and encourage healthy brushing habits, in early 2017.
Magik will launch later this year for under $30. That's significantly more than your average toothbrush, but you get the brush, the mobile game, the stand, and a much happier kid for that price.
Check out more of our CES 2018 coverage.
Topics Augmented Reality CES Gaming Virtual Reality
Redux: Great Blinding Flashes by The Paris ReviewPornhub will require proof of consent from all performersTwo Poems by Kathleen OssipThe One Who Happened by Xi ChuanBest tablet deal: Amazon Fire Tablets up to $110 offPhotographic Neuroses: Alec Soth's A Pound of Pictures by Gideon JacobsYou Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory by The Paris ReviewCooking with Virginia Woolf by Valerie StiversJamaica Kincaid Will Receive Our 2022 Hadada Award by The Paris ReviewRedux: Be My Camera by The Paris ReviewLions vs. Bucs livestream: How to watch the NFL PlayoffsRedux: Literary Gossip by The Paris ReviewRedux: Of Continuous Change by The Paris ReviewBy Your Name by Madeleine SchwartzTeonanácatl by Alejandro ZambraRemembrance Day by Spencer MathesonLions vs. Bucs livestream: How to watch the NFL Playoffs'Boy Swallows Universe' review: The stuff TV adaptation dreams are made ofConversations to the Tune of AirBack to the Essence by The Paris Review Want to Keep People Away? Don’t Insult Them; Confuse Them. A Letter from COP21 When Your Rum Balls Are Too Strong, Just Call Them Edible Shots Why John Updike Loved Comics “True Story”: Some Advice for the Raconteurs of the World A Letter from Our Paris Editor, Antonin Baudry Astrology: It’s Not So Bad! Better to Give by Sadie Stein Edgar Allan Poe’s Only Best That Time When Harry Truman Got a Menorah How Kurt Vonnegut’s Wife Jane Convinced Him to Write The Inscrutable Madame Roland’s Remarkable Prison Memoir The Historically Complicated Sex Drive of William Byrd II Addy Walker, American Girl Notes on John Carpenter’s “The Thing” An Interview with “Splendidly Cranky” Utopian Curtis White Why Does Moby The Art of Losing: Rowan Ricardo Phillips on the NY Knicks Our Contributors Pick Their Favorite Books of the Year Yeats’s “Second Coming”—Our Most Thoroughly Pillaged Poem
1.7349s , 10113.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Bhabhi Ka Bhaukal (2023) Part 2 Hindi Web Series】,Miracle Information Network