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IDontUseTheForumSoWhyAmIForcedToMakeANickname
I agree with chanj that connected TV will continue to be pushed ... but I see it ...
chanj
IMO, "Connected TV" will continue be pushed this year. I agree with Sylvie that ...
What will CES 2013 bring to the tech table?
Sylvie Barak
1/4/2013 7:17 PM EST
Big data and the maker movement
The maker movement, of course, is quite closely tied to 3-D printing, but gained an additional boon from Kickstarter this year, and will only be getting more attention in the coming months.
Hardware startups who couldn’t get a dollar in funding from venture capitalists learned that the general public was much more willing to put money into hardware development and a slew of creative ideas have been emerging ever since. With sensors and LEDs becoming cheaper, designers are able to embed electronics easily into a multitude of things, and through micro-funding, makers have created a pool of interest in their products even before it is released.
Also, while it’s not strictly speaking “consumer electronics,” I believe 2013 will be the big year of data analytics, pulling and pooling data from our plethora of digital devices.
Application of analytics to everyday things like advertising, network management, fraud management, commerce, energy management, enterprise productivity, etc. will all be huge this year, and will have a significant effect on the whole tech ecosystem. Likewise, being able to do real-time analysis of terabytes of data will provide a better feedback loop into the system to gain significant benefits.
So will CES 2013 be less about shiny expensive things and more about home-made smart things and data management? Possibly. Probably. Is that a bad thing? No. It will just be a different kind of show this year.
Related Stories:
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Discussion: CES post-mortem: Fear and loathing of the show
The maker movement, of course, is quite closely tied to 3-D printing, but gained an additional boon from Kickstarter this year, and will only be getting more attention in the coming months.
Hardware startups who couldn’t get a dollar in funding from venture capitalists learned that the general public was much more willing to put money into hardware development and a slew of creative ideas have been emerging ever since. With sensors and LEDs becoming cheaper, designers are able to embed electronics easily into a multitude of things, and through micro-funding, makers have created a pool of interest in their products even before it is released.
Also, while it’s not strictly speaking “consumer electronics,” I believe 2013 will be the big year of data analytics, pulling and pooling data from our plethora of digital devices.
Application of analytics to everyday things like advertising, network management, fraud management, commerce, energy management, enterprise productivity, etc. will all be huge this year, and will have a significant effect on the whole tech ecosystem. Likewise, being able to do real-time analysis of terabytes of data will provide a better feedback loop into the system to gain significant benefits.
So will CES 2013 be less about shiny expensive things and more about home-made smart things and data management? Possibly. Probably. Is that a bad thing? No. It will just be a different kind of show this year.
Related Stories:
Discussion: A Clean Slate for CES
News: Wolfe's Den: Will Complexity Kill CES?
Discussion: Top 10 engineering Kickstarter projects
News: TransferJet vs. NFC at CES
Discussion: CES post-mortem: Fear and loathing of the show
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Bert22306
1/5/2013 7:20 PM EST
I think that most of the press misrepresent the purpose of the tablet market. I'd agree for sure that they will be a growing trend, but you only need to see that EE Times has quit publishing a printed edition to understand why.
For the longest time, we heard people saying that printed publications were great because you could read them on the bus or train in the morning commute, or any number of places where it was inconvenient to have a PC or laptop. That's where tablets come in. And the lighter and slimmer, the better. They are a replacement for printed media, not a replacement for PCs.
I agree that 3DTV is not going to be a big deal. From the start, it has always seemed like something the CE companies want to force-feed to consumers, rather than something created out of consumer deamnd.
As to "connected TVs," if Roku or Apple TV are even slightly successful, imagine what an unfettered connected TV could do, where you can avoid that separate box and really get unhampered Internet access. The only puzzling thing is why the CE companies can't figure it out.
Forget about using half-hearted solutions. If the CE companies can't figure it out, just connect a PC to the TV/audio system. PCs are cheap enough these days, TVs are perfectly capable of operating as large and bright PC monitors, and you won't be slavishly tied to any subscription service you don't specifically want.
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rick.merritt
1/5/2013 7:48 PM EST
IMHO, the center of CES is TV and the big thing in TV this year will be a move to 4k x 2k resolution TVs, supported by the new HEVC codec (MPEG-4+) at the high end.
Personally I love 3-D movies and if I was a videophile I would have a 3-D TV. With that stuff shipping, I expect the big TV makers will be showing 4Kx2K at CES as the drool-over-it display.
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rick.merritt
1/5/2013 9:59 PM EST
BTW, after an interview with ex-Wired editor Chris Anderson I am less bullish on 3-D printing. It's interesting but not the makings of the Industrial Revolution 2.0, I think
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Bert22306
1/6/2013 7:19 PM EST
Rick, I don't know if you were a Star Trek fan, but IMO, the time has not yet come for 3D printing. The problem being, 3D printing can only manufacture plastic products.
The ultimate in 3D printing would be one of those "replicators" they have in Star Trek. You give it the name of an object, even food, and it produces it. Obviously, first you have to feed it a huge assortment of raw materials.
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rick.merritt
1/7/2013 11:23 AM EST
Indeed, 3-D printing is limited to a handful of materials at present. And at the end of the day its really a prototyping tool. Full on manufacturing requires several kinds of systems and processes that are not yet fully automated.
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Frank Eory
1/7/2013 12:31 PM EST
Maybe we will see a Star Trek replicator at CES 2113 :)
But seriously, even though 3D printing is still in its infancy, I think it really could be the makings of "the industrial revolution 2.0". When the right price point and capability to do more than just plastic prototypes is reached, 3D printing will spark a lot of consumer interest -- not just the "makers" and budding entrepreneurs.
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chanj
1/7/2013 2:00 PM EST
IMO, "Connected TV" will continue be pushed this year. I agree with Sylvie that Apple TV, Roku, XBox, etc, can do the job. However, for those who would rather have 1 less device on the TV stand, connected TV is the choice. I can see the convenience and cleanness a connected TV is bringing on the table. I understand why Apple is ambitiously building a real Apple TV. The question is what kind of features will be attractive enough to get more attention from the regular users. I am looking forward to seeing the great things coming out from CES.
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IDontUseTheForumSoWhyAmIForcedToMakeANickname
1/10/2013 9:38 AM EST
I agree with chanj that connected TV will continue to be pushed ... but I see it as a stop-gap measure until somebody figures out how to do it right.
Not only do I want to see mindless content from multiple sources, but I want to record it, back it up, transfer to other locations (ie USB key & SneakerNet), I want internet access to immediate purchase items from infomercials, I want access to additional movie information (IMDB), I want to view my camera's pictures by inserting its memory card and save it for a future slideshow and finally, I want a window in the corner for live video chat with a microphone that connects via bluetooth. A connected TV (hopefully) should be able to do this, but good luck on putting in a larger hard drive or upgrading to a higher resolution webcam, etc. It's not designed to be upgraded, it's designed to be replaced ... and I'm not changing my TV every 2 or 3 years.
The focus should be on the "Disconnected TV" and the "Connected Media Hub" ... as stated earlier, the "Connected TV" is just a stop-gap until we get it right.
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