The CES, or Consumer Electronics Show, has just been held in Las Vegas, and although there is apparently no obvious link with our cosmetics industry, I paid it a lot of attention because many of the applications presented have a potential link with our business. This lounge was largely covered, and it was quite possible to follow it remotely. Too bad… I wish I'd gone to Vegas.
The CES is an exhibition dedicated to the world of high technology and the various innovations in the field. Over the years, it has become the most important gathering of its kind. This show takes place at the beginning of the year in Las Vegas, where manufacturers, journalists and new technology enthusiasts rub shoulders for a week.
Among the various new things, such as curved screens or the like, observers have noticed a very strong push around connected objects and applications related to health and self-assessment. Certainly e-Celsius, a connected pill with a thermometer that patients can ingest to monitor their internal temperature is of little or no concern to us. Just as the contribution of Ohmibod, specialist in intimate accessories, who proposed to CES a Bluetooth version of one of its vibrators, so that couples can discreetly indulge in a few tricks, all competing with the Wake Up Vibe of the same kind, applications that will certainly make smile.
But this strong technological push cannot leave us indifferent. I had already reported in a previous newsletter the rather spectacular breakthrough of these connected objects, and the strong potential they represent, especially in the health field. According to Gartner, by …