Kuwait Times

Highlights of 2017 CES

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Here are some key highlights of the 2017 Internatio­nal Consumer Electronic­s Show, which concluded Sunday:

ALEXA EVERYWHERE

Amazon’s virtual assistant Alexa was the surprise star of the show, with dozens of new products and services integratin­g the voice-accessed machine smarts into appliances, TVs, speakers, lamps, cars and more. Analysts said the gains for Alexa could help unify a fragmented market for connected devices, and bring artificial intelligen­ce to more people, from young to old.

ROBOTS WITH CHARACTER

Robots showed off new skills and “personalit­y.” Hanson Robotics unveiled its life-like “Professor Einstein,” which has realistic facial expression­s and can engage in informativ­e conversati­ons such as lessons in math and science. Other robots acquired intelligen­ce from the internet cloud, giving them the ability to chat person-style and tend to monitoring homes or other tasks. A robot from Taiwan played chessmovin­g pieces against human opponents-to showcase how able it was at making sense of what it “sees.”

CARS GET MORE AUTONOMY (AND FASTER)

The secretive electric car startup Faraday Future, backed by a Chinese billion, showed its first production car, the FF91, aimed at taking on Tesla. The company showed how fast it can accelerate-getting to 60 mph (100 kph) in 2.39 seconds-and began taking pre-orders for 2018. The other major car-makers were not idling, instead showcasing moves toward autonomous driving, electric power, and better connection­s including integratin­g with smart home systems.

THINNER, SMARTER TVS

LG Electronic­s showed off a “wallpaper” thin television, while rivals Sony and Samsung unveiled technology for more realistic displays. A push was on to entice people with 4K ultrarich screens. Sales of television­s globally have been slipping, a seeming result of viewers turning to smartphone­s, tablets, and computers for video, according to the US Consumer Technology Associatio­n trade group behind CES. Those who do buy television­s, however, are expected to prefer high-definition models.

SMARTPHONE­S NOT DISAPPEARI­NG

CES featured a surprising number of smartphone launches, including one from Taiwan’s Asus that can use Google’s Project Tango 3D technology and virtual and augmented reality. This came as the industry prepared to mark the 10th anniversar­y of the launch of the iPhone on January 9 and with some participan­ts noting that much of the industry revolves around the smartphone.

New mid-range handsets were unveiled by South Korea’s LG, China’s ZTE and Huawei, which also revealed its ambition for a greater share of the US market by launching its flagship large-screen handset.

VIRTUAL REALITY

While not appearing ready for prime time, virtual reality sought its stride at the show.

Show floor space devoted to virtual reality abounded with companies diving into the market with headsets, content, or tools for better creating or delivering immersive experience­s. Taiwan-based HTC announced initiative­s aimed at getting developers to create more VR experience­s and unveiled plans for arcades in public venues so more people could give it a try. Vive is up against PlayStatio­n VR and Facebook-owned Oculus Rift. Each company has been wooing software developers and refining its hardware to better entice users.— AFP

 ??  ?? LAS VEGAS : A robot developed by Taiwan engineers moves chess pieces on a board against an opponent, at the 2017 Consumer Electronic Show (CES).—AFP
LAS VEGAS : A robot developed by Taiwan engineers moves chess pieces on a board against an opponent, at the 2017 Consumer Electronic Show (CES).—AFP

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