Separator
CES 2011 report: One man's futile attempt
Friday, January 14, 2011
Tags: CES 2011
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Brett Bates

When Peter told us after our recent Mobcast recording that he'd be heading to CES in a few days, we asked him to record his impressions of the show for us. Here are those impressions.

Last week's Consumer Electronics Show attracted over 140,000 attendees, marking the largest turnout in years for the technology trade show. Although the focus this year was squarely on 3D-ifying everything, there were a few gaming announcements -- most impressively the prototype for Razer's Switchblade gaming tablet and the chatting possibilities within Microsoft’s Avatar Kinect.

Since I had never been to the convention before, my first impulse was to attack CES the same way that I attack my first playthrough of a level in a game: by testing the boundaries. The plan was to see everything before delving into the stuff that really intrigued me. In this case, my typically reliable inclination to parallel any situation to gaming led to my downfall.

 

CES is huge. The event is located at the Las Vegas Convention Center, and I managed to make it from the entrance to the back wall of the showroom floor in about 15 minutes. That's when I realized there was an upstairs area that mirrored my recent trek. I didn't even know about the other building next door, also full of exhibits and booths, or that this second building was merely the "center walkway" connecting where I had entered in the South to the North side of the Convention. I hadn’t grabbed a map, so each new discovery was like reaching the top of a mountain only to find yourself still short of the peak. Suddenly those signs I had seen earlier for "golf cart rides" made sense.

Booth after booth beckoned, but I was intent on getting a feel for the different sections and divisions before settling on an area to explore in detail. The largest booths were from industry leaders like Sony, Samsung, and Verizon, displaying huge banks of TVs that flashed pretty colors across the showroom floors and beckoned passers-by to pick up 3D glasses for a peek at the future. In between these heavy hitters were smaller booths, hocking gadgets and gidgets of every sort, some of it nearly indistinguishable from the goofy kind of crap that you might see at your county fair.

My search for game booths brought me past...

3D everything. Want it or not, everyone is going to give it to you. Perhaps an increase in production and competition will drive down the costs a bit....

The first thing I saw when I walked in was this guy on his phone playing a shooter that he was pico projecting against a wall...very cool.

Glasses-free 3D, finally! They tell me I just have to be standing riiiight there. No wait, to the right a little. Little more. Can you kinda see it? Sigh.

Surely, this can't be a real thing, can it?

It's a real thing.

Aside from all the 3D, many proclaimed this year’s CES "the year of the tablet." Here’s the Razer Switchblade.


Continue on to page two for booth babes, tasers, doodads you strap on your head, and Peter's conclusions.

 
Pages: /2
1 2 >
4
BITMOB'S SPONSOR
Adsense-placeholder
Comments (0)
You must log in to post a comment. Please register or Connect with Facebook if you do not have an account yet.