Ottawa Citizen

‘Ultra HDTV’ the next step

Trade show will spotlight trends in television, PCS and phones

- PETER SVENSSON

Think your high-definition TV is hot stuff — as sharp as it gets? At the biggest trade show in the Americas, which kicks off next week in Las Vegas, TV makers will be doing their best to convince you that HDTVs are old hat, and should make room for “Ultra HDTV.”

It’s the latest gambit from an industry struggling with a shift in consumer spending from TVs, PCs and singlepurp­ose devices such as camcorders to small, portable doit-all gadgets: smartphone­s and tablets.

The Consumer Electronic­s Associatio­n estimates that device shipments to U.S. buyers fell five per cent in dollar terms last year excluding smartphone­s and tablets, but rose six per cent to $207 billion US if you include those categories.

The trends suggest that the Internatio­nal CES (formerly the Consumer Electronic­s Show) is losing its stature as a start-of-the-year showcase for the gadgets that consumers will buy over the next 12 months. It started out as a venue for the TV and stereo industries. Later, PCs joined the party.

But over the last few years, TVs and PCs have declined in importance as portable gadgets have risen and CES hasn’t kept pace.

It’s not a major venue for phone and tablet launches, though some new models will likely see the light of day there when the show floor opens on Tuesday.

The biggest trendsette­r in the mobile gadgets industry, Apple Inc., stays away, as it shuns all events it doesn’t organize itself.

Apple rival Microsoft Corp. has also scaled back its patronage of the show. For the first time since 1999, Microsoft’s CEO won’t be delivering the kickoff keynote. Qualcomm Inc. has taken over the podium. It’s an important maker of chips that go into cellphones, but not a household name.

None of this seems to matter much to the industry people who go to the show, which is set to be bigger than ever, at least in terms of floor space.

Gary Shapiro, the CEO of the organizing Consumer Electronic­s Associatio­n, expects attendance close to the 156,000 people who turned out last year. That’s pretty much at capacity for Las Vegas, which has about 150,000 hotel rooms. The show doesn’t welcome gawkers: the attendees are executives, purchasing managers, engineers, marketers, journalist­s and others with connection­s to the industry.

“We don’t want to be over 160,000,” Shapiro said in an interview. “We do everything we can to not be too crowded.”

Nor do the shifting winds of the technology industry seem to matter much to exhibitors.

Though some big names are scaling back or missing, there are many smaller companies clamouring for booth space and a spot in the limelight for a few days. For example, while Apple doesn’t have an official presence at the show, there will be 500 companies displaying Apple accessorie­s in the “iLounge Pavilion.”

Overall, the CEA sold the equivalent of 33 football fields of floor space for this year’s show.

 ?? AFP PHOTO / LG ELECTRONIC­S ?? South Korean models pose in Seoul with LG Electronic­s’ new 55-inch organic light-emitting diode TV, for which it has started taking pre-orders.
AFP PHOTO / LG ELECTRONIC­S South Korean models pose in Seoul with LG Electronic­s’ new 55-inch organic light-emitting diode TV, for which it has started taking pre-orders.

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