PET technology goes above and beyond in order to improve your pets’ safety and health.
Show attendees were shown two brand new products at the Consumer Electronics Show.
Two innovative pet technology companies are revolutionizing pet ownership.
SMART COLLADER
Invoxia AI is being used to create dog collars. These collars can be programmed to learn the habits of your dog and provide important information about their health.
You can track the vitals of your dog, monitor their sleep and activity patterns as well as their position in real time by attaching it to their collar.
Fido can wear the Invoxia smart-collar for longer periods of time. This allows the AI to learn their behaviors and find any anomalies in eating or movement.
Although it’s not yet able to communicate in language as Disney’s Up’s dog, the information it provides could be crucial for saving your dog’s lives by alerting you of possible problems.
“[Pets] wait until the illness is so advanced that they can’t hide it, and then they go hide under the bed or inside of the closet…then you will know something is wrong,” Anne-Charlotte Neau was a company representative and spoke for the Sun.
“Having a device able to give you precise objective data will give you piece of mind, knowing that your dog is feeling good, and…that the metrics are okay.”
The $8.25 monthly fee is negligible when you consider that 30 percent of dog owners have heart problems, while senior dogs can experience up to 70%.
PET RECOGNITION
Every dog has its own noseprint, which is why it’s so special. Petnow This unique system tracks the location of your pet and allows you to track it.
Their app is free to use, thanks to an AI system they developed exclusively for them and that’s exclusive only to them.
AI recognises cats based upon their unique grooming patterns that give each cat a different face.
This is the most important innovation. The microchips have become obsolete and are too intrusive to make pets sick. They can also be fatal.
“Sometimes, the microchip can make [pets] paralyzed,” Johnny Shin from the company spoke with The U.S. Sun.
“We want to avoid mishappenings,” He stated that South Korea-based firm’s mission was to “change the national pet registry into scanning, not microchipping.”