The 'International Consumer Electronics Show' (CES) is a
trade show held each January in
Las Vegas,
Nevada, and is sponsored by the
Consumer Electronics Association. At the show, many previews of products are introduced, or new products are announced.
The show is held at the
Las Vegas Convention Center with additional venues used for specific specialties. The CES is now considered one of the major technology-related trade shows, following the cancellation of
Comdex.
History
The first CES was held in June, 1967 in
New York City.
From 1978 to 1994, CES was held twice each year: once in January in Las Vegas known as ''Winter Consumer Electronics Show (WCES)'' and once in June in
Chicago, Illinois known as ''Summer Consumer Electronics Show (SCES)''.
In 1995, the show changed to a once a year format with Las Vegas as the location. In Vegas, the show is one of the largest, the other being
CONEXPO-CON/AGG, taking up to 18 days to set up, run and break down.
[1]
Show highlights
2005
The 2005
exhibition was from
January 6 2005 to
January 9 2005 in Las Vegas. The event started off with a twist when the main keynote address by
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates went wrong as a device that was being demonstrated failed,
[2] much to the amusement of the onlookers.
Samsung showed off a 102-inch
plasma television.
[3]
2006
The 2006 International CES took place on
January 5 2006 to
January 8 2006 at the Las Vegas Convention Center, the
Sands Convention Center, the
Alexis Park Hotel and the
Las Vegas Hilton Hotel.
HDTV was a central theme in the Bill Gates keynote
[4] as well as many of the other manufacturer's speeches. The standards competition between
HD DVD and
Blu-ray was conspicuous, with some of the first HD movie releases
[5] and first HD players being announced at the show.
Philips showed a
rollable display prototype whose screen can retain an image for several months
without electricity.
Attendance was over 150,000 individuals in 1.67 million net square feet of space making it the largest electronics event in the United States.
2007
In a break from recent tradition, the 2007 CES event did not begin on a Thursday, nor span a weekend. It ran from Monday
January 8 2007 to Thursday
January 11 2007. The venues also changed slightly with the high-performance audio and home theater expo moving from the Alexis Park venue to
The Venetian. The remaining venues were the same as previous years: the Las Vegas Convention Center was the center of events, with the adjacent
Las Vegas Hilton, and the Sands Expo and Convention Center hosting satellite exhibitions.
The location for the main keynotes was the other major change for 2007. Previously held at the Las Vegas Hilton's Main Theater, they staged for the first time at
The Palazzo Ballroom in The Venetian. Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft, gave his ninth pre-show
keynote address on the Sunday evening. The opening keynote was presented by Gary Shapiro (President/CEO of the
Consumer Electronics Association, which hosts the event), with
Ed Zander, Chairman/CEO of
Motorola. Other keynote speakers scheduled included
Robert Iger from
The Walt Disney Company,
Michael Dell, founder of
Dell Inc., and
Leslie Moonves of
CBS.
Finally, Industry Insider presentations moved to the Las Vegas Hilton, with contributions from
Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, CEO of
Nokia and
John Chambers, CEO of
Cisco.
In the gaming section for
Windows Vista and
DirectX 10, there were two games shown:
Age of Conan and
Crysis.
Notable product introductions
Products and technologies introduced at CES include:
★
Blu-ray disc and
HD-DVD dual format player, 2007
★
HDTV DVD players, 2005
★
Microsoft Xbox, 2001
★
Digital Video Recorder (DVR), 1999
★
HDTV, 1998
★
DVD, 1996
★
Virtual Boy, 1995
★
CD-i, 1991
★
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), 1985
★
Commodore 64, 1982
★
Compact Disc (CD) player, 1981
★
Camcorder, 1981
★ ''
Pong'' home console by
Atari, 1975
★
Laserdisc player, 1974
★
Video Cassette Recorder (VCR), 1970
CES in popular culture
★ In the film ''
Tron'' (
1982), ENCOM Senior VP Ed Dillinger sighs derisively to the
Master Control Program, "If you've seen one Consumer Electronics Show, you've seen 'em all."
★ Comedian
David Cross includes the convention in his act in his 1999 HBO special ''The Pride is Back!''
References
1. "Grandest Gadgets", ''Las Vegas Review-Journal'', Page A1, January 6, 2007.
2. Blue screen of death crashes Gates at CES Iain Thomson
3. Samsung's big-screen plans for CES John Spooner
4. Boutin, P, "Live Coverage of Bill Gates CES keynote". ''Engadget.com''. January 4, 2006. Retrieved on January 10, 2007.
5. Ricker, T, "Film studios set to release Blu-ray and HD DVD titles today". ''Engadget.com''. January 4, 2006. Retrieved on January 10, 2007.
See also
★
CeBIT (Hanover)
★
COMPUTEX (Taipei)
★
IFA (Berlin)
★
SIMO TCI (Madrid)
External links
★
CES Official Site
★
Tips for attending the show at livedigitally.com
★
Live Coverage of CES at Engadget
★
Video coverage of CES 2007 at video-blog.eu
★
CES schedule Keynoters