So, looks like these guys are trying to get funding. Not sure it's the BEST use of scientific advances, but who am I to judge?
Some of the pushback in the comments is interesting - there are already products out there designed to help a woman "smell better/feel fresh". Not sure why these guys get tarred and feathered...
http://www.dailydot.com/technology/sweet-peach-hack-vagina-personalized-probiotics/?tw=dd
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By Selena Larson (Google+) on November 20, 2014
Two tech dudes actually pitched an idea for women to biohack their private parts in order to make their vaginas smell like peaches at the DEMO conference in San Jose, Calif. on Wednesday.
Inc.com reported that Austen Heinz and Gilad Gome, startup founders of Cambrian Genomics and Personalized Probiotics, described plans for a new probiotic supplement called “Sweet Peach,” created by using DNA printing technology from Cambrian Genomics. (The company apparently attended Silicon Valley’s Y Combinator startup incubator.)
Sweet Peach will be funded on the crowdfunding platform Tilt because Kickstarter banned the project for being too controversial.
Some of the pushback in the comments is interesting - there are already products out there designed to help a woman "smell better/feel fresh". Not sure why these guys get tarred and feathered...
http://www.dailydot.com/technology/sweet-peach-hack-vagina-personalized-probiotics/?tw=dd
279
share-facebook share-twitter share-reddit share-tumblr share-google
share-icon
By Selena Larson (Google+) on November 20, 2014
Two tech dudes actually pitched an idea for women to biohack their private parts in order to make their vaginas smell like peaches at the DEMO conference in San Jose, Calif. on Wednesday.
Inc.com reported that Austen Heinz and Gilad Gome, startup founders of Cambrian Genomics and Personalized Probiotics, described plans for a new probiotic supplement called “Sweet Peach,” created by using DNA printing technology from Cambrian Genomics. (The company apparently attended Silicon Valley’s Y Combinator startup incubator.)
Sweet Peach will be funded on the crowdfunding platform Tilt because Kickstarter banned the project for being too controversial.






