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Tech living room revolution to be televised in HD 3D

January 06, 2010 10:27 pm | Updated December 15, 2016 11:01 pm IST - Las Vegas

On eve of Las Vegas consumer electronics showcase, expectations grow for internet TVs and the tablet computer

Workers set up the Samsung booth at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Tuesday.

This year could see a revolution in televisions on high street sale as they converge with the web, allowing viewers to watch services such as the BBC’s iPlayer and YouTube more conveniently.

Manufacturers including Sony, Panasonic and LG are expected to launch sets with a broad range of new capabilities at the Consumer Electronics Show, including High Definition TV (HDTV) screens with the internet telephony service Skype built in, so people can use their TVs for video chats with friends and family anywhere in the world.

The BBC launched a limited trial last month of the iPlayer on some high definition Freesat boxes — the free-to-air satellite service is increasingly integrated into TVs — and is anticipating even more viewers being online when the next generation of sets emerges.

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There is a scramble to profit on the hype surrounding 3D after cinema hits

Avatar and
Up . A number of companies will be debuting their attempts at high-quality 3D screens. The
Discovery Channel could even announce plans to launch a 3D TV channel next year.

The Las Vegas show is where the world’s most powerful electronics brands fight for top billing: launches in the past include the DVD, the Xbox games console and the puzzle game Tetris.

Last night’s launch of the Nexus One phone — Google’s rival to Apple’s iPhone — sought to upstage the start of CES and the next big moment will come tomorrow night with a keynote speech from Microsoft’s forceful chief executive, Steve Ballmer.

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The company has opened CES in the past by outlining a vision of where Microsoft believes the future is headed. Two years ago billionaire founder Bill Gates demonstrated a table with a built-in touch sensitive computer, the Surface, while last year Ballmer showed off Windows 7.

Announcements likely this year include new mobile phones, concepts for home entertainment — perhaps even a launch date for Project Natal, the motion—sensitive video gaming system unveiled last summer. Whatever Ballmer has up his sleeve, he will have to compete with announcements from rivals such as Sony, Samsung, and Google.

Microsoft is not alone in looking for wow factor. Others include Nokia, the beleaguered mobile phone maker whose chief executive, Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, will attempt to excite Friday’s crowds with a new slate of gadgets. Alan Mulally, boss of car maker Ford, is expected to show off hi-tech concepts aimed at changing the future of driving.

“We expect them to say something fairly significant,” said Gary Shapiro, head of the Consumer Electronics Association, which organises the show. “They are positioning themselves as a tech company rather than a car company.” It is on the show’s extensive floors that most surprises are likely. With more than 2,500 exhibitors and acres of floor space, weird and wonderful ideas have plenty of room to thrive. Exploding on the scene this year are tablet computers — touchscreen devices pitched between a laptop and a mobile phone. With Apple — which is not at CES itself — set to make an announcement later this month, rivals are hoping they can break into the market. Among these is Freescale, a US company which has announceda machine combining tablet and smartbook features. “We believe the tablet will emerge as a popular form factor for the next generation of smartbooks,” said Henri Richard of Freescale.

What’s new

By Jack Schofield

Tablet computers : Firms have been offering touchscreen tablet computers since the GridPAD and WebPads of the late 1990s. Microsoft has had several goes with PC Companions and Origami without selling significant numbers, but it might be an idea whose time has come.

Ebooks: Following the success of Amazon’s Kindle ebook reader I’m expecting to see many more: in particular, Taiwanese manufacturer MSI is likely to show a twin screen model. At least a couple of companies will try ebooks with colour screens, which look attractive but have short battery life. 3DTV Some sort of 3D TV has been shown at nearly every CES in the past decade, but thanks to the success of 3D films there should be even more this year.

Smartbooks: Intel-powered netbooks are selling like hotcakes, but smartbooks — powered by chips made by Cambridge—based ARM — barely exist ... yet. Several dozen new netbooks are expected, and there should also be the chance to see some working smartbooks.

© Guardian News & Media 2010

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