Chattanooga Times Free Press

The smart-tech future beckons to us from the CES gadget show

- BY RYAN NAKASHIMA

LAS VEGAS — Look around. How many computing devices do you see? Your phone, probably; maybe a tablet or a laptop. Your car, the TV set, the microwave, bedside alarm clock, possibly the thermostat, and others you’ve never noticed.

Much of that computing isn’t doing much while segregated into individual devices. But many of these gadgets have the potential to get smarter by connecting to their fellows, which in turn could open the door to a brave new “Internet of Things.”

To see where that might be taking us, there’s no better place than the annual gadget extravagan­za formerly known as the Consumer Electronic­s Show — and now simply as CES.

The show, which starts Wednesday in Las Vegas, is the place for companies large and small to show off new connected devices. These range from the seemingly trivial — for instance, smart umbrellas that message you if you leave them behind — to the undeniably helpful, such as navigation devices that display driving directions onto your windshield so you don’t have to take your eyes off the road.

And while traditiona­l consumer electronic­s such as phones and TVs account for about half of revenue in U.S. consumer tech, they aren’t growing as quickly as newer connected devices, according to the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, the organizer of CES. For instance, smart home devices, such as cameras, thermostat­s and locks, are expected to grow 21 percent to 8.9 million units in 2016, or $1.2 billion in revenue.

According to the McKinsey Global Institute, a division of the consulting giant McKinsey & Co., the value created by connecting the world’s devices could hit $11 trillion annually by 2025, a mind-boggling sum that represents over half of U.S. economic output in a year.

Most of the value comes from industrial uses — like cleaner air from smarter energy use and fewer factory shut- downs due to smarter maintenanc­e. But trillions in benefits are expected to come from consumer-bought products: safer streets because of better-driving cars, robots that take care of household chores and health and fitness trackers that let us know when our bodies need medical attention.

“There’s a big value in avoiding pain and suffering,” says report co-author Michael Chui.

Of course, people have been making big projection­s for the Internet of Things for years, yet progress remains halting and fragmentar­y. Major technology companies can purposeful­ly make it tougher to interact with other companies’ gadgets for business reasons. More data can mean less privacy.

In recent years, CES has begun catering more heavily to startups hoping to break through the noise. The sprawling show has sections for wearable fitness gadgets, drones, autonomous vehicles, education, virtual reality, video games, robots, 3-D printers and smart homes.

That’s largely a reaction to the fact that many of technology’s biggest names have been no- shows for some time. Apple Inc. has skipped the show since the 1990s, and Microsoft Corp.’s then- CEO Steve Ballmer gave the company’s last CES keynote in 2012. Google parent Alphabet Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. hold their own events to release products.

And the Consumer Technology Associatio­n that runs CES is aiming for attendance this year at or below last year’s record 176,000.

Shawn DuBravac, the CTA’s chief economist, argues the show’s maturity is a good thing, its focus transformi­ng over the last two decades from what was “technologi­cally possible” to what’s “technologi­cally meaningful.” It’s no longer about a robot that can walk up steps. It’s about robots that actually mow your lawn.

It’s worth bearing in mind that CES is first and foremost a venue for promoting the tech industry — at least the non-Google/ Apple/Amazon/Microsoft part of it. Sometimes the promotion falls flat; 3- D screen technology unveiled at CES in 2010 went from the next big thing to a mostly unused feature. Netbooks introduced in 2009 took a back seat to the iPad released a year later. And concepts such as the smart home have taken a really long time to materializ­e.

For all we know, the Internet of Things could be next on that list. Last summer, two researcher­s described how they hacked into and took control of a Jeep Cherokee via its cellular connection to the Internet. Cybersecur­ity firm Rapid7 gave a failing grade to eight of nine popular baby monitors for simple and obvious weaknesses like failing to encrypt Internet-streamed video to prevent eavesdropp­ing or using unchangeab­le passwords that malicious types could easily find online.

Such issues point to a deeper problem: Many would-be connected devices max out their capabiliti­es doing one thing well, leaving little headroom for security protection that wasn’t ever necessary in an unconnecte­d world. Such gadgets could offer hackers an easy route into home or work computers. The fact that many such devices are produced by startups, often crowd-funded and on shoestring budgets, means security is often an afterthoug­ht.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Attendees sit in the self-driving Mercedes-Benz F 015 concept car at last year’s Internatio­nal CES in Las Vegas. Everything we buy or use these days has the potential to be smarter.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Attendees sit in the self-driving Mercedes-Benz F 015 concept car at last year’s Internatio­nal CES in Las Vegas. Everything we buy or use these days has the potential to be smarter.

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