This one of several special cross posts between Unplggd and WePC.com focusing on the topics and technologies leading up to the 2010 CES show. This week, we look at the hottest tech trend forming for 2010:
CES is really like any other large technology trade show: a lot of the "same" with just enough "new" to whet your appetite in anticipation every year. After years of attending the heydays of the spectacle which was once E3, or even more specialty niche trade shows like Siggraph, an annual attendee soon realizes these mega-exhibitor shows are a whole lot of style and not much substance (and they all seem to be attended by Olivia Munn and sports celebs who want the latest and greatest). This is not to say there isn't a significant amount of amazing technology and ideas being shared at CES...there is, and it can be awe-inspiring to see the results of years and millions dollars of investment, promising you an oh-so better tomorrow. But CES can sometimes end up feeling like purchasing a fast food meal: the picture in the ads rarely materializes into the same thing once you get down to the meal. Inbetween industry sponsored parties, booth babes and freebies, and the occasional celebrity sighting, there's only a few niblets of meat with a whole lot more bun than promised …




it'll be interesting to see what happens with a tablet device. in 2001, bill gates assumed that tablet PCs will be everywhere in 5 years. instead they died quickly, and refluxed into the netbook.
for a tablet to work, it has to have the same functionality of a netbook, but not have the same flaws in design as a netbook. anything lower than the standards of a netbook won't sell.
or you could take another approach. maybe as an ebook reader, that does everything that a netbook can do. THAT will raise some eyebrows.
view FightTheFuture's profile
I still don't understand the infatuation with tablets.
view gas0line7's profile
I have a tablet on my desk at work (in addition to a desktop) and I've been testing all of the latest tablet releases from Dell, Lenovo, Motion, Fujistu and HP.
They definitely have applications in certain areas of business, especially medicine, but I think they'll be too expensive for at least a few more years for most people to justify one for personal use. Then again, they may just STAY expensive since I know the engineering behind the hinges is pretty complicated and expensive.
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