Tag Archives: International Consumer Electronics Show

Hot for Tech in 2011

Mashable has picked the hottest tech for 2011, based on the recent Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. We know all about tablets and smartphones, but the article — which you can find here — is about some deeper level tech, including smart televisions and how phones are now using dual-core processors.

Who Makes the Best Tablet?

At the CES tradeshow in Las Vegas, several companies announced or released amazing new tablets. For business owners, it might be tough to decide which one is right for your employees. InformationWeek has selected the best of the best.  CES Tablet Extravaganza: Motorola, RIM, Toshiba & Asus Stand Out [InformationWeek]

Android is Coming…to Your Dishwasher

Android in your dishwasher? That appears to be the plan for theupstart operating system, which is now common on smartphones andtablets. The Google OS made a splash at the CES tradeshow onappliances, headsets, and touch remote controls. Click here to read the article.

More Time for Work? Let the Car Drive Itself

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Envision the day when you can video chat or write a report while behind the wheel on your way to work. Not only is the car driving itself, but it communicates with other vehicles and senses the environment, so getting into an accident is nearly impossible. That sounds like a sci-fi fantasy, right? Not at all. Several car companies, including Volvo, General Motors, Ford, Audi and its parent company, Volkswagen, are aggressively developing autonomous cars. Even Google has figured out a way to make cars drive themselves. “Almost all accidents take place because of human distraction,” says Sebastian Thrun, a fellow at Google and director of Stanford University’s Artificial Intelligence Lab. “A self-driving car never sleeps and always pays attention so we believe there is a significant opportunity to make cars much safer.” For the small business, using AI for robotic driving means commute time can someday be turned into work time. And, it could mean a fleet of delivery vehicles autonomously controlled. “The capability of this is absolutely realistic,” says Karl Brauer, senior analyst and editor-at-large for Edmunds.com. “There might be a few odd things to iron out but we’re talking years, not decades to finish it off.” The Google car One of the strangest examples of robotic driving comes from the search engine giant, based in California, who is using their programming prowess to help build AI for cars. Google announced in October that seven Toyota Prius test cars have driven more than 140,000 miles on California roads with only occasional human control. Considering Google’s penetration into the average person’s everyday life — whether through search, maps, or apps on Android phones — it’s entry into the automotive scene almost makes sense. During the tests, a driver was always on board in case something went awry, but it’s still amazing to think about. Six months ago who would have considered the search engine giant would be letting their robocars roam the California countryside? Of course, current AI programming is not quite ready for rush hour. “Construction zones aren’t handled well yet. If the car were to drive on a snow-covered road it would cause problems for us. We also get hiccups, for example, if someone parks and blocks our lane — then our cars are stopped and the person needs to take over,” Thrun says. That said, Thrun maintains that Google’s accomplishment is remarkable. “Until recently, there seemed to be a consensus that this was 30 or 40 years off. And I would submit that the progress that we and others have made has stunned all of us in this area,” he says. Self-driving cars and safety Recently, GM gave reporters (including this one) a ride in a small, autonomous concept car at the Consumer Electronics Show last month in Las Vegas. The two-seater EN-V, which stands for Electric Networked-Vehicle, was designed for use in large cities to help with traffic congestion, parking availability (you can’t imagine a car that is easier to park!) and improved air quality. According to GM spokesperson Daniel Flores, when vehicles are able to communicate with each other and sense their environment, the accidents that contribute to traffic congestion can be eliminated. “Urban congestion is a very legitimate problem. If left without new technologies it’s going to become a bigger and bigger issue,” he says. Volvo also is working on autonomous cars and already offers, in its S60 sedan, sophisticated options such as pedestrian detection and collision warning, both with full automatic braking. The Swedish carmaker is also working on a project backed by the European Union called SARTRE, which stands for Safe Road Trains for the Environment. Spokesperson Daniel Johnston says the project is all about platooning many vehicles together — a sort of long-distance game of “follow the leader” in which all the occupants can do other things instead of paying attention to the road. “The idea is to compact distances between lead and following cars. Compacting space allows for more cars in one lane,” he says, adding that platooning also saves fuel by reducing air resistance, resulting in the use of less horsepower. What about people who like driving? Along with Stanford University and Oracle, Audi and Volkswagen have successfully created the Autonomous Audi TTS Pike’s Peak Research Car which last September completed the 12.42-mile Pike’s Peak International Hill Climb without any driver behind the wheel. Because some people actually like driving, Dr. Burkhard Huhnke, executive director of the Audi Electronics Research Laboratory in Palo Alto, Calif., says Audi is less concerned about making fully autonomous cars and is more focused on “reducing accidents down to zero. That would be a dream.” He says Audi is working toward that lofty goal by experimenting with its self-driving car and through a new research collaboration with four universities in California and Michigan to bring as much information as possible about drivers and their environments into the vehicle. Cars that talk to one another Edmunds’ Karl Brauer says the technology in today’s new cars like Audi’s A8, which is covered from head to toe in sensors, has several cameras and is connected to the Internet, making the prospect of cars talking to each other and automatically averting dangers on the road much more feasible. “We can put sensors in roadways. We can put sensors in cars. We can put GPS devices in vehicles so that they are aware of where they are and what’s around them. That can already be done now — it’s largely what the Google car does. But it’s going to cost money and it’s going to require some standardization work,” he says. About that standardization, Ford recently said it is partnering with other auto makers and the federal government to create a single language that ensures all vehicles can talk to each other based on a common communication standard. The company says its involvement is part of a stepped-up commitment to developing wirelessly connected intelligent vehicles. Steve Birkeland, who owns a Minnesota-based company called Custom Canopy, says he often drives hundreds or more miles to get to a job site and would be interested in reclaiming time spent in the car as long as doing so was safe. “I could easily see a sleeping area where I would leave for Denver after dinner, watch a movie, go to sleep and wake up in the morning in Denver.” Not everyone is buying the idea of cars that talk to each other and drive themselves. Paul Burton, who owns West Point Driving School in Sacramento, says, “Unless autonomous cars are vastly superior to the average teenage brain — which is pretty sophisticated — they’re going to make a lot of mistakes.” According to Thrun, the AI is coming along, however. In the next decade (or less), your car might just drive you home. Now if we can just figure out how to make them brew coffee.  

New PC designs: Ideal for Small Business?

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Much of the media attention at the recent Consumer Electronics Show (CES) surrounded new computer styles, shapes and sizes — perhaps signaling a change from the tried-and-true laptop form factor popularized over the past two decades. One attention-getting device is the Dell Inspiron Duo, which looks like a typical netbook at first glance but actually transforms into a tablet when you remove the LCD touch display. Lenovo offers a similar model called the LePad U1, but that hybrid was first announced over a year ago. Another laptop, which uses dual touchscreens instead of a physical keyboard, is the Acer Iconia. The main advantage of this new form factor is that the keyboard can be customized or changed altogether depending on what you need the laptop to do. Another model, the Razer Switchblade, has keys that display different words or icons depending on the application — say, for gaming or for getting real work done. So, are these new form factors innovative? Sure. Practical? That’s another — and perhaps more important — consideration altogether. As usual, the hardest part about deciding whether these new form factors make sense is just being careful to avoid the lure of something being new and interesting, and then determining whether they will actually make sense for real work. To find out, we caught up with industry experts to weigh in on the pros and cons of alternative computer styles. Does ‘one size fits all’ work?“We’ve all been conditioned into believing that something that’s remained fundamentally unchanged for decades is a classic, successful, perfect design that needs no additional modification,” begins Carmi Levy, an independent technology analyst based in London, Ontario. “In the case of the basic laptop, however, classic doesn’t mean ideal — despite the fact that the basic laptop has become an icon of business and consumer computing, it’s been apparent for years that its one-shape-fits-all form factor falls short.” Levy says enterprise and consumer buyers are often “complacent,” and in turn stick with a familiar design. “Because of this, hardware vendors, afraid of introducing the PC world’s equivalent of the Edsel, have shied away from stretching the form factor envelope.” Times might be changing, however. “The tablet is the first truly successful post-laptop design for a mobile productivity device in a generation — it has opened the door to other hybrid hardware designs by softening buyer resistance anything that strays too far from the trusty old laptop design.” The new laptop-tablet hybrids may just be a smart new form factor, he says. “The Dell Inspiron Duo (aka Sparta) is just close enough to existing form factors that buyers might be willing to give it a shot. It’s evolutionary, not revolutionary, and that could be more than enough to begin to give Dell some sales momentum in this emerging market slice.” Options are goodOn whether small-to-midsized businesses should invest in a nonconventional design, Leslie Fiering, research vice president at Gartner, says it all depends on the needs of the company. “A tablet, for example, is really designed for media consumption rather than content creation — therefore those who need to do a lot of typing should probably stick with a physical keyboard.”  Fiering says the question isn’t “Should I go out and buy one of these new kinds of computers?,” but rather “What can I do better with an alternative form factor over my existing hardware?,” she asks, rhetorically. That said, Fiering concedes she’s not a big fan of the virtual keyboard in general. “They tend to be more error-prone because they don’t give feedback; I’ve seen people use these [onscreen] keyboards after three months and they still make the same mistakes and some start getting bone soreness through the pad of the fingertip,” adds Fiering. On the flipside, Fiering says on-the-go types who spend a lot of time viewing or listening to content might benefit from a keyboard-less computer. While she’s “skeptical” about two operating systems, Fiering says the Lenovo LePad U1 hybrid — a Windows laptop with a snap-off screen that becomes an Android tablet — offers the “best of [of both] worlds, as you get a slate and keyboard to dock it in.” Businesses open to changeThe surge in new form factors can also largely be attributed to Apple’s success with the iPad, says Levy, as they “force buyers to realize that laptops aren’t the exclusive choice for mobile productivity.” Rob Fleischer, partner and executive vice president at Sandbox Strategies, a public relations and marketing firm that handles videogame and tech clients, says they use iPads at work. “We have iPads and we use them regularly as they’re great for entertainment when traveling [and] we’ve adapted business presentations to show on iPad, which has worked out well.” While Fleischer admits there are times when a physical keyboard is a more ideal interface than touch, he’s open to new concepts. “Out of the new products on display at CES, I’m most excited about the Motorola Atrix,” says Fleischer.  The Atrix is an Android-powered smartphone that can be docked in a 2.2-pound laptop shell with 11.6-inch screen, full-sized keyboard and trackpad. Therefore, when docked, users can interact with the smartphone’s content as if it were a PC — and the dock charges up the phone at the same time. “Sure, we’re all using iPhones right now, but the idea of having a single phone/laptop is awesome,” says Fleischer. “The phone with the laptop dock looks like a really great solution for us: we can travel light, work remotely, and have the ability to really get stuff done.” In the end, that’s the ultimate goal: being productive, even if the laptop is completing new and different.

CES Wrap-Up: What Small Business Needs to Know

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For business owners, it’s important to know the tech trends, gadget frenzies, and overarching themes from the show in order to plan your tech buying strategies. Here are six findings directly from the showfloor to help you stay in tune. 1. 4G is finally hereFrom the very first press conference, the main theme from the show emerged: your next smartphone will likely connect to a 4G network. In a private demo with T-Mobile, we tested the new Dell Streak 7 tablet, which connected to a 4G signal at a mouth-watering 6Mbps – faster than many DSL connections. With that speed, video chats with colleagues stayed smooth and it took only 8 minutes to download an entire Hollywood movie. For business use, 4G on your smartphone or tablet means easier Internet back-ups, smooth video chats, and snappier Web viewing. 2. Smartphones: the new notebooks?The rumors about the death of the notebook still persist. Granted, we still use these 6-pound behemoths for productivity work, but Motorola revealed a new strategy that might just put the notebook on notice. The Astrix 4G smartphone, which will be available first quarter, can be used with a docking station that connects to a desktop monitor and keyboard. The phone uses a custom interface that lets you use Web sites like Google Docs for writing, say, a business plan. There’s also  a full-size QWERTY keyboard for Astrix. The idea is to use your phone for all of your productivity work, including e-mail, word processing, slideshows, and online accounting, and then dock at the office to keep working. 3. Tablets will be ubiquitousApple has sold 7.5 million iPads since its original debut. Yet, instead of just admitting defeat in the tablet market, several companies – including HTC, Motorola, and Samsung – announced new models, some that connect to 4G service. At CES last year, many companies announced or released an e-reader, but it was more of a groundswell uprising against the Amazon Kindle. This year, the industry switched to tablets and it seems as though every other booth had one on display. One interesting model to watch: Illuminus (www.illuminus.com) will release their T9 tablet this quarter that connects to an HDTV over a Wi-Fi signal in just a few steps. 4. 3D goes independentBig-budget 3D movies like Avatar are great the first few viewings but wear thin eventually. Consumer electronics giants like Sony really want you to buy a 3DTV, even if you already own an HDTV, but the content is slim. The answer: the company announced a consumer camcorder called the 3D HandyCam HDR-TD10, available this April, that shoots video in 3D and costs only about $1500. (The viewfinder displays a simulated 3D image that, in our tests, looked too blurry.) For business users, 3D could provide a way to liven up a sales demonstration. 5. The car industry is serious about electric carsAnother interesting trend from CES is that major automakers like Ford are very serious about electric cars. The company chose the CES convention to announce the new Ford Focus electric. A few weeks ago, the Chevy Volt started rolling out to dealers. What does this means for small business? For some entrepreneurs, it means a new business opportunity – e.g., helping build the infrastructure. For others, it could mean investing in a fleet of electrics for delivery as a way to lower start-up costs for fuel.  6. The economy is starting to reboundAnother important trend from CES: it appears the economy is starting to make a rebound. Attendance was up from last year, hitting about 140,000 attendees over a four day period, according to NewsFactor.com. There was also a renewed optimism – several electronics giants made splashy announcements. Panasonic had one of the biggest booths ever, and there were exhibits in just about every open space. For small business owners, a gadget boon can fuel many other industry segments.   

The Need for Speed: 4G Networks

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Every time Andy Abramson goes to Las Vegas, he rents several 4G USB adapters for himself and his team. Abramson is CEO of communications agency Comunicano and author of the blog Working Anywhere. “I can go just about anywhere in Las Vegas and be connected,” he says. “We supplied 4G modems to clients at the Consumer Electronics Show, and they were able to host demos in hotel suites, on the show floor, and even in coffee shops and restaurants where they were having meetings. I’ve made video calls, voice calls, and even sent files over 4G while in the back seat of taxi cabs. It really helps me stay connected.” At a recent technology show, he adds, he also rented a USB device for his wife, who was along for the trip. “She’s a physician, so this allows her to access patient files through a secure network,” he says. Renting the USB adapters actually saves money, he says. “It’s a big savings over hotel bandwidth, and I can go just about anywhere in Las Vegas and be connected. Plus, not everywhere is a hot spot. This gives you a hot spot wherever you go. Most people I know are cutting the cord and going WiFi or 4G.” Today Las Vegas, tomorrow, the world. The nation’s largest mobile carriers will be rolling out 4G wireless connections to major markets as quickly as they can. Currently, Sprint is the only carrier with 4G already available, though even such large cities as New York don’t have it yet. But Verizon plans to provide 4G coverage in 30 U.S. cities by the end of 2010. And AT&T says it will begin rolling out its own 4G network in 2011. Just how fast is 4G? 4G wireless is up to 10 times faster than the 3G technology currently in widespread use, according to Sprint’s advertising. “Theoretically, it can download up to 100 megabits per second, but that’s in lab testing, not in the real world,” says Soumen Ganguly, principal at Altman Vilandrie & Company. Still, even in the real world, 4G is very noticeably faster than 3G. “If I’m getting mail from my server, with 4G it takes micro-seconds. With 3G, it could take 5 to 10 seconds to download the same email,” Abramson says. In general, he adds, though service providers may claim faster speeds, most 3G transmissions are in the 1 megabyte per second range. “With 4G, I’m getting speeds that are three to four times faster, he reports. Pricing for 4G has thus far been comparable to that for 3G connections, but that may be about to change, Ganguly says. “The way pricing will play out is a wild card. Some carriers have been signaling that with the move to 4G, there will be fewer unlimited data plans, and a move toward tier plans based on levels of usage.” Can your company benefit? Will 4G’s higher speed make a real difference to your company? It might, especially if any of the following applies to you: You’re a very small company with a highly mobile work force. Some companies that fit this description have eliminated land line phones in favor of mobile phones, and now they may do the same with their Internet connection. “It can replace broadband for a very small shop,” Ganguly says. For some small businesses it might make sense to have every laptop enabled with 4G, or to use a card that broadcasts wireless Internet to up to five devices, such as the MiFi or Overdrive, he adds. (Needless to say, this only makes sense if your company’s website and any ebusiness or other essential Web-based functions are hosted elsewhere.) You work in construction or other industries where it’s useful to stream video from field locations. “With live video from a construction site, you can communicate better with a central office and make decisions on the spot,” notes Ron Mudry, CEO of Tower Cloud, a company that is building part of the infrastructure for 3G service. “Another use would be for a real estate agent who could stream video of a property to potential buyers,” he says. Keep in mind, though, that 4G is slower than WiFi, and probably not appropriate for the transfer of large files, such as construction blueprints. You don’t want to be dependent on hotspots. How many times have you tried to log in to a wireless hotspot at a hotel or café, only to find that there’s a structure blocking the signal to your spot. Or that the password you were given doesn’t work. Or that, once you connect, your signal is much slower than you expected because everyone around you is using it as well. “We made sure or clients had the 4G adapters when they went onstage to do demos,” Abramson says. Yes, the hotel or exhibit hall probably can provide a wireless connection. The problem is, it might get overloaded. “Counting on the venue’s bandwidth can be a bad during a big event,” Abramson says. “It’s less reliable because thousands of people are using it.”  

A Network for Networkers

Bulletin Board Every January a sleepy swiss ski town hosts some 2,000 of the world’s most influential corporate and political leaders — from Nelson Mandela and Yasser Arafat to Jack Welch and Bill Gates — for six days of seminars and informal conversation. The 2001 World Economic Forum was the 31st such gathering of global leaders in Davos. The forum took no chances when it came to communicating with its own participants. They stayed connected with a wireless local area network. In a welcome bag, each participant received a free Compaq iPAQ pocket PC (which lists for $499). Preloaded with a complete list of participants and events, it served as a mobile conference guide. The information on the iPAQ was updated automatically through the wireless LAN whenever the participant carrying it entered the conference center. What the Davos conference did with a wireless network may still be a few years down the road for most business conferences, but the transition to handheld-based conference guides has already begun. At the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last winter, for example, conference materials were available in a Palm-friendly format. “You just brought your own Palm device, set it in the cradle, and synced up,” says Alex Slawsby, an analyst of smart handheld devices at IDC, in Framingham, Mass. “Obviously, wireless networks would make attending big conferences a lot easier.” Bulletin Board See Bot Run Rent a Phone, Lose a Headache No Receptionist Necessary Things We Love: Home-Phone-Line Networking Log On, Turn Off, Spend Less Acronym Watch A Network for Networkers A ‘Black Box’ for Your Car Please e-mail your comments to editors@inc.com.