This is a slightly puzzling product. To begin with, Christopher  Goggin, shown as the inventor of the Electronic Dog Nose  (as  featured in Popular Science) may not be the actual inventor,  at least according to some of the comments attached to that 2011  Popular Science article. Yet other comments on the same article  claim that the unit Goggin supposedly ripped off is totally  different from his, and doesn't work, while his does. A report  (pdf) on bed-bugs.co.uk says the device "...clearly fails to  perform to the manufacturers specification and procedures."  Goggin's badge at CES showed his company affiliation as Datt Solutions Group,  but Datt's website did not mention him as of Jan. 21, 2013,  several weeks after CES 2014  closed.   A New York Real Estate blog is skeptical, as are others.  Goggin also claims to have a laser device that will kill the  bedbugs you find. It sounds great. But a person who prefers the  tried and true to new products that may or may not work might  want to use old-fashioned, all-natural Diatomaceous  earth, which kills not only bedbugs but other insect pests,  and costs very little compared to most other methods. If that  method doesn't work, then it may be time to try dogs, lasers, and  other ways to find and kill bedbugs, which have been spotted  everywhere from luxury hotels to housing projects, even in  taxicabs and movie theaters.  
    Tim: So Chris, you are holding a device in your hands    that you have invented, and it detects certain chemicals. Can    you talk about what it detects?  
    Chris: Yes, this is a molecule detector for two organic    compounds and they would be 2-octanol and 2-hexanol. Those are    odors that come from certain places. And this product is    designed to detect those two specific organic molecules.  
    Tim: Okay, now those are very specific molecules indeed.    Why those twoand we will give this awayand what is it to    detect?  
    Chris: Those two organic odors are the odors that bed    bugs give off. They are distinct to bed bugs and not to any    other insects. And by detecting those two odors, this product    can help find or root out bed bugs that are burrowed into    furniture, cracks, and crevices, bedding, warm socks on your    nightstand. They are very difficult and time consuming to find.    They are an insect like a lot of insects that have evolved over    millions of years. So they are very good, very learned at    hidingthats what they do best.  
    Tim: I am a little hesitant to ask but how badly do you    need to detect these?  
    Chris: Well, a bed bug can be from anywhere from a fancy    high end hotel to a very low end public housing. So they can be    anywhere, they could be on a bus, airplane, movie theater,    taxicab. But most of the time bed bugs are the result of just    poor housekeeping in one place. And they are very portable    insects so their eggs can stick to clothing, shoes, pocket    books, wallets without you knowing that and then unknowingly be    spread to very far flung places.  
    Tim: I understand that there are plenty of bed bugs to    go around these days.  
    Chris: Yeah, and they make more every day. So yeah,    there are plenty of bed bugs to go around.  
    Tim: Now since we are at the consumer electronics show,    does this have a household and individual consumer targetwho    would buy a bed bug detector?  
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CES 2014: A Bedbug Detector that Looks Interesting but has Detractors (Video)