The fragrance industry is embracing artificial intelligence as a tool to create hyper-personalised scents, prompting ...
"I strongly believe that whenever you do something, you should put yourself in someone else's shoes," former flight attendant Paula S. Adams told Newsweek.
Essentially, the perfume acts as a high-tech Febreze, blocking the receptors in your nose that cause you perceive bad odors. The hope is that the spraying the product in latrines will encourage ...
"Also, while in the restroom/lavatory, the passengers could consider spraying the perfume onto a part of their body a little farther from their nose, one that's going to be covered by clothing.