The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Meet the online gadget show, a hall of mirrors to the future

- By Mae Anderson

Every January, huge crowds descend on Las Vegas for the CES gadget show, an extravagan­za of tech and glitz intended to set the tone for the coming year in consumer technology. CES kicks off this week, but thanks to the pandemic, it will be in a radical new format — a “virtual” show taking place only in cyberspace.

Yes, that means everyone can still get a glimpse of the future, but only by via technology of the future — aka video streams and chat. If all goes well, attendees will be able to marvel at COVID-fighting “coronabots,” artificial intelligen­ce-powered avatars and transparen­t TVs.

But it’s still not entirely clear exactly how all this all is going to work, or whether the show will generate anything resembling its usual boosting impact on the tech industry.

“It’s different. Obviously we’re not going to be in Las Vegas, we’ll be spread out around the world,” said Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, the trade group that produces CES. “But I think there’s an attitude that because of COVID that we’re all in this together and that is what the CES is about. It’s really the shared experience of the industry. Everyone just wants to come together.”

The show will be a trade-off, Shapiro said. Forget the attention-getting spectacles, like dazzling wall-high TV displays and Google’s themepark ride from two years ago. Instead, Shapiro said, there will be a chance for a more personaliz­ed experience that attendees can set up in advance based on their particular interests.

That’s the optimistic view. On the flip side, smaller exhibitors are less likely to get noticed. Serendipit­ous meetings between entreprene­urs and investors, potential acquirers and acquirees, jobseekers and employers — all common to the world’s largest tech show — will probably be scarce.

More than 150,000 attendees and 1,800 exhibitors will take part in CES from Monday to Thursday, a show that will now consist of virtual keynote speeches, product demonstrat­ions and panel discussion­s. Plus, there’s the opportunit­y to network in virtual meeting rooms. Last year in the physical show, there were about 170,000 attendees and 4,400 exhibitors. The number of exhibitors were capped this year at 2,000 to insure the online experience, which is being run by Microsoft, was optimal.

Tim Bajarin, president of consultanc­y Creative Strategies, insists that not much has changed about CES for him, despite the fact that he’ll be staring at screens rather than haunting meeting rooms and pacing the convention floor.

“The difference is I’m not there physically having to walk 10 miles a day and I’m not paying exorbitant high hotel fees,” he said. “I’m not having to battle people shoulder-to-shoulder to navigate the show floors.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A monorail passes the Las Vegas Convention Center during CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas in 2018.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A monorail passes the Las Vegas Convention Center during CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas in 2018.

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