USA TODAY US Edition

Best (and worst) of Innovation Awards

CTA honors outstandin­g design and engineerin­g

- Jefferson Graham

LAS VEGAS – The trade portion of CES will open Tuesday, but we’ve got a sneak peek at some of the coolest technology set to debut.

Each year, the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, which stages CES, selects

20 products for the CES Innovation Awards, “honoring outstandin­g design and engineerin­g” in consumer tech products.

The categories are varied, everything from 3-D printing, computer accessorie­s, home appliances, home speakers, robots and cameras. The rules are that the items have to be released between April 2017 and April 2018. Highlights:

❚ Buddy is a personal robot. Think of him as Alexa with big eyes, because he can do many of the same things, such as reading the weather or offering you great recipes.

❚ The security camera robot, the

AR4X camera, which promises to recognize faces and turns security from passive to proactive. The idea is that the camera learns your face and lets you by, but when a stranger is lurking, the camera knows and sends the owner an alert.

❚ Olie is a new smart lamp from a company called InstruMMen­ts, which responds to commands via Amazon’s Alexa or the Google Assistant and also doubles as a wireless charger for your smartphone.

❚ Nura is a new-style $400 headphone that calls itself “the first selflearni­ng headphones to literally adapt to your unique hearing using soundwave technology,” while BeoSound Shape is an odd-shaped, long, flat speaker resembling a soundbar.

Nuviz is a $700 display unit for motorcycle helmets, offering navigation, built-in action camera and music, adding a little more distractio­n while you drive.

Aipoly isn’t a gadget, but it wants to change the way we shop, offering artificial intelligen­ce and an app to replace the store checkout, and re-stocking. This is similar to a concept store Amazon set up in Seattle in early 2017, but if it takes off, and say Best Buy, Target and others signed up, our shopping would be way easier all over the world, not just with Amazon,

Mars is a new line of earbuds that will be marketed in Asia in early 2018, promising real-time language translatio­n. That’s similar to Google Pixel Buds, which went on sale in late fall.

Some clunkers are also on the list. Despite having debuted at the 2017 CES, the Willow Breast Pump made the CES Best of Show list. The company had said the product would be out in the spring but has never gone beyond a “beta” offering that asks consumers to write an essay first about why they want it, and await invites to eventually buy the product.

Another golden oldie, the Nissan Leaf car, was first introduced in 2011 yet somehow made the CES list.

On its website, CES doesn’t offer any explanatio­ns on how the products were chosen. The CTA does say that each product category has a three-member judging team composed of an independen­t designer, engineer and a member of the trade press.

 ??  ?? Buddy, a personal robot, is like having an Alexa with big eyes. Buddy can read the weather or offer you a recipe. BLUE FROG
Buddy, a personal robot, is like having an Alexa with big eyes. Buddy can read the weather or offer you a recipe. BLUE FROG

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