The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

We’re techy, too!

Deere, Tide maker head to annual gadget fest

- By Matt O’brien and Joseph Pisani AP video journalist James Brooks contribute­d to this report.

LAS VEGAS >> The companies founded by blacksmith John Deere and candle-and-soap-making duo Procter & Gamble may not be the hip purveyors of new technology they were in 1837.

But they were first-time exhibitors at this year’s CES gadget show, along with other unlikely newcomers such as missile-maker Raytheon, outdoorsy retailer The North Face and the 115-year-old motorcycli­ng icon Harley-Davidson.

The four-day consumerel­ectronics show took place earlier this month with some 4,500 companies exhibiting products and services and more than 180,000 people expected to attend. It’s the place startups and establishe­d tech giants alike go to unveil everything from utilitaria­n apps to splashy devices.

So what were these legacy companies doing there?

“Every company today is a technology company,” said Gary Shapiro, CEO of the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, which organizes CES.

Shapiro said many companies already send executives to Las Vegas each January to gauge trends, so it’s not surprising that they eventually unveil their own new technology, as well.

It’s also part of a more fundamenta­l economic shift as consumers increasing­ly expect to buy not just goods and services, but a personal experience, which often skews digital, said Dipanjan Chatterjee, a brand analyst at Forrester Research.

“We’re still doing oldfashion­ed things: Ordering clothes, buying detergent, getting a cup of coffee, but there are new-fangled ways of doing it,” he said. “Brands have no choice but to play a role in this new technology space.”

That’s one reason HarleyDavi­dson is using the show to announce the commercial launch of its first electric motorcycle LiveWire. The motorcycle will have a cellular connection, as many cars do these days, so people can keep track of their motorcycle’s charge or check where they parked it through an app.

Consumer goods giant P&G, best known for Pampers diapers and Tide detergent, is showcasing heated razors, a toothbrush with artificial intelligen­ce and a wand-like device that scans the skin and releases serum to cover up age spots and other discolorat­ion.

P&G is also showing off an internet-connected scalp adviser: The Head & Shoulders-branded device uses ultraviole­t light and other techniques to uncover scalp issues and recommend products. The device is available only in Europe and Asia for now.

Expect these gizmos to cost more than the plainold “dumb” versions. P&G’s Oral-B toothbrush, for example, is expected to cost $279, while a regular OralB electric toothbrush can be had for less than $30.

And every new connected device means more data collection about people’s personal habits — a gold mine for advertiser­s and hackers alike.

The North Face used virtual reality to provide a finegraine­d look at its waterproof fabrics.

Raytheon demonstrat­ed the everyday applicatio­ns of GPS anti-jam technology, which was originally designed to protect military forces.

And John Deere has hauled in self-driving tractors and a 20-ton combine harvester aided by artificial intelligen­ce. The combine has cameras with computervi­sion technology to track the quality of grain coming into the machine so that its kernel-separating settings can be adjusted automatica­lly. Farmers can monitor it remotely using a smartphone app.

It’s hard to imagine what 19th-century Illinois blacksmith John Deere might think if he were plopped into his company’s 2019 booth at the flashy Vegas convention center, but Deanna Kovar believes he’d be “amazed and astonished.”

“His innovation was making a self-powering steel plow that could cut through the heavy, rich soils of the Midwest,” said Kovar, the company’s director of production and precision agricultur­e marketing. “We’ve been a technology company since the start.”

Kovar said American farmers have been using self-driving tractors for decades — and CES is a chance to let everyone else know.

Chatterjee said such messages are directed not just at a company’s customers, but to investors, potential corporate partners, startup acquisitio­n targets and the technicall­y skilled employees these more traditiona­l firms are hoping to attract.

“These are brands that are aggressive­ly looking to work tech into their DNA,” Chatterjee said. “They want to be perceived all around as a tech-forward innovative brand.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hansjoerg Reick looks at a display of Oral-B Genius X smart toothbrush­es at the Procter & Gamble booth before CES Internatio­nal Monday in Las Vegas.
PHOTOS BY JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hansjoerg Reick looks at a display of Oral-B Genius X smart toothbrush­es at the Procter & Gamble booth before CES Internatio­nal Monday in Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? A Harley-Davidson Motorcycle­s LiveWire electric motorcycle is on display during a Panasonic news conference at CES Internatio­nal Monday in Las Vegas.
A Harley-Davidson Motorcycle­s LiveWire electric motorcycle is on display during a Panasonic news conference at CES Internatio­nal Monday in Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? Gillette’s Heated Razors are on display at the Procter & Gamble booth before CES Internatio­nal, Monday in Las Vegas.
Gillette’s Heated Razors are on display at the Procter & Gamble booth before CES Internatio­nal, Monday in Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? Iris Xuan demonstrat­es a facial scanner from SK-II, a skin care company, at the Procter & Gamble booth before CES Internatio­nal, Monday in Las Vegas. The scanner takes measuremen­ts of the user’s face to give a “skin age” to help the user pick cosmetic products from the company.
Iris Xuan demonstrat­es a facial scanner from SK-II, a skin care company, at the Procter & Gamble booth before CES Internatio­nal, Monday in Las Vegas. The scanner takes measuremen­ts of the user’s face to give a “skin age” to help the user pick cosmetic products from the company.

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