Houston Chronicle Sunday

Gadgets go from sublime to silly

- By Dwight Silverman STAFF WRITER dwight.silverman@chron.com twitter.com/dsilverman houstonchr­onicle.com/ techburger

CES 2019 boasted some new and exciting tech — from laptops to smart pet feeders.

CES, the personal technology trade show that swarms Las Vegas at the start of each year, concluded Friday. The wraps were taken off a slew of new products and services that were intriguing, lustworthy or downright goofy. Just which gadgets end up in consumers’ hands — and even then not shoved into a storage closet or sock drawer — remains to be seen.

This year’s extravagan­za featured a variety of themes, from the coming of the nextgenera­tion 5G cellular network to the beginning of higher-resolution 8K TVs to internet-connected everything. Are you ready for a toilet that reponds to Alexaor Siri-like voice commands?

Here’s a look at some highlights from CES.

iTunes on Samsung TVs

Except for a notorious Windows client, Apple’s iTunes music and video store has largely been confined to the Macintosh / iOS ecosystem. But in a surprise announceme­nt at the start of CES, Samsung announced that an iTunes app would be coming to its 2018 and 2019 lines of HDTVs, allowing owners of those devices to see movies and TV shows from that service without using Apple TV, that company’s streaming box.

In addition, both Samsung and LG TVs will support AirPlay 2, Apple’s technology for beaming content from iPhones, Macs and iPads to other devices.

Why is Apple doing this? With iPhone sales slowing, Apple’s looking to spread its branches to non-Apple hardware.

Look for the iTunes app to show up on Samsung’s TVs sometime this spring.

5G and not 5G

This will be the year that all the major cellular carriers begin switching on 5G, the successor to 4G LTE, the data service found on most modern smartphone­s. 5G promises dramatic increases in speed and latency (the time it takes to receive informatio­n online after it has been requested) to the point that new applicatio­ns and services will be born.

With that in mind, 5G was all the buzz at CES. Samsung showed off its planned initial 5G phone, though it was kept in a glass box on the show floor, untouchabl­e. Qualcomm and Intel talked about the hardware they will sell to enable it. Verizon and AT&T bragged about being the first to market with 5G, though there’s some debate about that.

Don’t expect 5G to become mainstream in 2019. Coverage will be spotty at best, bugs will still need ironing out and early hardware and service pricing will be high. What you’ll hear at the 2020 CES will be far more realistic.

LG’s rollup TV

Speaking of LG, a product that the company first showed off at last year’s CES came closer to reality this time around. The Signature OLED TV R is a 65-inch, 4K HDTV that disappears into its base.

OLED TVs are known for their brilliant displays, and those who got a good look at the Signature R say it’s no slouch visually. But when you don’t want it there, it’s not, descending smoothly into its base in just seconds.

How much will this cost you when it hits showrooms this spring? LG isn’t saying, but start saving your pennies now — the company says it will be priced as a premium product.

Revenge of the laptop

Laptop computers are so 2005, but new ones still made a splash at CES this year. New technologi­es allowed some notebooks to get astonishin­gly thin, while others rivaled desktops both in power and size.

Huawei, which earned critical praise last year with its MateBook 13, updated it and earned raves at CES. The 13-inch Windows 10 computer is less just .59 inches thick, 11.26-by-8.31 inches and weighs just under 3 pounds. It runs Intel’s newer Whiskey Lake processors and starts at $999.

On the other end of the spectrum is the latest version of Dell’s Alienware Area 51m, a high-end gaming notebook that stretches the boundaries of what a portable PC can do. With a 17-inch display, Intel’s ninth-generation desktop processors and desktop-quality nVidia GeForce RTX display processors.

All this is packed into an 8.5-pound case that’s 1.5 inches thick. It starts at $2,549, and you can mortgage your home to buy it at the end of the month.

Tech for pets

The elevator pitch for this product — a food dish for dogs and cats that uses facial recognitio­n to release meals — seems dumb at first glance. But Mookkie could actually be a godsend for pet owners with one more than animal and a need for specialize­d feeding.

My daughter, for example, has two cats. One is grossly overweight (his name: Sarge), and really needs low-calorie cat food. The Mookkie pet feeder uses artificial intelligen­ce and face recognitio­n to tell one cat from another, so only the right cat would receive the diet food.

Is Mookkie worth $189, which is what it will cost when released this fall? My daughter seemed to think so.

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 ?? Robyn Beck / AFP / Getty Images ?? Mookkie, set to be released this fall, is a smart pet feeder that uses facial recognitio­n to release meals to cats and dogs.
Robyn Beck / AFP / Getty Images Mookkie, set to be released this fall, is a smart pet feeder that uses facial recognitio­n to release meals to cats and dogs.
 ?? AFP / Getty Images ?? The folding and capabiliti­es of the Royole FlexiPai tablet.
AFP / Getty Images The folding and capabiliti­es of the Royole FlexiPai tablet.

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