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Artificial intelligence has become a dull buzzword: things like the Internet of Things, 5g and foldable phones, a label that is said to mean so much to the world that it means so little.
Its backers claim that AI is everywhere-and if it is not somewhere yet, it will exist.
The place it recently arrived is perhaps the most private place: in your mouth.
Oral B's latest toothbrush wants to bring the power of artificial intelligence and machine learning to your teeth and use artificial intelligence to guide you to brush your teeth better.
This is not the first toothbrush to use techniques that are usually kept on mobile phones and other gadgets to ensure that brushing your teeth is as effective as possible. But Oral-
B think it is the smartest and the brush has a proper name: Genius X.
The toothbrush was exposed this week at the World Mobile conference in Barcelona.
This year, the focus of many exhibitions is on foldable mobile phones and 5g. Oral-
B based not only on its smart toothbrush, but also on its overall vision for the future of healthcare and its connection to dental hygiene, makes its own claim.
This vision includes a complete
Scale smart mirror, which can be controlled by people's hand movements and displays information about the overall health of the day ahead and the people who use it. Oral-
B already has a toothbrush that relies on some clever features: genius.
This is also the job of brushing the trainer and brushing the teeth themselves, observing how you clean your teeth, encouraging you to avoid bad habits and making sure your entire mouth is brushed.
To know where it is, the toothbrush uses the built-in
In sensors built on a lot of experimental work, learn how people brush their teeth.
The company puts a large number of people in front of the camera, asks them to brush their teeth, inputs that information into an algorithm that lets the toothbrush know where it is, regardless of the different way people brush their teeth.
But using the camera of the phone is OK, which means you have to put a special stand on the mirror and stick the phone inside.
When it's there, it can watch the brush move in your mouth and monitor the exact location of your brush and where extra work is required.
This is a fairly complex process that requires only a fairly complex process to brush your teeth, which may not always work if the phone does not have the right perspective.
Instead, genius eliminated some of them: it only needs to be within the Bluetooth distance of the phone and then pass the information displayed on the phone.
In MWC's app, all this information is displayed, and the app can be used in a booth for visitors to brush their teeth.
The brush gets a score, which is a factor in whether they press hard and how long they brush and how effective and complete their coverage is.
Over time, people are encouraged to raise this score by brushing their teeth better.
These scores can be viewed historically through the app, and it also holds data on things like the frequency of gum bleeding.
Genius X will be released later this year and pricing has not yet been announced.