Inside the Consumer Electronics Show
Friday, January 10th, 2020January 10, 2020
Today, January 10, is the third and final day of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), the largest digital technology exhibition in the world. CES takes place every year in Las Vegas, Nevada, drawing thousands of tech companies large and small from all corners of the world. Such tech giants as Amazon, Google, and Samsung exhibit their latest products alongside those of small tech manufacturers, developers, and suppliers hoping to grow or get noticed. More than 4,400 companies are represented at this year’s CES, including 21 different companies whose names begin with smart, from Smart Adserver USA to SmartyPans, Inc.
CES is owned and produced by the Consumer Technology Association, the standards and trade organization that represents the massive U.S. consumer technology industry. This year, CES sprawls over 11 official venues covering nearly 3 million square feet (280,000 square meters). About 170,000 tech professionals attend CES each year (including more than 60,000 people from outside the United States) to display and market, but also to attend conferences and see and play with the latest tech gadgets. Attendees need maps to navigate the venue groups—Tech East, Tech West, and Tech South—and patience to wade through the throngs of people distracted by massive video boards, robots, and a host of other electronic bells and whistles.
The first CES took place in New York City in June 1967. It proved popular and grew quickly along with the consumer technology industry. From 1978 to 1994, CES had two shows per year—a winter exhibition in Las Vegas and a summer show in Chicago. CES has concentrated on just one major Las Vegas event per year since 1998. Numerous consumer electronics have made their debuts at CES, including videocassette recorders (VCR’s) and laser discs in the 1970′s; camcorders and compact discs (CD’s) in the 1980′s; and interactive and satellite technologies, digital versatile discs (DVD’s), high definition television (HDTV), and satellite radio in the 1990′s. Since the early 2000′s, Microsoft Xbox, plasma televisions, blu-ray DVD’s, HD radio, tablets, notebooks, Android devices, smart appliances, driverless cars, 3D printers, wearable technologies, and varying levels of virtual reality have all been seen for the first time at CES. This year’s CES features more than 200 new products as well as innovations in artificial intelligence, cloud services, cyber security, digital health services, drones, mobile payments, and 5G wireless technology.