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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The Cellphone, Navigating Our Lives

John Markoff

The cellphone is the world’s most ubiquitous computer. With the dominance of the cellphone, a new metaphor is emerging for how we organize, find and use information. That metaphor is the map.

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Friday, January 9, 2009

CES: Mattel Revamps Web Sites and Launches Digital Toys

Dean Takahashi

Digital toys and Web sites for kids have had a mixed history. But the future is so full of techno-savvy kids that toy makers are finding they have no choice but to move into the digital realm by providing better online entertainment, as well as digital toys in the physical world.

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

CES: The High-Tech Art of Shredding

Christopher Lawton

Do you like your documents shredded with a cross cut or micro cut? Here’s a hint: Shredders using the micro cut make the smallest cut, which slashes documents into such small pieces that it provides “maximum” security, while the cross cut shreds documents to provide just “enhanced” security.

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

CES: Toshiba Sees Five Percent Growth in LCD TV Market in 2009

Eric Savitz

Toshiba expects the LCD television market to grow five percent in 2009, the company said this morning at a press conference at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Scott Ramirez, VP for TV Marketing at Toshiba, also said that he expects there will be “no real volume” this year in televisions priced above $2,500. He notes that the average 52-inch LCD TV in November sold for $1,948. He expects no significant sales of televisions above 55 inches.

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CES Economist: Gadgets Are Necessities Now

Christopher Lawton

Yes, this may be the worst recession America has seen since World War II. But the people who are bringing us the Consumer Electronics Show would like to point out that sales of tech products are actually faring pretty well when compared to what happened during previous recessions.

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CES: Cisco Says It Is Now a Consumer Company

Eric Savitz

Cisco has decided to be a player in the consumer electronics business.

Cisco is a company that tends to be associated with enterprise networking–at its heart it remains a manufacturer of big honking routers. But over the last few years, the company has made a concerted effort to get into the consumer business.

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Is Microsoft About to Launch Its Own Mobile Phone? (Updated)

Eric Savitz

Everyone else is in the phone business, so why not Microsoft? Several reports suggest that this may actually be in the works–one has the phone sporting an Nvidia processor and launching at the 3GSM conference, another that it is code-named “Pink,” will be Zune-based and will launch at CES in January. No word on what the code name may allude to.

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Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Giz Banned for Life and Loving It: On Pranks and Civil Disobedience at CES

Brian Lam

A Gizmodo writer has been banned from CES for a prank. But when I see some fellow press damning us for the joke, I feel sorry for them: When did journalists become the protectors of corporations? When did this industry, defined by pranksters like Woz, get so serious and in-the-pocket of big business? This is totally pathetic.

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Monday, January 14, 2008

CES: Interview: Jeff Weiner, EVP-Network Division, Yahoo: You’ll See This Stuff in ‘08

Staci D. Kramer

When Marco Boerries and David Filo joined Jerry Yang on the stage of the Las Vegas Hilton Theater to show off new launches and upcoming concepts, the audience at their feet included most of Yahoo’s top management–among them Jeff Weiner, whom we last heard from here after he shook up the Yahoo Media Group. Weiner seemed a little taken aback by my comparison of Yang’s presentation with the one Terry Semel gave in 2006, particularly with how many elements of the strategy–for instance, Go, the three-screen approach to connecting–were still in place albeit evolving.

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Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Death of the Corporation

Matt Richtel

If you want to know the theme of the Consumer Electronics Show, play taps. Fly the flag at half-mast, and say a few words for the proud monolithic corporation of years past. This year is not about products. It’s about partnerships. It’s about a marriage of the once-proud hardware makers, the defiant and boring Internet infrastructure providers, and the flashy, sometimes arrogant makers of content. It’s about even mixing in the input of consumers.

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Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Who Is More Human: PC Users or Couch Potatoes?

Matt Richtel

Matters turned philosophical here at the Consumer Electronics Show in a discussion with Toshihiro Sakamoto, president and senior managing director of Panasonic AVC Networks. Sakamoto is charming, twinkle-eyed and at least a grade classier than the sell-at-all-costs, run-of-the mill American C.E.O. (And, as my friend Alex Pham of the Los Angeles Times put it, he sure is handsome.)

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@ CES: Hollywood Talks Technology; Caruso Cameo

Staci D. Kramer

Back in the Hilton Theater Monday afternoon for a session with execs from Hollywood–Albert Cheng, EVP-digital media, Disney-ABC Television Group; Dan Fawcett, president, Fox Digital; Tom Lesinski, president, Paramount Pictures Digital Entertainment; and four days into the job, Thomas Gewecke, president of Warner Bros. Digital Distribution.

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Monday, January 7, 2008

Investors Said to Seek a Takeover of CNet

Andrew Ross Sorkin

CNet Networks, one of the original online media companies, would typically write about all the gossip and speculation at the Consumer Electronics Show this week in Las Vegas. Now, however, the company is likely to be the one talked about.

A consortium of prominent investment funds has amassed a 21% stake in CNet and is seeking to oust the company’s directors and take over a majority of its board, according to people briefed on the proposal.

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We’ll Be Covering CES

Dan Lyons

As you probably know, the Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow in Las Vegas, kicking off with a big keynote by the Beastmaster, where I’m guessing he will talk about all the new ways in which Microsoft hopes to add extra layers of frustration to people’s lives by turning ordinary everyday experiences like making phone calls and watching television into annoying, confusing processes that require you to integrate multiple unreliable and incompatible digital devices into a Frankenstein system that needs a dozen different remote controls (each one bigger and uglier than the others, with a zillion tiny buttons) and which freezes, hangs and crashes without warning. Or something.

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This Video Makes Bill Gates Look Cooler Than Steve Jobs

Brian Lam

OMG, I can hear the fanboys battling already. Here’s a video from last night’s CES 2008 keynote, Bill Gates’s last for the foreseeable future. And I know it’s scripted, edited and contrived, but I’m sold: The man is a cool geek.

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