CEATEC 2012 wrap-up: concept cars, eye-tracking tech and motion sensors galore
CEATEC, Japan's largest annual electronics show, is winding down here on the outskirts of Tokyo. We've spent the past two days scouring the halls of the Makuhari Messe, digging up no shortage of concept cars, eye-tracking technologies and even the odd Windows 8 device. The star of the show may have been Japanese carrier NTT DoCoMo, with its gaze-controlled prototypes and real-time translation app, but there were plenty of other gadgets on hand to peak our interest -- even if many of them won't make it to market anytime soon. Have a look for yourself by browsing our complete CEATEC 2012 coverage past the break.
Hands-on with Sharp's new 443ppi 5-inch and 498ppi 6.1-inch smartphone displays
KDDI's smartphone palm authentication app unveiled at CEATEC 2012
Fujitsu Lifebook UH75 running Windows 8 at CEATEC (hands-on video)
Toyota's Smart Insect concept EV packs Kinect motion sensor, voice recognition
Fujitsu eye-tracking tech with built-in motion sensor hands-on
NEC Medias Tab UL runs Android 4.0, weighs just over half a pound
NTT DoCoMo translation app converts languages in real time (hands-on)
Rohm 5Wh hydrogen fuel cells power up smartphones, ready for the trash after one charge
Researchers show off robotic suit powered by pneumatic artificial muscles
Alps Electric integrates motion sensors and eye detection into vehicle of the future (video)
NHK demonstrates 8K 3D digital binoculars: 16x 'lossless' zoom at 1080p (hands-on)
Panasonic shows off foldable Windows 8 Ultrabook hybrid, launches October 26 (hands-on)
Nissan NSC-2015 self-driving car with LTE and smartphone connectivity (test-ride with video)
Panasonic's 7.5mm-thick, 100-lumen laser projector module claims world's thinnest title
Nippon Electric Glass demos liquid crystal lens and 'invisible glass' at CEATEC (video)
Mitsumi exhibits micro-vibration power generator and batteryless RF switch (video)
Sharp 'Moth Eye' LCD Panel demo shows off future HDTVs with less glare
Zach Honig and Richard Lai contributed to this report.