Ces2008

Latest

  • Crapgadget CES edition, round 2: the MP5 player

    by 
    Joshua Topolsky
    Joshua Topolsky
    01.10.2008

    When four MPs aren't enough... now with RealPlayer support!

  • Bumblebee spotted on CES floor

    by 
    Joshua Topolsky
    Joshua Topolsky
    01.10.2008

    The Transformers' Bumblebee showed up on the CES show floor this year, though we have to say he was more than a little worse for wear. According to reports, he'd been out drinking all night with David Caruso at the Bellagio, and couldn't find his keys when he woke up... which we're sure you can imagine is a major problem for him. When we requested an interview, the alien robot claimed he wasn't feeling too well, and asked if we had a swimming pool and two gigantic Alka-Seltzer tablets.

  • Note to Intel: leave the bike-building to OCC

    by 
    Evan Blass
    Evan Blass
    01.10.2008

    This is what happens when Intel tries to design a vehicle without the help of Orange County Choppers.

  • The fugliest laptop you'll see all day

    by 
    Evan Blass
    Evan Blass
    01.10.2008

    The goggles... they do nothing.

  • UTStarcom's CES 2008 booth tour

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    01.09.2008

    In terms of layout, UTStarcom's booth is close to a dead ringer for its showing at last year's CES; just the promos and handsets have changed, basically. The darlings of the show have to be the HSM180, an absolutely bizarre HSDPA candybar featuring two circles for a keypad, and the TXT8010, a QWERTY slider with an attitude for CDMA networks. Check 'em out, yo.%Gallery-13261%

  • Hands-on with the LimePC

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    01.09.2008

    THTF (which stands for Tsinghua Tongfang, if you must know) is at CES showing its LimePC series of simple, lightweight computers, and we took a particular interest in three of 'em, ordered by size from largest to smallest: the UMPC, HandheldPC, and PalmPC (pictured) models. All three pack an uber-low power mobileGT core from Freescale, WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR, and touchscreen displays; the Palm PC and HandheldPC feature either 8 or 16GB of Flash, while the UMPC upgrades to a hard drive between 30 and 100GB in capacity. Though both the hardware and the Linux-based software were extremely raw here, we see promise in these totally hackable little beasts -- particularly in the smaller of the two, both of which are totally pocketable. Check out the gallery to see all three doing their thing.%Gallery-13271%

  • THX's CES 2008 booth tour

    by 
    Steven Kim
    Steven Kim
    01.09.2008

    We took a stroll through the THX booth, where they were showing off all sorts of audio Jedi magic. In-car audio got some attention, evidenced by the Lincoln MKS at the booth featuring THX tech. Worry not, though, the living room experience hasn't been forgotten.%Gallery-13255%

  • Butt-on with the ButtKicker

    by 
    Barb Dybwad
    Barb Dybwad
    01.09.2008

    Let's be honest, gaming chairs in all flavors of "enhancement" from vibration to sound to cup holders and beyond are quickly becoming a dime a dozen -- but the ButtKicker not only takes a different approach to vibration enhancement than other options but also wins the "most notable name" award in the arena. For one thing, it's not a chair -- it's a device you can install on any office chair to add vibration experience to not just gaming but anything producing sound on your computer including music and other media players. There are also two other versions of the device for use in home theater and auto installations (you can retrofit pretty much any old Lazy-boy in your living room). At $99 the gaming-focused version of the ButtKicker is cheaper than a lot of all-in-one gaming chair solutions as well. Oh, and how does the thing feel? Let's just say it tickled us in many nuanced ways.%Gallery-13283%

  • Video: eCoupled not demoing its wireless power system

    by 
    Nilay Patel
    Nilay Patel
    01.09.2008

    We were totally stoked to see eCoupled's "Intelligent Wireless Power" system in action -- the rep even said they'd try and cook us a burger on their wireless Foreman grill -- but when Veronica got there, "power fluctuations" kept them from demoing anything more than a Zune that lit up when placed directly on a charging pad. VB was way too nice to call them out on video, but come on -- you don't run around promising wireless burgers and then barely compete with a WildCharger. Check out Veronica's barely-concealed boredom after the break.

  • Crapgadget CES edition, round 1: the Mini Phone

    by 
    Joshua Topolsky
    Joshua Topolsky
    01.09.2008

    The Mini Phone. Just like a regular landline phone, but a little bit smaller.

  • Samsung's CES 2008 booth tour

    by 
    Thomas Ricker
    Thomas Ricker
    01.09.2008

    Despite the shadow of justifiable hype cast by Panasonic's 150-inch TV, Pioneer's 9-mm thin and "extreme contrast" prototype plasmas, Samsung still managed to make a respectable (yet quiet) showing at CES 2008. After all, it's not every day we see a pair of 31- and 14-inch OLED TVs, a touch-screen RTS-A1100 Media Center beauty, and 82-inch quadHD and 52-inch Ultra Slim LCDs. They've even tamed their usual push of "world's first, fastest, biggest, etc." boasting... a bit. But hey, it wouldn't be Samsung if they didn't crow a little.%Gallery-13272%

  • CES 2008: Most random booth gimmick award

    by 
    Barb Dybwad
    Barb Dybwad
    01.09.2008

    Mind you, we've seen no shortage of crazy antics to grab attendee attention out on the show floor (P.T. Barnum would be very, very proud), but this year's award for randomest booth gimmick goes to wall mounting solutions company Vantage Point, who (rather successfully) drew their flock via this oxygen bar in their booth. We did overhear them get a lot of product inquiries out of the deal... about where to buy an oxygen bar (but we're sure the mental road to wall mounting curiosity is super short).

  • IntelliCorder 0 Door Camcorder System is a really expensive peephole

    by 
    Christopher Grant
    Christopher Grant
    01.09.2008

    Knock, knock. Who's there?The IntelliCorder 0 Door Camcorder System which replaces your perfectly functional (and affordable!) door peephole with a $150 battery powered camera and 1-1/2-inch screen.... get the hell away from my house before I call the cops.

  • Hands-on with Samsung's Q1 Ultra UMPC

    by 
    Joshua Topolsky
    Joshua Topolsky
    01.09.2008

    Meet the WiBrain B1's bigger, meaner brother -- the Samsung Q1 Ultra. We've been lovingly gazing at pictures of this behemoth for some time now, but we finally got a chance to toss it around at ye old CES this year. Truth? It's kind of messed up looking, and that keypad isn't any easier to use than it looks. For some reason, Samsung thought the layout should slant downward, but we can't say why. At any rate, the model we had was running Vista -- if a bit slowly -- and had a pretty nice looking display. Hit the gallery and see the goods for yourself. %Gallery-13260%

  • Eyes-on: Samsung's 82-inch QuadHD & 52-inch Ultra Slim LCDs

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    01.09.2008

    Samsung can join Hitachi while crying into their sake as its 52-inch "thinnest non-OLED HDTV ever" is around 4x as thick as Pioneer's 9mm heroin-chic Kuro. Take heart Sammy, because your 82-inch -- and btw, what is with the 82-inch obsession (2005 & 2006 CES), we need to talk about that -- Quad HD display is like looking out of a window, if we had bigger and cleaner windows. Check out the gallery to see what we mean.%Gallery-13265%

  • Hands-on with Denon's super-separates

    by 
    Steven Kim
    Steven Kim
    01.09.2008

    If the idea of a receiver is just too lowbrow for you, check out Denon's processor/amplifier separates, the AVP/POA-A1HDCI ('AVP' for the processor, 'POA' for the amp). Six HDMI 1.3 inputs, two parallel HDMI outputs and Silicon Optix Realta video processing are some processor highlights; the amp packs in 10 channels at 150-watts. While you're at it, why settle for a Blu-ray player when you can get a dedicated transport? That back panel picture of the DVD-2500BTCI is no prototype unit -- all you get is a power cord, HDMI output, and RS-232. Spin those bits off the Blu-ray disc and send them on to the AVP-A1HDCI for decoding. Pricing is securely in the "if you have to ask..." category: $7k for the AVP-A1HDCI, $7k for the POA-A1HDCI and $1200 for the DVD-2500BTCI.%Gallery-13251%

  • Digital Photo Frame Watch, it's a watch and a photo frame

    by 
    Christopher Grant
    Christopher Grant
    01.09.2008

    Finally, you can throw out that slide carousel you've kept strapped to your wrist for the last two decades and replace it with the absolute latest in cutting edge digital photo frame technology. Introducing the aptly titled Digital Photo Frame Watch, whose packaging promises "It's a real watch." But wait, it gets better. This "real watch" stores 140 pictures in its copious 2MB of internal memory, all for playback on its no doubt gorgeous OLED color display. This is the future, folks. It's here. We've seen it. And it shows pictures.On your wrist.

  • NEC has its own 2880x900 curved gaming display

    by 
    Christopher Grant
    Christopher Grant
    01.09.2008

    We feel sorry for poor NEC. While everyone at CES is busy buzzing about Alienware's gorgeous curved DLP display (including us), NEC is quietly showing off its CRVD-42DWX+ display that's more or less identical: a 2880x900 (double WXGA+) panel with a contrast ratio of 10000:1. We're assuming they're both built by the same ODM, Ostendo, so hopefully some healthy competition will help bring one of these two beauties within your meager gaming budget. Unfortunately, like the Alienware model, there's no pricing or shipping information. Ogle some more pics in our gallery below.%Gallery-13275%

  • Hands-on with Qualcomm's Snapdragon-powered "Anchorage"

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    01.09.2008

    We sat down with one of Qualcomm's fancy new reference designs today, the Anchorage QWERTY slider phone. Let's be perfectly clear -- the Inventec-crafted device won't ever see the light of day in this exact form, Qualcomm just needed some eye candy with which to demonstrate its new Snapdragon platform. The chipset features a highly specialized and customized ARM-based core and graphics from ATI -- both actually licensed this time around, we're told -- and tries to take advantage of as many technologies that Snapdragon offers as possible: MediaFLO support, blazing clock speeds (1GHz to be exact), high resolutions (SVGA here), and the list goes on. Snapdragon-powered devices should hit retail from HTC and Samsung by the end of the year. Click on for pics, just don't get too attached since this is as close as you'll ever get to it, alright?%Gallery-13243%

  • Video: Downloading content with Blu-ray interactive

    by 
    Nilay Patel
    Nilay Patel
    01.09.2008

    It's pretty cheery in the Blu-ray camp this year, for several reasons -- and one of them is the launch of BD Live. We're not exactly certain why they picked downloadable ringtones from Godzilla as the demo, but Veronica was brave enough to sit through the lowest point of Matthew Broderick's career to snag us this demo. Check it all out after the break!Update: Sorry, YouTube was being a little balky -- video's up again!