Showing posts with label CES 2014. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CES 2014. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

Wearable gadgets not ready for prime time - tech watchers


LAS VEGAS - Despite the hoopla, wearable gadgets like wristwatches for checking your text messages or eyeglasses that capture video are unlikely to make a splash with consumers anytime soon, given the clumsy designs, high prices and technological constraints of many of the current offerings.

That is the conclusion drawn by many industry executives and analysts who trolled the vast exhibition halls of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week.

Most of the wearable products on display at the industry's premier showcase looked like awkward attempts to shoehorn technology into new forms without an original or compelling benefit for the wearer, skeptics say.

Stacy Rasgon, a semiconductor analyst at Bernstein, spent a day at CES busily snapping photos of every fitness band, watch and other wearable device he came across.

"I have 20 different photos, but if I look at the pictures I couldn't tell you which product is from which vendor. They all look the same," Rasgon said. "Wearables sound like a great idea and there's going to be a lot of experimentation. People are throwing spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks."

Sony Corp, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Qualcomm Inc showed off new or recently launched smartwatches, most of which act as extensions to cellphones, letting users check messages and appointments. Wristbands - like the popular Fitbit that tracks physical activity - also accounted for a big chunk of the devices on display at CES.

"For wearables to finally match up with the hype, (they have) to be a true solution, where it isn't about the technology - it's about what the technology enables you to do, something you couldn't do before," said Mike Bell, the senior executive leading Intel Corp's wearables push.

"The function, form and experience have to be as important as the parts you slap inside," he said.

Intel this week unveiled its take on wearables that Bell believes serve a clear purpose and could catch on, including prototype earbuds with a built-in heart rate monitor that changes the music on a smartphone to keep pace with a workout. It also announced a collaboration with luxury department store Barneys New York to develop smart bracelets intended to look like they were dreamed up by a fashion designer - not an engineer.

The wearables mania gripping the industry is in part a response to slowing smartphone and tablet markets. After growing 39 percent in 2013, global smartphone shipments are forecast to expand by just 18 percent annually through 2017, with prices steadily falling, according to market research firm IDC. Tablet shipments are seen up 22 percent this year, compared with 54 percent in 2013.

Tech executives say many consumers are intrigued by the potential for wearable gadgets, but they are also cautious. A survey by research company Yankee Group in December found less than 10 percent of respondents planned to pay $200 or more for a fitness wellness device.

A survey by Wakefield Research, commissioned by U.S. cloud-services company Citrix Systems, last November found 91 percent of respondents were excited about wearables, but 61 percent said they had no plans to purchase one.

Simon Randall, whose British-based OMG Life Plc makes a wearable camera called Autographer, is not surprised. He recalls the lukewarm reception when Nokia, his employer at the time, introduced camera-phones more than a decade ago.

"New things take time to be broadly adopted but if there's an intrinsic benefit at the heart of them they'll prosper," Randall said.

HAUTE COUTURE

Samsung's $300 Galaxy Gear may have had the biggest launch of any wearable so far - but it was panned by reviewers. It shipped an estimated 800,000 of the watches in the two months since it was introduced in September, a figure that pales in comparison to the millions its smartphones manage.

Some experts said Apple may have the best chance of developing a gadget that will propel the wearable category into prime time, given its track record in consumer devices.

"2014 will be more a year of attempts than of successful products. And for a lot of manufacturers it will be a matter of waiting to see what Apple does," said Carolina Milanesi, a consumer tech analyst at Kantar Worldpanel.

While the electronics show lacked sure-fire winners, some offers were definitely intriguing and drew crowds.

Epson unveiled a $700 pair of eyeglasses that allow the user to simultaneously view data about objects they are looking at. Sony's prototype glasses can display captions and information about programs a viewer is watching on TV.

Another offer was a bracelet made by Netatmo embedded with a sensor that looks like a jewel and which measures exposure to sunlight, helping the wearer decide when to put on sunscreen.

Even Qualcomm, one of the largest companies now touting the impending wearable device revolution and purveyor of the "Toq" smartwatch, acknowledges the hurdles ahead.

Raj Talluri, who oversees the design of its Snapdragon smartphone processors, wants to add the same chips to watches and apparel to let them handle much more sophisticated functions. But more work needs to be done on power consumption.

"The power consumption of processors really needs to get an order of magnitude less," Talluri said. "People's expectation in wearables is not that they have to charge them every day. They want to wear things for weeks."

(Additional reporting by Michael Gold in Taipei; Editing by Edwin Chan, Tiffany Wu, Frank McGurty and Edwina Gibbs)

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Sunday, January 5, 2014

'Internet of Things' to take CES center stage


SAN FRANCISCO -- From drones and smart cars to remote-controlled door locks and eyewear, the 2014 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) promises to showcase the "Internet of Things," along with gadgets like smartphones and tablets.

The technology extravaganza that plays out each year in the glitz-laden city of Las Vegas has evolved beyond the eye-popping television technology for which it is known, to serve as a stage for once-dumb devices given brains in the form of computer chips and Internet connections.

And smartphone and tablets have become such stars in their own rights, complete with rapid release cycles and exclusive launch events, that the titans in that market tend to leave the CES stage and hordes of press from around the world to gizmos that don't usually get a spotlight.

"You will see a lot about the Internet of things; all the gadgets that are not a tablet, smartphone or personal computer but are attached to the Internet," Forrester analyst Frank Gillett said of CES, which officially kicks off on Tuesday.

"Like your car telling you that you are speeding too much or door locks that you unlock with a smartphone," he continued. "There are all kinds of gadgety things like that we will see."

CES organizers are also billing the four-day show as the largest "app event" in the world, complete with hackathons and a mobile applications "showdown."

"Apps have become an integral part of our everyday lives, from use in phones, computers, tablets and wearable technology," said Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) which organizes the show.

"The app innovation at CES offers the opportunity for networking, showcasing technology and hackathons focused on this growing tech space."

The show will feature more than 3,200 exhibitors with products spanning 15 different categories, according to organizers. There will be an array of zones with themes such as seniors, children, health, robotics, and wearable tech.

"I think CES is going through a bit of an identity crisis," said Gartner consumer technologies research vice president Carolina Milanesi. "We used to turn out to play with the toys, now with the software and services being what people are looking for the toys just aren't as cool any more."

Long a hardware showcase, CES is under pressure to adapt to consumers loving digital content and services ecosystems such as the iTunes library tailored for Apple iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch devices, according to Milanesi.

"So, you need the health, connected home and other zones to show end-to-end value being delivered through the hardware," she said.

Apple has made a practice of skipping CES, opting instead to launch products at private events deemed must-attend media affairs. Other major players, such as Samsung and Google, in the smartphone and tablet market have followed suit and host product unveilings of their own instead of competing for attention in the CES frenzy.

"Last year, CES exhibits went from an Internet fork to connected cars," Milanesi said. "There is so much, it is easy to get lost in the noise."

Analysts did expect arrays of smartphones or tablets powered by Google's freshly released KitKat version of the Android mobile operating software.

And, while Microsoft no longer formally exhibits at CES, there should be an abundance of hybrid tablet-laptop computers built with the latest Windows software from the US technology titan, according to Gillett.

"You will see a big push from Microsoft and Intel on two-in-ones, tablets with removable cordless keyboards that let you use a tablet as a PC."

The latest and greatest in television ultra-high definition screens are expected to be on display, but analysts expected them to land in the market with a thud similar to that made by 3-D televisions.

"You television gets a zillion more pixels, but most people won't be able to notice the difference," Gillett quipped.

Automotive offerings will include Toyota unveiling a new hydrogen fuel-cell concept car set for exclusive release in California in the year 2015.

"It is a legitimate and logical launching pad for advanced technology in the automobile business," said John Hanson of Toyota Motor Sales USA.

Meanwhile, a company called Cellcontrol will be showing off a gadget that plugs in under car dashboards and blocks drivers from using smartphones while vehicles are in motion.

CES will include sessions devoted to industry trends and regulations.

Among those slated to take to the CES stage are the chiefs of Sony, Yahoo, Twitter, Intel, and Cisco.

"CES is the global gathering place for anyone whose industry touches technology," said CEA spokeswoman Tara Dunion. "Given the reality of our lives, the Internet-of-things has become a central theme."

CES organizers expected attendance to be on par with the 152,000 people who showed up last year.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com