For
foodies desperate to make their food porn as realistic as possible, a
new app could finally attach what's missing from all those pictures of
gourmet meals: smell.
Harvard
University professor David Edwards, along with a team of students,
created an iPhone app called oSnap that can take photos and send
accompanying scents to the recipient. The app premiered June 17 at the
American Museum of Natural History in New York with a scented message
sent from Paris to New York.
The
app has an Instagram-like automatic camera with which the user can snap
photos of the object they wish to send. After the photo is taken, a
tagging menu appears with a selection of scent notes for the user to
choose from, such as butter, cocoa beans, baguette or red wine. Up to
eight different scents can be combined to give the recipient the full
picture of a meal or other experience. The photo and its corresponding
scent tags are then messaged to the recipient, who uses a
scent-transmitting machine called an oPhone to "receive" the smell.
Currently,
the oPhone is only available at the Museum of Natural History and at Le
Laboratoire in Paris. Users who send an oSnap from their iPhone can
travel to the two locations and download the message — called an oNote —
along with the scent. But Edwards and his team are raising support via
an Indiegogo campaign to mass-produce the oPhone for home use. The
sticker price of an oPhone is $199. Since the site launched Monday, 27
contributors have pledged nearly $7,000, a small dent in the $150,000
goal.
The
team envisions the device becoming commonplace in restaurants, coffee
shops and other places where explaining complex smells and flavors can
be difficult. Edwards suggested that baristas could use the oPhone to
give customers a sense of a product before buying.
The
invention evokes memories of Smell-O-Vision, an ill-received effort to
add smells into the movie-watching experience. Edwards was quick to
point out that while Smell-O-Vision and its subsequent attempts doused
the room with an overwhelming scent, the oPhone keeps the odors
contained to the individual's nose.
"[The
oPhone] produces just enough aroma that it's your message, not your
neighbor's message," he said. "It's enough for a signal but it's not
anything more than that."
The
Museum of Natural History will be displaying the oPhone in an
interactive exhibit in the Sackler Educational Laboratory for
Comparative Genomics and Human Origins. Part of the appeal in curating
the device was in its demonstrating the connection between primitive and
modern humans.
"The
museum is very interested in the evolution of life and scent is a big
part of that," said Michael Novacek, the museum's senior vice president.
"In a sense, our whole legacy really comes from the olfactory system."
Posted by : Gizmeon
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