This Handheld Scanner Identifies Pills, Determines Calories and More After making its debut on Kickstarter, the SCiO pocket-sized molecular scanner showed off some cool new features at CES.

By Emily Price

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SCiO
SCiO food scanner

LAS VEGAS – What if you could scan a piece of cheese to discover its caloric content or a stray pill to figure out if it's a vitamin or your pain medication? It sounds like something out of a sci-fi movie, but it's a feat that's already possible thanks to a tiny device called SCiO. After raising close to $3 million on Kickstarter last year, the company showed off a prototype of its molecular scanner this week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Since its time on Kickstarter the device has gotten even better. "SCiO's current design incorporates more features and increased functionality than the original molecular sensor we promised," says Dror Sharon, CEO and co-founder of Consumer Physics, the company behind SciO.

Related: 9 New Fitness Gadgets to Help You Get Into Shape This Year

The device is about the size of your average Zippo lighter and scans food when you press a button its side. SCiO analyzes whatever you have it pointed at on a molecular level and then reports back its findings to the scanner's app. Details include not only what something is but also its nutritional information.

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Image credit: Consumer Physics

Since Kickstarter, SCiO has added a remote temperature sensor, a protective cover that pulls double duty as a calibration mechanism and a new light indicator on the activation button to let you know a scan is underway.

Related: An Insider's Look Into CES 2015

"You don't have to be a scientist," says Sharon "Users can just follow their curiosity. The applications are truly endless and as SCiO grows and learns so will our users be able to scan more and more materials. "

That learning is an important piece of the puzzle. In order for SCiO to accurately scan something, it will need to have scanned it before and have the item in its database. Once it's saved, it can always identity that item in the future. It can even tell the difference between Coke and Pepsi. The more people who use SCiO the greater that database will eventually become.

This Handheld Scanner Identifies Pills, Determines Calories and More

Image credit: Emily Price

SCiO is currently available for pre-order on the company's website with as estimated ship date of July 2015. Just the scanner is $249 while the device's software development kit is $449.

Related: Lessons from a Food-Tech Startup: Big Data Isn't Just a Buzzword -- It Can Be Your Secret Weapon

Emily Price

Technology Writer

Emily Price is a tech reporter based in San Francisco, Calif. She specializes in mobile technology, social media, apps, and startups. Her work has appeared in a number of publications including The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, PC World, Macworld, CNN and Mashable.

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