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+18 +1
CES 2017: What to expect at the biggest tech trade show of the year
TVs, drones, and self-driving cars invade Las Vegas
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+17 +1
This is Lenovo’s Windows Holographic VR headset
Lenovo just showed us its first VR headset, a prototype device that works with Microsoft’s Windows Holographic platform. Next to other tethered PC headsets like the Oculus Rift or the HTC Vive, it’s noticeably smaller and lighter — Lenovo says it’s targeting around 350g for the final product’s weight versus the Vive’s 555g. The design is also pretty comfortable, taking heavy inspiration from PlayStation VR’s approach and suspending the lenses in front of the user’s eyes rather than securing them in place with a strap.
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+26 +1
CES 2017: Faraday Future unveils super fast electric car
Start-up Faraday Future unveils a self-driving electric car that it says can accelerate from zero to 60mph faster than Tesla's Model S
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+7 +1
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai canceled his appearance at CES because of death threats
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai canceled his scheduled appearance at a major upcoming tech industry trade show after receiving death threats, two agency sources told Recode on Thursday. It’s the second known incident in which Pai’s safety may have been at risk, after a bomb threat abruptly forced the chairman to halt his controversial vote to scrap the U.S. government’s net neutrality rules in December 2017.
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+41 +1
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai canceled his appearance at CES because of death threats
The threats have intensified following an FCC vote to repeal net neutrality rules.
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+21 +1
Google is gearing up for an Alexa fight at CES
We’re still a ways away from the official start of CES 2018, but the news is already starting to trickle out and everybody is setting up for the big show. And if the parking lot outside of the Las Vegas convention center is any indication, one of the biggest shows this year is coming from a company that has historically stayed quiet at CES: Google.
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+16 +1
I tried the first phone with an in-display fingerprint sensor
After an entire year of speculation about whether Apple or Samsung might integrate the fingerprint sensor under the display of their flagship phones, it is actually China’s Vivo that has gotten there first. At CES 2018, I got to grips with the first smartphone to have this futuristic tech built in, and I was left a little bewildered by the experience.
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+9 +1
Samsung's huge 146-inch TV is called The Wall
With new MicroLED display technology, this massive TV at CES 2018 is composed of modules that allow it to grow even bigger.
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+25 +1
CES Was Full of Useless Robots and Machines That Don’t Work
This year’s electronics expo promised a ‘better life’ and ‘better world.’ It instead offered a folding machine that can’t fold sweatshirts.
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+11 +1
All of the amazingly terrible slogans of CES 2018
CES was full of gadgets, and terrible advertising.
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+13 +1
CES 2019: what to expect from the biggest tech show of the year
CES 2019 is upon us, and The Verge is headed back to Las Vegas to bring you all of the news from the gadget-filled electronics show next week. This year’s conference is shaping up to be more of an iterative event; we should see plenty of improvements to existing services and products like PCs and smart home devices, but no major overhauls or groundbreaking gadgets are expected this time around. Expect to see more folding phones, more devices with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant built in, and the continued development of the smart home. Here’s a full glimpse of what we’re expecting to see at CES 2019.
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+12 +1
LG’s new OLED TVs: true 4K/120Hz, variable refresh rates, HDMI 2.1, more
LG has announced its TV lineup in the lead-up to the 2019 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) next week. As in other recent years, the company has split its lineup between LCD and OLED models, and the OLED models are generally the most interesting. This year, LG's OLEDs and certain high-end LCD TVs will support HDMI 2.1, allowing them to display 4K content at 120Hz over HDMI.
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+22 +1
Samsung’s 75-inch MicroLED 4K TV is a huge step into the future
After launching an enormous MicroLED TV called The Wall at last year’s CES, Samsung has returned in 2019 with a smaller, 75-inch 4K TV that’s a far more practical fit for the living room. It uses the same MicroLED foundation as The Wall, combining “individual tiles of self-emissive MicroLEDs, featuring millions of inorganic red, green and blue microscopic LED chips that emit their own bright light to produce brilliant colors on screen.” There’s no backlight required, so MicroLED displays can be incredibly thin.
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+23 +1
Everything is too complicated
It’s CES time again, with a flood of gadget news set to arrive when the industry’s biggest tech show kicks off later this afternoon. As usual, it’s easy to see the broad outlines of the show already: tons of new devices that support Google Assistant and Alexa, a flood of nonsense 5G news, and the TV industry trying to make people care about 8K after finally hitting mass adoption of 4K.
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+16 +1
Apple promotes HomeKit at CES with press event to highlight new smart home accessories coming in 2019
As reported by TechCrunch, Apple is pushing HomeKit hard at CES this year. It coordinated with manufacturers to demo key new HomeKit smart home announcements to the tech press. Apple HomeKit has been criticized in the past for having a relatively small ecosystem of compatible accessories. In 2017, Apple made it easier for accessory makers to get HomeKit accessories approved, and the fruits of that labor are finally paying off.
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+16 +1
Robotic dildo barred from top tech showcase, prompting sexism claims
CES organizers withdrew an award for the Osé personal massager despite spotlight on male-focused sex tech
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+26 +1
A robotic-sex-toy company accused the world's biggest tech show of sexism after being stripped of an innovation award
A robotic sex toy had its innovation award revoked at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, prompting accusations of sexism. The Osé hands-free personal massager is the first product made by Lora DiCarlo, a company that describes itself as "a woman-run start-up" that is "determined to change the face of pleasure products."
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+25 +1
Impossible Burger 2.0 tastes too real for this vegetarian
Commentary: I haven't eaten beef in a decade, and the new fake meat at CES comes close enough to cow to gross me out. That's a compliment, I think.
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+25 +1
Skin printer wipes years from your face
Procter & Gamble has developed a handheld device that precisely covers blemishes.
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+24 +1
In a Sea of Plastic and Metal, a Block of Wood Stands Out at CES 2019
What does it mean that one of my favorite demos at CES 2019 — the world’s foremost technology show — was a block of wood? Maybe that I’ve been spending too much time in my garage with a table saw. Maybe that we’re collectively suffering from a bad case of screen fatigue. Maybe both. But if the crowd surrounding Mui is any indication, I’m not the only one smitten with the Kyoto-based company’s head-smackingly simple approach to technology.
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