electronic cigarette

Latest

  • Smokio electronic cigarette may be the first time 'smart' and 'smoking' have been used in the same sentence

    by 
    Brian Heater
    Brian Heater
    12.18.2013

    Well, you had to see this coming right? Someone was bound to connect an electronic cigarette sooner or later. Smokio's bringing its e-cigarette to market along with apps for iOS and Android, so you can track smoking, check the battery and regulate the amount of vapor you're getting with each puff. Heck, you can even map all the places you've been smoking with the thing, and if you need some positive reinforcement, the app'll show you the equivalent number of analog cigarettes you'd have smoked, had you not switched. Smokio is currently listed as "coming soon" on the company's site, with no word on pricing. Apparently it'll start shipping next month, after the completion of an upcoming Kickstarter campaign. There's also a video below, if you can stand to hear someone use the term "vape" over and over again in a short period of time. Now if only would could figure out how bad those smartphones are.

  • E-Lites electronic cigarette review: no one ever said healthy was delicious

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    07.15.2011

    I have the unfortunate distinction of being what people disgustedly refer to as a "smoker." Personally, I prefer tobacco inhalation enthusiast -- but idiot works just as well. For more than half of the time I've been breathing under my own power, I've felt the need to periodically interrupt the life-giving flow of oxygen with a delicious, but cancer-causing mix of carbon monoxide, nicotine, and tar. Sure there are gums and patches and even pills that can supposedly help you kick the nasty habit but, I'm a twenty-first century man, and I need a twenty-first century solution. Enter the electronic cigarette. These "smokeless" nicotine delivery devices aren't exactly new, but we figured it was about time we put one through its paces and for me to try (yet again) to quit smoking. So, I grabbed a "pack" of the newest offering from British company E-Lites and spent a couple of weeks giving the latest trend in smoking cessation technology a go. %Gallery-128444%

  • Thanko's USB-powered Health E-Cigarettes sound healthy

    by 
    Tim Stevens
    Tim Stevens
    03.31.2009

    It was only a matter of time, and it took Thanko to make it happen. The purveyors of all things able to be tethered to that most special port now offer the affordable, USB-powered Health E-Cigarette; a name that cunningly stops short of raising the ire of the WHO while still giving you the hope that they might really be "healthy." Like other electronic cigarettes, it uses a heating element to vaporize a nicotine solution to supposedly give you a purer smoking experience along with a suite of other benefits: preserving the health of those around you, keeping your teeth white, and even preventing fires. All that at a fraction of the price of other USB-powered cigarettes -- just ¥2,980 (about $30). If that's all it costs to make Smokey proud, you can sign us up.[Via TechFresh]

  • "Fifty-One" e-cigarette will ensure you have no friends even after you quit smoking

    by 
    Laura June Dziuban
    Laura June Dziuban
    11.12.2008

    We've seen e-cigarettes before, and no one was really surprised to hear that inhaling liquid nicotine might not be the safest way to kick the habit. Fifty-One, a new, more cigarette-looking e-cig, claims it's better than previous products because you change the mouthpiece with every use so you're not inhaling old leftover nicotine again and again... plus they've added a fake smoke effect when you exhale, which makes you look and feel cool. Sound safer? Nope, probably not. There are a host of other things just completely wrong with this product: it comes in five flavors (tobacco, menthol, chocolate, vanilla and coffee) and seems to be marketed to only the shadiest sectors of society -- gangsters, card sharks, thieves, private dicks, AKA our kind of people. The starter kit also apparently includes a membership card in addition to all the regular stuff -- batteries, USB charger, poker chips -- and it'll run you a not-so-affordable $149.95, but you can probably score that at tonight's shakedown, right?

  • E-cigarettes banned in WHO-ville

    by 
    Stephanie Patterson
    Stephanie Patterson
    09.20.2008

    As it turns out, the World Health Organization (WHO) isn't condoning e-cigarette products -- shockingly -- as some manufacturers might like you to believe. In fact, the lawsuit flag is being waved at a few companies who brazenly plastered the organization's name and logo across promotional material, suggesting an endorsement of the product. The WHO's Douglas Bettcher asserts that the product is untested as a nicotine replacement therapy, stating, "If the marketers of the electronic cigarette want to help smokers quit, then they need to conduct clinical studies and toxicity analyses." So while e-cigs might not carry the same carcinogenic risks as traditional smoking, there are still plenty of health issues surrounding liquid nicotine and all the nasty additives it's served in... and the WHO isn't about to let you forget it.[Via PhysOrg]