London: Ever imagined yourself sharing a kiss with your own phone? Well, now with the development of a series of phone prototypes, that could be a possibility.

Fabian Hemmert, a design researcher at the Berlin University of the Arts, Germany, came up with the phone prototypes that can transmit grasping, breathing and even kissing.

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“Mobile phones use so little of our sensory abilities. They are great for information exchange - text, video, and speech - but they provide no feeling of nearness,” New Scientist quoted him as saying. The grasping prototype includes force sensors on the phone’s sides and a strap, which the user places over their hand, so that when one person grips their phone it sends a signal to a motor in the other phone that pulls the strap tighter.

The breathing prototype similarly transmits air movement, with a pressure sensor on one side and a jet on the other. Perhaps the most extreme prototype is the kissing phone, which consists of a moisture sensor on the sender’s phone and a motorised wet sponge that pushes against a semi-permeable membrane on the receiver’s phone.

The extent to which the sponge moves depends on the wetness of the sender’s kiss, letting you distinguish between a peck on the cheek and full-on slobber.

“It starts the discussion about how we actually want to communicate in the future,” he added.
ANI