All About CES 2007

Tue Dec 12, 2006 12:25PM EST

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You've heard us Advisors rattling on about CES (Consumer Electronics Show) for months now...but unless you're the kind of person who lives and breathes tech every day (like me), you may not really understand what it is or why it's important. Allow me to give you a little intro to the show.

Since the demise of COMDEX earlier in the decade, CES has become the country's most important technology trade show. In fact, it is essentially the only important tech trade show in America any more, though a few smaller shows dedicated to phones (CTIA), cameras (PMA), and Macs (Macworld) fulfill their niches.

In recent years, CES has become monstrously huge, as large as COMDEX ever was back in its heyday (the late '90s), and increasingly important to both tech companies and tech reporters. Why? Taking place in early January, it's when the upcoming year's products are formally rolled out, with virtually ever major tech vendor officially launching multiple products at the show. For many of the hundreds of thousands of visitors, this will be their first chance to get hands-on experience with Windows Vista, with HD-DVD recorders, or with the PlayStation 3.

Those are just a few of the things we actually know are going to be at the show, and this year is the 40th anniversary of CES. CES always hides a number of surprises, the most fun of which is watching the TV vendors attempt to one-up each other on who has the largest flat-panel TV on display (last year it was 103 inches...I'm hoping to see a 120-incher this year). But most of the new products are a little more subtle. Ultra-small MP3 players, handheld satellite TVs, stylish audio gear, and next-gen wireless technology are all on tap for CES 2007. Dig into some of CES's more obscure corners (which can be difficult to do; CES covers over 1.5 million square feet of exhibit space) and you'll find bizarre oddities from all around the world, all being shown off by upstart electronics companies hoping to make their mark.

We'll bring you all of this starting on January 8 from Las Vegas, from creepy robots to "vinyl demagnetizers" to those giant TVs to more mundane affairs like PCs, laptops, cameras, and cell phones. Keep an eye on our CES coverage to see what goodies we get our hands on.

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  • 6 Posted by n6rnc on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    Yes CES is in Las Vegas Nevada Jan 8-11 If you are in the Business you or your tect need to go. Most question will be answer and If not you will get to talk to someone other the customer service. I am a small one man store and go every year. put as sign on the door going to CES see you in Two Days

  • 8 Posted by tgh9507pgk on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    2007 International CES Conference Program Pricing Ultimate Pass - BEST VALUE! $799 advance; $999 on-site Includes all CES Knowledge Track, Digital Hollywood, CES Mobile Entertainment and CES Game Power sessions Full Knowledge Track Pass $499 advance; $699 on-site Includes all CES Knowledge Track and Digital Hollywood sessions Hollywood Express Pass $699 advance; $899 on-site Includes Digital Hollywood, CES Game Power Showcase and CES Mobile Entertainment sessions Exhibits Plus Pass FREE in advance; $200 on-site Access to exhibit show floor, keynotes, SuperSessions and more than 60 conference sessions Single Session Pass $179 advance; $279 on-site

  • 10 Posted by wasupp45424 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    well 'bigdicksplace' looks like you've bought a computer at one time in your life, let the kids have fun now. You sound like your parents. Good thing you didn't settle for an 8-track player, huh?.

  • 11 Posted by bdigitalnow on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    Love your coverage of CES so far. Great help in my prepraration, which can be a little overwhelming for this great show, but I think when listing other relevant tech shows you overlook Ziff Davis Media's DigitalLife show in NYC in the fall. In just our 3rd year over 53,000 consumers and almost 1000 press attended. Perhaps you view it in a different category b/c of its emphasis on honest-to-goodness end users. Of course this is also precisely why it fulfills a rather large niche as the only major tehcnology event where companies can connect face-to-face and engage, educate, and even inspire actual consumers. That said, the show is a bit of a hybrid, dedicating the 1st and part of the 2nd day to the industry. Last year, this aspect of the show grew a great deal with Palm CEO Ed Colligan choosing DigitalLife as the venue to launch the new Treo 680, MS using the show to launch their Safety in Gaming initiative and a host of others including Dell, Red Octane, Square Enix and others launching new products at the show. Finally, even more so than CES, which was created pretty strictly as a gadget/device show but has morphed into more, DigitalLife was created as a lifestyle show to put things like search, social media, and eCommerce on equal footing with home theater, cell phones, gaming equipment, etc. Over the past three years, Internet leaders like AOL, Google, Earthlink, Lycos, and Ask.com have all particiapted as well as a host of great new "Web 2.0" brands like blinkx, blip.tv, Sharpcast, imeem and many more. Thanks Barry Myers Director, DigitalLife

  • 13 Posted by dave11130 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    So where is the best place to buy Demo models from CES, there were some good buys on CES amps when I got mine.

  • 14 Posted by mr_notes2025 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    I would like to go to the CES convention in Las Vegas, ever since I heard, but the CES is closed to the PUBLIC, unless you work in the Consumer Electronics Industy. Correct, me if I'm wrong there. I read it on the http://www.cesweb.org website. The expo is FREE before a certain date in December. If you go there at the CES in L.V., be willing to pay $200 just to get in. I know it's held every year in Las Vegas during the the first week of January. Of course, it's only 3 days. I have attended the COMDEX convention from 1999 to 2003, the last one in 2003 when KeyMedia3 sold it to another company and since then nothing has happen. It kept getting postpone every year. So, do any of you work in the Consumer Electronics Industry?? I would like to attend the next one next year, if the PUBLIC is allowed to attend. Have a nice day!

  • 15 Posted by glbritton30 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    So, Chris, what is CES? Commercial Exposition of Stuff? Complex Electric Symposium? Creepy Ectoplasmic Snuffer? Post #4 says "CES (Consumer Electronics Expo)" but that would be CEE? Yep, I'm anal but I hate aricles which have several abbreviations with no explanation of what they stand for. CTIA, COMDEX, PMA?? I understand TV and DVD but beyond those, I think a good writer would explain better.

  • 17 Posted by dberuvides on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    Because all electronics pwns all!!!!!!!!!!! There is nothing like watching a Blu-Ray of HD-DVD movie on a 61in HDTV with a 6.1 setup. Nothing like it. Not even bringing a child to the world compares to this!!!!!!

  • 18 Posted by glbritton30 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Dear wasupp45424, I agree with bigdicksplace on hype. While there are many things I "must have" rarely does mass marketeers get it right. One thing I dislike is being told my equipment is "obselete", maybe outdated, but nothing is obselete until it quits working and ya can't fix it. Excuse me, I'm going to turn on my BetaMax and watch a movie now...on my B&W console TV....LOL.

  • 19 Posted by phillysnd on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Dear Mr. Null I just woke up from a nap - haven't had coffee yet - I intend to read your whole blog but after the 1st few lines I thought you & other living persons might find this amusing: Not only haven't heard of CES but I have no idea what COMDEX was (and no I don't live in a cave in Mongolia - in case you were wondering) Coffee's ready, Have a good day.

  • 20 Posted by extreme_marketing_maven on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    If you're not in the industry, there's no reason you would have ever heard of an industry show like CES (Consumer Electronics Show). But in the case of CES, the media attention has made it much more familiar, and the media attention is driven by us: the consumers so hot to get our hands on this stuff. CES is attended primarily by buyers from giant retail stores like Best Buy all the way down to Bob's TV and Bait Shop to find the hottest new technology to stock their shelves (which doesn't stop the average consumer from getting in the door, they just need to know how or be willing to pay). Trade show acronyms are usually association-based (ABA for the American Bankers Association, AMA for the American Medical Association, etc.) but in the case of COMDEX, it got its name when it was just a simple computing show. By the time it tanked, it was much more than that and the original meaning of the acronym was lost (like when telcom giant MCI was formed, it stood for Microwave Communications ... but it wasn't long before that didn't really apply anymore). In the case of COMDEX (Computer Dealers Exhibition), it's gone, never to return. It tanked for a lot of reasons, my personal experience was greed - they wanted too much money from exhibitors and couldn't really deliver any buyers. Check out the COMDEX story on Wikipedia - its interesting. For the average consumer, I wouldn't make a trip to Vegas for CES (it's a week of sheer CHAOS), but reading news about it can help you see what future trends are going to be, which can keep you from spending money on a technology that may drastically change in the next few years.

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