The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The big takeaway for gadget nerds in 2016

Industry appears to have hit a lull in exciting new devices.

- By Hayley Tsukayama Washington Post

Let’s face it: 2016 was a fairly disappoint­ing year for the average gadget nerd. Yes, there were some bright spots, but they were mostly glimpses of technologi­es that are approachin­g rather than ones that are changing our lives right now.

If there is a takeaway for consumers from 2016, it’s that we appear to be in a bit of a lull when it comes to exciting pieces of technology. And while we’ve seen new gadgets come onto the scene, even the big successes this year felt more incrementa­l than monumental.

There are a few reasons for this. For one, much of the innovation in the technology world of late has been in software — the thing about apps, streaming music and streaming video is that they manage to revolution­ize devices that we already have. In fact, they’re best when they don’t become their own devices — otherwise, we’d all need a lot more outlets in our homes.

Another is that designing hardware is, well, hard. The smartphone was an extraordin­ary invention that required a lot of conditions to converge and make it successful. In the years since the smartphone burst onto the scene, manufactur­ers have worked hard to make them thinner, lighter and more powerful — and appear to have come pretty close to hitting the upper bound of useful improvemen­t. Fingerprin­t readers and curved screens bring their own advantages, but they’re hardly as revolution­ary as the touch screen. That could explain why people, in general, are becoming less likely to rush out and get a brand-new device rather than just wait until their old one fades away. Our love of tech is still strong, but it’s not quite as exciting.

Home hubs such as Amazon’s Echo family and Google Home started to prove their worth, but they’ve hardly become a necessity — in fact, their greatest value is their promise to work with a Web of connected home devices that still haven’t proven their worth. Driverless cars have made leaps and bounds in terms of research and even some pilot programs, but they aren’t hitting your garage any time soon. Virtual reality made the biggest strides this year to hit the mainstream, but despite the rosy world painted in Samsung ads, it’s still not a “one in every house” sort of gadget.

The devices on which the tech industry has pinned its hopes are, in fact, ones that will take time to develop as products — and will also take time to earn consumers’ trust. Tech companies have had to turn to more personaliz­ed tech, which raises all kinds of questions in consumers’ minds about oversharin­g with their tech. Telling a Nest thermostat when you’re out of the house, or confiding your shopping preference­s to an Amazon Echo that keeps records of your voice may give you pause. That’s hardly the kind of excitement that makes you stand in line for hours, particular­ly when the benefits of a fitness tracker may not outweigh your worries about how closely it’s tracking your location.

Taking a look at what’s on deck for the big CES industry show in 2017, we’ll continue to see these small steps before we see giant leaps: smart home gadgets, drones, 3D printing and wearables are all being touted as the tentpoles of the industry again this year.

 ?? AP ?? A man holds his smartphone at the Mobile World Congress wireless show, in Barcelona, Spain, in February.
AP A man holds his smartphone at the Mobile World Congress wireless show, in Barcelona, Spain, in February.

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