Archive for January, 2008

Gizmodo (and others) Best CES Booths Roundup

Gizmodo has a nice top 10 booths of CES roundup. I would bet this is the only gallery of its kind in which Peter Frampton is depicted as a “top booth”.

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EDIT - And Engadget added something of a booth gallery, too.

Or you can just check out the rapidly growing Flickr pool tagged CES2008.

CES Prank - A Quick Lesson for Exhibitors

The bloggers from Gizmodo ran amok at CES with a tiny portable IR transmitter that shuts down almost any TV screen in sight. The fact that CES, with 1.85million square feet of TELEVISIONS wasn’t prepared for this even though the devices have been around for years, is fairly surprising.

This sort of prank isn’t unique to CES, so exhibitors at any show will want to heed this vivid warning and block their IR ports. In the meantime, I have to work on not laughing every time I see this video of the prank in action.

EDIT - The blogger has been officially banned from CES, and additional actions against Gizmodo may also be taken.

Reactrix Shows New Gesture Tech at CES

Reactrix, a gesture-based interactive signage company who is best known for their permanent interactive floor installations in malls all over the USA, partnered with Samsung at CES to showcase a new product called WAVEscape. Clearly a competitive offering to Gesturetek’s Gestpoint, the WAVEscape appears to be considerably easier to stage. You simply hang a 3D Infrared sensor bar above the screen and you’re ready to go (I think). The sensor can detect hands and fingers in 3D so it can react to motion such as a horizontal sweep or a forward point, which it would probably interpret as a mouse click. It appears to work with several people at once.

The video at Gizmodo makes it look fairly decent, although it suffers from the same awkward lag that Gesturetek’s products can have when the application isn’t well-tuned. They demonstrate the device being used in a “box the panda game” (has PETA seen this?), a traditional point-and-click application, and virtual volleyball.

As a method for creating a compelling interactive experience, with one or more participants, this looks like another promising offering. Is it as intuitive and slick as Microsoft Surface? Not even close - but it can service a larger crowd, will probably work through storefront windows, and is much easier to hang on a wall. It is also much easier to keep clean!

CNET has a nice article about it, too.

CES 2008 - Portable Floor-rising Screen

It’s magic, and I want one for presentations. It’s a motorized screen that you carry into a room, plop it down on the floor, and an 84 or 100″ screen rises out of it like a charmed snake. See the video at Gizmodo.

Before:

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After:

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CES 2008 Little PC Roundup

UMPC Portal published a nice roundup of the Ultra Mobile PC and Mobile Internet Devices at CES 2008.

You may be asking “what do I do with these little things?”. Most people ask that question. That’s why you can’t find them in stores. At least… not in this country.

The rest of the world gets it. They’re great because they’re small, light, easy, and cool. They run familiar things like Vista and Word and Firefox and PowerPoint. And because they can’t quite squeeze all that into your phone. Yet…

LG/Philips Salvo at Microsoft Surface

This 52″ Multitouch screen that LG/Philips showcased at CES appears at first to trump the Microsoft Surface product, at least in terms of a multitouch interactive display device. Surface is a coffee table, whereas this is a wall-mount display. Surface is, again, a coffee table, and this is a flat panel display. They both offer multi-touch. But when you watch the video below you notice several big differences. The surface interface demos have been optimized for intuitive behavior. If you place your hand on an image and drag your hand it moves the image with your hand. In the LG/Philips demo, the hand movements of the presenter and the google earth images on display are not intuitively connected. Also, he regularly struggles with the interface which is the exact opposite experience of Surface. Frankly, I could have brought up the images he requested far faster with a traditional mouse and keyboard, so what’s the point?

The Surface team has been very careful to make sure they design applications that use the technology effectively and appropriately. They step back and ask themselves “could I do this as well or better with a mouse and keyboard or a traditional touch screen?” and “Am I adding value or adding to the experience with this technology”.

The best part of seeing this video is the fact that other companies are getting inspired to join the party. Multi-touch interfaces are a big part of our man-machine interface future, and like the iPhone, Surface is creative very positive activity in the research labs of their competitors. Now I think they need to pick up the pace!

Thanks again, Engadget.

The Optimus Maximus at CES

Engadget published a terrific video of the Optimus Maximus keyboard at CES. You may recall that this keyboard has tiny full-color displays inside each key cap that allows they keyboard to change its appearance for different applications, user preferences, languages, etc.

In this video, the inventor Art Lebedev describes much of the functionality, and makes it really appealing to anyone working with macro-intensive applications (Photoshop, edit software, etc), gamers, etc. As I mentioned a year ago, there must be a way for a company to buy the rights to display their logo on one of those keys and drive traffic to their website, in return for subsidizing the cost of the device. That sponsor could even change that logo remotely to reflect special promotions (Woot! - are you listening? I need a woot-off key!).

I’m assuming that the key labels can change when you depress the ctrl, shift, and alt keys - making the process of finding those obscure macro keys and shortcuts far easier.

Now… if only Mr. Lebedev would send me one to review extensively…

Why WiMAX?

What do these devices have in common?

A teeny portable media player called mTube:

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A glossy next gen mobile phone:

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A cheap Eee laptop PC:

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They all have WiMAX installed. WiMAX is, put simply, city-wide Wifi coming to a neighborhood near you. It’s not “wifi” in that it won’t work with your wifi devices - they have to be WiMAX devices. But this means your customers, and employees will have all kinds of mobile connectivity all the time. This is another part of the shift to the small screen, and it’s part of the reason behind Google’s frantic maneuvers to own a piece of the small screen. And it’s happening fast.

via multiple sources including Engadget and Ubergizmo

iPod Podcast Producer

Another gadget from CES - this one makes it easy for you to record podcasts on your iPod with “professional” results.
You probably should be thinking about podcasting. You probably need to think about the quality of the content far more than you need to think about cool (but kinda cornball) devices like this:

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via Engadget

Xerox Rebrands After 40 Years

Saw this note among the Engadget CES feeds:
Xerox has unveiled a new logo which, for the first time in 40 years, eliminates the signature capital X from their brand. Engadget wasn’t very nice about it, claiming that it’s just like everyone else’s. I’m not so sure about that, but what a bold move. The New York Times has a nice historical view on the logo evolution which was capped by the recent change by agency Interbrand (Omnicom). The change was the result of 18 months of work and 5,000 customer interviews. Here’s the full press release.

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and old

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EDIT: And XBOX

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