Science is also known as Mr. Sai
For all kinds of high-tech now,I can only say that it is getting more and more detailed.,Smartphones have been able to check blood sugar and blood tests through guò peripherals.,Now even the juice of the sister is not let go.,Developed a test device.,High-tech is sometimes really equated with blind tossing.。
Sometimes, you'll need to use a dongle to do the work with your fingers. At least, that's what Pokr is all about. This new product helps women check the condition of the uterine and cervical mucus, and the correlation jù can be entered into fertility tracking apps such as Glow, FertilityFriend, Kndara, Clue, and Ovia.
Made of silicon and shaped like a real finger, this dongle is easy to use, in addition to being plugged into the iPhone's headphone jack. Fertility tracking apps can help women who want to get pregnant (or avoid pregnancy), but if they only track their menstrual cycles, then these apps are just a much better notebook.
In order for the algorithm to work better, women need to enter basal body temperature and uterine and cervical mucous fluid traits every day. This is important because the cycle of body temperature change is close to the ovulation cycle, and when the ovulation period is approaching, the uterine neck mucous fluid will become as transparent and slippery as egg whites. The ovulation period in a woman's menstrual cycle is usually not fixed, and there are only a few days before conception, so it is important to pay close attention to the signals sent by the body.
Both Glow and Kindara said that it is easy to check the mucus of the uterine neck, and it is convenient for women to do it every day. Glow's advice to users is as follows:
If you want to check the mucus of the uterine neck, you can check the toilet paper after going to the toilet, or insert a clean finger into the vaginal canal and touch the **neck (deep inside the vagina). After bowel movement, you may find more uterine and cervical mucous fluid. Some women are checked daily after showering. It will help if you check at the same time every day, as Glow will be able to monitor continuously.
Glow makes a number of assumptions about users, though. If a woman is usually busy, how can she go to the same time every day to check the mucous liquid? When attending a business banquet, can she leave halfway through the meal, go to the bathroom to wash her hands, insert her finger into the vaginal channel, rotate her finger until she has extracted enough liquid from the vagina, check it, and enter the results into her smartphone, then wash her hands and return to the restaurant to eat with the client?
Therefore, Pokr and the app it comes with, which is currently only available for iOS, will help. To use Pokr, users simply connect the device to their smartphone and plug it into the channel. After shaking the phone, the app can check the viscosity of the mucous liquid and check the viscosity with an algorithm developed by the scientists of GuòPork. Pokr has R&D centers in San Francisco, Shanghai, and Ho Chi Minh City.
After checking a woman's uterine and neck mucus, the Pokr app can automatically record the information and send it to the pregnancy tracking app.
Pokr has yet to receive funding, but its founders plan to launch a Kickstarter or IndieGoGo crowdfunding campaign in the near future. Learn more about Pokr and you can use your imagination because it's not yet a real product.