Tablet PCs, 3D, Netbooks Will Be at Forefront of CES (
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When the Consumer Electronics Show kicks off in Las
Vegas Jan. 7, technology companies large and small
will crowd into the Las Vegas Convention
Center and auxiliary sites to show off their
latest wares. With about 110,000 attendees and nearly 3,000 exhibitors, it's
fair to say the three-day event will be epic. Keynote addresses will be given
by Intel President Paul Otellini, Microsoft CEO
Steve Ballmer, and Ford President and CEO
Alan Mulally.
The following are some of the broader trends to expect at the show:
3D attempts to enter the mainstream
Three-dimensional video is apparently, not just for movie theaters anymore;
if the number of companies announcing 3D-capable screens at CES is any
indication, manufacturers will be pushing 3D for home and office use throughout
2010 and beyond.
"There are lots of geographies where you see [the technology]
coming," Accenture analyst Jean Laurent Poitou said in a Jan. 4 interview
with eWEEK, suggesting that manufacturers would introduce a slew of 3D products.
"There's [a lot] of [3D] content being developed for the next 12 to 18
months."
Throughout 2009, a number of hardware manufacturers have been demonstrating
3D screens at conventions and product rollouts. Before the Windows 7 launch on
Oct. 22 in New York, for example, Acer demonstrated a range of 3D-capable PCs
for an eWEEK reporter; during the event itself, media was invited to play "Batman: Arkham Asylum"
on a 3D widescreen.
But the number of manufacturers debuting 3D wares may only increase in 2010.
In a Jan. 4 Smarter
Technology article, R. Colin Johnson suggested that Panasonic, Mitsubishi,
LG Electronics and Samsung will be among the companies debuting 3D televisions
at CES. At the same time, the Blu-ray
Disc Association has "drafted 3D extensions that maintain backward
compatibility by allowing existing Blu-ray drives to play 3D discs in
conventional 2D format," and the HDMI (high-definition multimedia
interface) licensing group has drafted new specifications permitting 3D signals
to be broadcast over existing HDMI cables.
If companies are gearing up for a possible surge of interest in 3D, however,
there are also some warning signs that the technology could be more fad than
trend. Johnson cited a subset of cinema-goers experiencing nausea while
watching James Cameron's "Avatar"
in 3D, and at least one manufacturer—Philips—decided to shut down its 3D television
development.
Tablet PCs
Despite Apple's refusal to confirm any stories that it intends to produce a
tablet PC in 2010, the rumors about the device have reached the point where the
biggest surprise, frankly, would be the company announcing that it has no
intention of manufacturing what has been variously referred to by outsiders as
the "iSlate" or "iTablet."
Those rumors currently suggest that Apple has rented the stage at Yerba
Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco
at the end of January, and will likely debut the tablet then. Whether or not
that will take place, it is definite that other companies are using CES to
announce their own multitouch tablet PCs for the coming year.
On Jan. 4, embedded semiconductor manufacturer Freescale
Semiconductor announced that it would debut a 7-inch touch-screen tablet PC at
CES, priced at less than $200 and powered by Freescale's i.MX515 processor
incorporating ARM Cortex-A8 technology. The
tablet features Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless connectivity, 512MB memory, USB
2.0 and USB mini ports, 4GB to 64GB of
internal storage and a 3-megapixel camera with video recording.