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- Duration: 4:14
- Published: 08 Jan 2011
- Uploaded: 22 Mar 2011
- Author: AssociatedPress
Name | Consumer Electronics Show |
---|---|
Status | Active |
Genre | Consumer electronics |
Venue | Las Vegas Convention Center |
Location | Las Vegas, Nevada |
Country | USA |
First | 1967 |
Organizer | Consumer Electronics Association |
Attendance | 140,000 |
Website | www.cesweb.org |
The International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is a major technology-related trade show held each January in the Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada. Not open to the public, the Consumer Electronics Association-sponsored show typically hosts previews of products and new product announcements. CES rose to prominence after COMDEX was canceled.
The winter show was successfully held in Las Vegas in 1995 as planned. However, since the summer Chicago shows were beginning to lose popularity, the organizers decided to experiment by having the show travel around to different cities starting in 1995 with a planned show in Philadelphia at the Pennsylvania Convention Center. However, the inaugural E3 gaming show was scheduled to be held on the West Coast that same weekend and many exhibitors protested, causing the Philly Summer CES show to be cancelled. The 1996 Winter show was again held in Las Vegas in January, followed by a Summer show this time in Orlando, Florida, however only a fraction of the traditional exhibitors participated. Again, the 1997 Winter show in Las Vegas was very successful. The next "Summer" show was scheduled to be held in conjunction with Spring COMDEX in Atlanta, Georgia, however when only two dozen-or-so exhibitors signed on, the CES portion of the show was cancelled.
In 1998, the show changed to a once-a-year format with Las Vegas as the location. In Las Vegas, the show is one of the largest (the other being CONEXPO-CON/AGG), taking up to 18 days to set up, run and break down.
Samsung showed off a plasma television.
Zimiti Ltd (renamed Boardbug Ltd in 2007) won the "Best of Innovators" award for Personal Electronics. It is the only British company to have won this award.
Attendance was over 150,000 individuals in 1.67 million net square feet of space, making it the largest electronics event in the United States.
The location for the main keynotes was the other major change for 2007. Previously held at the Las Vegas Hilton's Main Theater, they staged for the first time at The Palazzo Ballroom in The Venetian. Bill Gates gave his ninth pre-show keynote address on the Sunday evening. The opening keynote was presented by Gary Shapiro (President/CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association, which hosts the event), with Ed Zander, Chairman/CEO of Motorola. Other keynote speakers scheduled included Robert Iger from The Walt Disney Company, Michael Dell, founder of Dell Inc., and Leslie Moonves of CBS.
Finally, Industry Insider presentations moved to the Las Vegas Hilton, with contributions from Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, CEO of Nokia and John Chambers, CEO of Cisco.
In the gaming section for Windows Vista and DirectX 10, there were two games shown: Age of Conan and Crysis.
Panasonic attracted much attention by releasing a 150" Plasma TV, as well as a 50" TV as thin as 0.46 in. (11.6 mm).
Several highlights include organic light-emitting diode (OLED) televisions, the Palm Pre, pico projectors, the Marvell SheevaPlug plug computer, and 3D projectors.
The Minoru 3D Webcam, a USB webcam that is billed as the world's first stereoscopic 3D consumer stereo webcam won the "Fans Favorite" award. Dell introduced its Dell Adamo subnotebook.
The game show Jeopardy! filmed one episode from the celebrity series and the 2009 Tournament of Champions in a new set at the Sony booth. The set was moved to their main studio at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, California for their 26th season.
CES 2009 suffered 22 percent or more attendance drop, which was attributed to the global financial crisis.
Highlights include the Intel Infoscape, which is run on the Intel Core i7 processor. One computer ran two 7-foot screens, displaying 576 cubes hooked up to 20,000 info sources, including 20 live video feeds. Visitors would touch one of the cubes, and an infobox displaying that content would come forward. One journalist explained, "The graphics on the giant screens were a tons of fun to move around with their uncanny quickness and smooth motion, and the whole thing felt super responsive, Giving us a peek into the future, it seemed a lot like that computer screen in the movie Minority Report. It was the most spectacular demo we saw at CES 2010."
Sustainable Planet grew by 40% in 2010.
Many tablets were introduced in 2011's show, including the Motorola Xoom tablet, which will run Android 3 and a possible new "iPad 2". Also, many 4G phones were unveiled at the show, including the LG Revolution, Samsung Infuse, HTC Thunderbolt, Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc, Motorola Cliq 2, Motorola Droid Bionic, and Motorola Atrix 4G.
Category:Trade shows in the United States Category:Las Vegas conventions and trade shows Category:Recurring events established in 1967 Category:Consumer electronics Category:Computer-related trade shows
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