Most people’s first exposure to the Japanese “neurowear” line of robotic animal parts likely came last year when the designers behind the movement debuted the “necomimi” cat ears. On first inspection these ears appear to be a pretty standard pair of fluffy, triangular clusters of fur attached to a hard-plastic headband, but once you fit the necomimi onto your head you’ll find that the ears languidly sway, flatten and perk up depending on your “mood” (or, at least, what the device determines your mood is based on its suite of biometric sensors).
Not content to merely offer its customers the opportunity to enter public looking like an anime stereotype, the designers behind necomimi are now working on a new project in the same vein. Dubbed “shippo,” the latest addition to the line takes the same basic principles that have made the necomimi ears such a surprising international success and applies them to a fluffy, cat-like tail. As with the ears, the tail will wag, droop and stiffen depending on your mood, but as an added bonus, the shippo device also comes with novel social networking features. Like some kind of emotional Foursquare, the shippo is able to broadcast both your current location and mood.
Those of you who read the above text or watched the demonstration video below and suddenly find yourselves desperately wanting to purchase a robotic, faux appendage are going to be in for a bit of disappointment. Currently, the shippo is only a prototype, and as far as anyone seems to know, the Japanese designers behind the gadget have yet to disclose plans to make the tail widely available to consumers. Actually, it’s so far from official release that it hasn’t even been added to the official neurowear website. Given the breakout success of the necomimi ears however, we have to imagine that the designers will eventually release a consumer-grade version of the shippo, if only so the forward-thinking customers who purchased the necomimi ears can properly accessorize their outfits with a full complement of borderline-cybernetic augmentations.
Related Posts
Your WhatsApp voice notes could help screen for early signs of depression
The study, led by researchers in Brazil including Victor H. O. Otani from the Santa Casa de São Paulo School of Medical Sciences, found that their AI could identify depression in female participants with 91.9% accuracy. All the AI needed was a simple recording of the person describing how their week went.
Talk to AI every day? New research says it might signal depression
This finding comes from a national survey of nearly 21,000 U.S. adults conducted in 2025, where participants detailed how often they interacted with generative AI tools and completed standard mental health questionnaires. Within that group, about 10% said they used AI daily, and 5% said they engaged with chatbots multiple times throughout the day. Those daily users showed higher rates of reported depressive symptoms and other negative emotional effects, such as anxiety and irritability.
You might actually be able to buy a Tesla robot in 2027
The comments follow a series of years-long development milestones. Optimus, which was originally unveiled as the Tesla Bot in 2021, has undergone multiple prototype iterations and has already been pressed into service handling simple tasks in Tesla factories. According to Musk, those internal deployments will expand in complexity later this year, helping prepare the robotics platform for broader use.