cuddletech
n. Technology — such as the new Volkswagen or the iMac computer — that is marketed as cute, friendly, or just plain cuddly.
Etymology
Examples
2002
Forget the straight line, that tyrannical construction devised as a means of getting from A to B and favoured by those rigid Romans. Cuddletech caters to our yearning for soft, rounded shapes which evoke the motherly affection our do-more-earn-more lives supposedly lack.
—David Wilson, “'Cuddletech' emerges as the squishy alternative to a boring straight line,” South China Morning Post (Hong Kong), November 21, 2002
1998
Many of the architects in the show developed a modular system in which prefabricated units could be configured into different houses to meet different needs, but none so boldly as Mark Wamble and Dawn Finley. Embracing rather than eschewing the ways in which giant corporations shape our lives, they've envisioned a system in which familiar brand-name companies produce injection-molded modules that snap together on 'Klip Binders' in the configuration of the client's choice. Therma-Rest manufactures a sleepklip, Igloo makes the Chillklip, and Nike makes the hoopShoot attachment. It's pure cuddletech.
—Shaila Dewan, “Home Despots,” Houston Press, November 19, 1998
1998 (earliest)
Snuggle up. It's time to get cozy. Curl up to your new computer, car and kitchen gadgets and feel the happiness wrap around you like a warm, fuzzy blanket.

Cuddletech is here.

Forget about the streamlined, hard-edged look that all the old science-fiction movies styled as the look of the millennium. Now that we're almost there, and technical advances have made even the most basic consumer products more efficient, powerful and varied than ever before, there's also been a corresponding change in the way those products look.

Signs of cuddletech have been popping up for the past several years — a rounded corner here, an unexpectedly bright color there. Perhaps it was a rounded bumper on your new car. Or a beeper or cell phone made of plastic that resembles raspberry sorbet.
—Alisa Gordaneer, “Cuddletech: New products so cute you just wanna pinch their cheeks,” Metro Times (Detroit), October 14, 1998