
- L’Oréal announced a new product at CES 2025 called Cell BioPrint.
- It analyzes skin and offers tailored advice on ingredients and skin health.
- L’Oréal plans a pilot run in Asia, but pricing and global availability are currently unknown.
L’Oréal is one of the most well-known beauty and makeup brands across the world. The company has several amazing skincare products under its belt. It announced its new product called L’Oréal Cell BioPrint at CES 2025. It’s a device that can analyze your skin and offer personalized treatments and ingredients to counter the signs of aging.
Cell BioPrint is a result of the company’s partnership with NanoEntek. This device aims to resolve the issue of sampling different products or ingredients to see what suits your skin and works best for it. The device can help determine what works best for you. It can give you a personalized result, as not everyone’s skin is the same.

Image Credit: L’Oréal
The way it works is, that someone has to stick a face strip and then dip it into a buffer solution. This strip is then put into a cartridge that is diagnosed by the Cell BioPrint machine. The device will also click some photos of your face, and ask queries related to your skin problems. L’Oréal will then use the diagnosis of your protein structure to offer tailored advice to improve your skin health. It will also suggest what ingredients aren’t suitable for you, either.
The entire process might sound intimidating, but it shouldn’t take more than five minutes. People can redo their tests to notice changes to their skin over some time. However, there is no fixed timeline as to when this product will become available for everyone. L’Oréal has stated that they will do a pilot run in Asia for the Cell BioPrint, but there are no words about its pricing and availability.
Cell BioPrint in its current state sounds too good to be true. But there is no exact way to put their claims to the test unless it is tried out by an independent group of scientists. The whole point of this machine is to remove the confusion of trying different products to see what’s best for you. But maybe it’s nothing more than just a proof of concept. Only time will tell.

With over 4 year of experience under the belt, I cover all facets of consumer tech, from smartphones to other consumer electronics, our favorite social media apps, as well as the growing realm of AI and LLMs. As an Apps and AI writer app Beebom, I provide my expertise in all these areas, weaving stories that help you get familiar with the tech around you. But you will find me playing NYT daily puzzles in my free time.
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- Movano is coming out with their new EvieAI coming to their smart rings.
- It is post-trained on 100,000 medical journals, including FDA-approved content cross-referenced from Harvard, UCLA, and Mayo Clinic.
- The AI chatbot achieves high accuracy rates and doesn’t provide answers to unknown topics.
Nearly every device at CES has AI labeled all over it, given its flexibility of use and marketability. But its incoherence and the room for hallucinations make it a poor choice for medical advice. So, companies stray away from it because of the major repercussions it can have on someone’s health and life. But smart ring maker Movano is coming out with their new health and wellness LLM called EvieAI, offering more reliable medical advice.

Image Credit: Movano
So EvieAI will only be pulling its information from this data set reducing its chances of hallucinations. The results speak for themselves as the answers from the AI chatbot are 99% accurate. That’s also because EvieAI confirms whether your query tracks with the Movano’s training data. The AI will also follow industry-standard encryption methods. Since chats are deleted periodically, no one will be able to track them back to the users.
Movano’s CEO John Mastrototaro also mentioned that the AI doesn’t shy away from saying no. If you ask anything related to a topic it hasn’t been trained upon, “it’s not going to tell you because it doesn’t have any information about that” according to Mostratotaro. He further added, “I think that it’s okay to say no if you don’t know the answer to something,”
Movano has recently re-released their Evie Ring to customers which addresses feedback on sleep data and heart rate accuracy. The company has also received FDA clearance for the EvieMED ring which is aimed at remote monitoring and clinical trials of patients. The beta version of the EvieAI will be rolling out starting January 8th to current Evie Ring users in their companion app.
Movano is trying to do something that can change the way people perceive AI. Training their LLM on just medical journals will for sure improve the accuracy of results, and they are going to be better than other general AI models. However, even Doctors coincide with each other on the recent development of new techniques and technologies. So its accuracy and how correct it stands with its answers will be interesting to see.

With over 4 year of experience under the belt, I cover all facets of consumer tech, from smartphones to other consumer electronics, our favorite social media apps, as well as the growing realm of AI and LLMs. As an Apps and AI writer app Beebom, I provide my expertise in all these areas, weaving stories that help you get familiar with the tech around you. But you will find me playing NYT daily puzzles in my free time.
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