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Every year my husband and I attend the Consumer Electronic
(CES) in Las Vegas to see the latest and greatest high tech gadgets. This year
didn't disappoint. We found everything from a Leggett & Platt's $20,000
Starry Night bed with an HDTV projector, pop-up speakers, snoring sensors, iPod
dock, automatic lighting system, and breathing pattern monitor to a General
Motors Chevy Tahoe prototype car that drove itself. While I don't expect this
GM prototype to make it to market anytime soon, some of the technology that it
is built in will evolve and is sure to find its way into our future
automobiles.
We also found a few more down-to-earth gadgets and gizmos.
In fact, there were several devices that you may want to check out for your own
gaggle of high tech products. For instance, if you hate cleaning the gutters, the
iRobot Looj has you covered. This robotic gutter cleaner cleans a 60-foot
section of gutter in just 10 minutes. Yes, you must use a ladder to place it in
position, but you don't have to move the ladder multiple times as you do in
regular gutter cleaning. The demos looked marvelous. iRobot also have robotic
vacuum cleaners and floor scrubbers.
Although we have been hearing about wireless technologies
for what seems to be ions, this year some of that wireless technology became
mainstream. Wireless speakers, which up to now were feeble and erratic, have
finally found their voice. The Griffin Evolve is a great example. It is a
compact speaker system for an iPod. It has two wireless speaker cubes that can
be placed in any room in the house. It sounds great and is also easy to use. At
about $300, this is a great solution to distribute music from your iPod
throughout the house.
While prices of technology gadgets continue to drop, it
seems that ink for that inexpensive ink jet printer often costs more than the
printer itself. Well, thanks to Kodak, this trend may be coming to an end. The
new Kodak printers are said to use 50% less ink and ink cartridges are
reasonably priced at $15 for color and $10 for black.
Polaroid, another
well-known name in photography has also released a breakthrough product. Their
new inkless printer is made for printing pictures from a cell phone or digital
camera. Not only does the printer use Bluetooth wireless technology, but it
uses special paper that is embedded with 100 billion colored dye crystals. The
colors appear when the printer applies heat pulses to the paper. This ink-less
technology is called Zink, for zero ink. The 2-inch-by-3-inch prints cost about
30 cents each and the printer sells for $150, which is not bad for cutting-edge
technology.
Although computers are not
the focus of the CES show, there were many computer manufacturers showing their
wares. Lenovo, the Chinese company who bought IBM's PC division three years ago
has previously focused on their ThinkPad business laptops, but this year they introduced
a line of consumer laptops called IdeaPads. These include facial recognition
technology. Lenovo, Sony, and others will follow Dell's lead with the
introduction of laptops in a variety of bright colors.
Bright colors were the norm
at the show. There were MP3 players, cell phone, and gadget covers in every
color imaginable. There were red and blue ladybug-shaped iPod speakers and
speakers that pulsated to the beat in vibrating, changing colors. There was
even pink CAT-5 networking cable, whose purchase supports the National Breast
Cancer Foundation.
Oh, and you can expect to
be even more confused by television display technologies in the future. Sony's
$2500, 11-inch Organic light Emitting Diode (OLED) was small but clearly better
than anything else on the market today..... and it was only as thick as 3 credit
cards. Mitsubishi's laser television was also a dramatic improvement. Samsung
and Sharp announced backlit LCD televisions. While these technologies may take
awhile to go mainstream, other manufacturer's announced Internet-enabled
televisions that are sure to appear quite quickly. For instance, the Sharp
Aquos Net television displays small icons called widgets that showed news,
weather, and traffic data from the Internet right on the television screen.
Also next year, when digital television goes mainstream you will see digital TV
broadcasting in a variety of devices including cell phones, cars, buses, and anything
else they can possible think of. One car at the show already had TV's in every
door and drop-down television screens for every passenger.
While we may not all be
interested in watching television all the time, we will find some of these new
technologies making our lives just a little more pleasurable in the future.
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