Neat Stuff In Sin City: CES 2004 173
Even for convention-happy Vegas, CES is one of the city's biggest annual events -- approximately 120,000 attendees and more than 2,000 vendors have gathered to sell, buy or window-shop all sorts of electronic and related products, from high-end turntables (for pre-digital music stored on extruded polyvinyl) to message-scrolling LED badges, batteries and chargers, metal detectors, digital cameras, strange-looking MP3 jukeboxes, LED-strewn computer cases, and more.
Repeat: CES is not necessarily about computers -- at least it's not centered around devices with keyboards, rectangular CPUs and monitors. There's plenty of computer industry action here -- Michael Dell is one of the keynote speakers, for instance, and several of the biggest exhibitors are computer manufacturers -- but the "consumer" part of Consumer Electronics Show is an unsubtle hint that anything which beeps, glows, plays recorded music, takes batteries, or has a circuit board buried somewhere within is fair game. (I'll skip details on some of the products that slip past even this catch-all description, among them ceramic figurines and other gimcracks.) There are companies represented who will cast your industrial design in aluminum, and one which will let you do the shaping yourself, but in plastic. There's no way to see everything here; here are some impressions of what I did see, though.
May I interest you in a humongous television?
Plasma and LCD displays are everywhere at CES, in the form of new but current products, prototypes to whet your appetite for next year, and as visual aids selling other products. The ongoing switch in the U.S. to digital broadcasting and the uncertainty attached to early adopter purchases generally make me glad not to be in desperate need of a television right now, but the home-entertainment hardware on display is enough to make my eyes water. LG, both inside the show and on a billboard outside the convetion, proclaims that they have the world's first 76" plasma television (their booth has this on display, and many smaller ones as well), while Samsung's giant blue-themed booth tops that by featuring a crowd-paralyzing 80" model; people stood to watch the demo loop, which was mostly natural imagery rather than the bikini show running on many other companies' sets.
(This display, and LG's 76" model, brings up a point that seems to generalize well to many of the claims made at CES and in less overt marketing circumstances as well: Samsung calls theirs the world's first 80" plasma TV, but they also are showing a 70" model inexplicably labeled "The World's First Plasma TV." These companies are far from the only ones making dubious contradictory claims; the standard of evidence to be a "world's first" at CES seems lower than you might expect.)
TV and monitor overload is easy: Toshiba, Panasonic, Sony, Philips, Sony, Aquos (made by Sharp), Daewoo, Apex, ViewSonic, and other brands more or less familiar to electronics-friendly American householders all had their LCD displays out, both computer-only and TV-friendly devices. So did low-end, badge-stamping names like LennoxSound and Coby; some of the Coby displays had lifelike paper screen mockups rather than actual moving images. (If you're in the market for a flat-screen television, beware that some LCD televisions are really only monitors; if you need a tuner, don't assume one is built it.)
LCD computer monitors are now so mainstream that nothing stands out as spectacular in what I saw of this year's crop, though it's nice to see that bigger models are eroding 20" as a gigantic-LCD standard and pushing it down to merely large: suffice it to say, 20" LCDs may remain in the high end of computer displays for a little while, but far larger ones are now at the high end.
While on the topic of big-screen displays, two products from InFocus stand out: First is their 7"-thick, 61" screen (the model is labeled Screenplay RPTV; this may change before it ships), which is easy to confuse with a plasma model, but it's not -- it's actually a rear-projection system that's had its guts folded into a silvery rectangle taking up about a foot of vertical space beneath the display's screen. This rearrangement means it lacks the spare, picture-frame look of most plasma TVs, but the result still whips old-style console sets. Pricing is not yet set (it's not shipping until later this year), and smiling InFocus representatives deflected the question of price from several people, including me, only hinting that it would be cheaper than similarly-sized plasma models. And only your aesthetics and stud placement can determine whether a near-100-pound television qualifies as "hangable" for you. A 70" version is set to follow.
The second product, happily, does have a price; unhappily, that price is $2700. That much money buys you their LP120 model, introduced earlier this year, which InFocus says is the smallest XGA projector on the market -- it's about the size of a 5-pound block of cheddar cheese, weighs less (a hair less than two pounds) and has to be seen to be believed. It sits strictly in the middle end of the brightness scale (1000 lumens) but on the moderately lit convention floor, the image is actually hard to distinguish from that of a non-projected screen. I'm not sure at what price I would buy this (I would really like to take a projector this size along with me, everywhere), but at almost three grand (and replacement bulbs are the industry-norm 2000/hour life, $300-400 replacement cost) this is for business travelers and jillionaires more than those of us who'd like to watch "L.A. Confidential" in a hotel room.
Black boxes for your humongous television.
The electronics industry would obviously like you to buy a big (expensive) display of some sort, and they're happy to help supply moving images to make it worthwhile. "Convergence boxes," with different logos on the front, but with for the most part similar capabilities and interfaces, are on display from many manufacturers. Convergence is like perfection, though -- the pursuit is worthy, but ongoing. There will always be new file formats, media, and output devices to fold in.
Drawing a composite sketch, this year's standard-issue convergence box runs embedded Linux like TiVo (for instance Daewoo's DX C811N Digital Video Recorder) and in many cases the TiVo name (under license), holds a hard drive from 80-120GB (like Toshiba and Panasonic are offering), features composite and S-Video outputs (nearly every maker), lets you record to DVD-RAM or DVD-RW/+RW, and is still at standard resolution (rather than High Definition). High Definition PVRs will eventually arrive in force; I bet they'll be next year's big trend of the show. Also next year, you'll probably see more all-in-one boxes which can play back WMV files; one Microsoft display area was showing off the first WMV-capable DVD player, the Malata DiVA DVR-489. Confusingly enough, a few feet away Microsoft was giving out sample DVDs with WMV format high-density program examples; these can't be played back (for now) in anything but a PC running Windows; the Malata and similar, soon-to-market players are for standard definition only.
(The Daewoo PVR I mentioned, by the way, is really a different beast altogether, built for things like monitoring multiple security cameras: I lust for the built-in 8-way video multiplexer).
Considering that PVRs are becoming ever more commoditized, I hope that Apex's prototype PVR-9280 (with a DVD burner as well as an internal hard drive) becomes a reality. When I asked about that, Sal Fiore from Apex did what a lot of exhibitors at CES have to do: he hedged, resorting to a smile and calling it "a definite possibility." Though known as at best a medium-grade electronics brand, Apex has followed the path of eMachines by making more impressive products over the last few years. I'd be happy to find the PVR equivalent to today's low-end DVD players.
On the high end, though, Samsung was showing a working and very polished looking Blu-Ray recorder, which they say will be able to store up to two hours of high density programming (and 12 hours of standard) per Blu-Ray disk. (Blu-Ray, mentioned briefly here, is an optical format storing up to 27GB on a CD-sized disk.)
And now for something completely obscure ...
Since I'm in the market for a portable Ogg Vorbis player, I've asked at several of the manufacturer's booths whether they plan to support it, and specifically whether they will sell CD-based units with Vorbis decoders. (I've been encoding my CDs to Vorbis for the last few years; YMMV, but I like it.)
The results are about what I'd expect: a polite "not on our radar screen" is the gist of responses from representatives at Creative, Sony, and nearly all the other Big Names; at the lower-end makers booths (who, after all, make things like $40 MP3 CD players available at mass-market retailers), I never even found anyone who'd heard of Ogg. iRiver is the current standout in this regard, since they're releasing firmware to make their CD-based players Ogg-friendly; I'll be visiting iRiver's product lounge soon to take a look at their current lineup. I also found flash-based players from Samsung and Rio.
This isn't surprising in the crowded world of audio codecs: MP3 has the benefit of years of market saturation; Microsoft has the research and marketing clout to develop and license WMA; and the Apple touch, via ITMS, has make AAC a nearly overnight contender. (Microsoft was showing off in a dedicated booth a few dozen models of portable audio players, like the Rio Nitrus, that will play WMA files in addition to MP3s, including the smallest 20GB hard-drive based model I've yet encountered, the not-yet-in-the-U.S. Toshiba Gigabeat MEG200J. Think of portable audio as sculpted by Minox.)
However, I did find one working CD-based Ogg-playing portable (model MCD-CM600, part of the "Yepp" line) on display in the Samsung area. "On display" is pushing things; several examples of the player were on hand, but behind plexiglas as window dressing rather than as a demonstration product. A company representative did some Won-to-dollars calculation, and said the player is available in Korea for between $130-140 dollars at current exchange rates, but that Samsung had no current plans to sell it in the U.S.
Tomorrow, look for a report collecting some of the wackier (and stupider) stuff at the show -- like a Segway do-alike (sans balancing brains and with more wheels), the electronic home of the future as seen from 1982, interesting swag, and the sad fate of the Wurlitzer name.
Wow... (Score:5, Funny)
Anxiously awaiting reply before taking article seriously...
Passed by it, but not yet stopped (Score:1)
Hmmm, will let you know.
timothy
Re:Passed by it, but not yet stopped (Score:2)
The real question should be (Score:1, Offtopic)
So you found my video too huh [google.com]? I won't comment on my experience sir
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:2, Funny)
--
Re:Wow... (Score:3, Funny)
OGG Portable Players (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.immunitysec.com/
-dave
the iRiver is nice (Score:1)
timothy
Re:the iRiver is nice (Score:5, Informative)
NewEgg.com listing [newegg.com]
It doesn't look like the iHP-120 plays FLAC, but it is firmware upgradable so it may someday. USB mass storage device so it will work with Mac, Linux, and Windows without extra software (If that's important to you). The Rio Karma's ethernet interface is Java/Swing based, so you must have that on your computer. However, I don't own either of these, yet; this is just the research I have done. I'm seriously considering the iHP-120, but it is rather expensive.
Re:the iRiver is nice (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:the iRiver is nice (Score:2)
Re:the iRiver is nice (Score:2)
As for Linux support, it works great [neurosaudio.com] and there is a good Linux client [sourceforge.net]
Re:the iRiver is nice (Score:5, Informative)
Karma:
- Ethernet port
- FLAC support
- Mad on-the-fly playlisting capabilities (AutoDJ thingy)
iHP-120:
- Comes with inline remote with LCD (can do everything you could with the main unit afaik)
- Is completely plug-and-use as a generic hard drive for at least semi-modern OS-es (the Karma needs special software for transferring files)
- FM tuner
- Voice recording
- Mad i/o and recording capabilities (line in/out, optical in/out)
What stands out is that, asides from the Karma's ethernet port, the iRiver's advantages are hardware-based, while the Karma's are software, meaning there's a good chance of the iRiver gaining some of them as well later through a firmware upgrade (of course, I wouldn't count on it, but it's something to be considered). Other than that, it basically depends on what you need it for.
Re:iRiver is nice; also consider: (Score:2, Insightful)
- Needs software like the Karma (but open source, linux version, cool dev community)
- MP3, WAV, OGG, (FLAC beta)
- Voice, radio, line-in recording to WAV, MP3
- FM tuner and Transmitter
- other Misc features (site [neurosaudio.com])
IMO, you can't really have a compressed audio "jukebox" without the ability to play your music anywhere with almost any device.
The song browsing by filesystem or media library on the iHP is nice though.
Re:the iRiver is nice (Score:2)
- Comes with inline remote with LCD (can do everything you could with the main unit afaik)
From the pictures I've seen, I only saw a Play/Pause and Stop button on the remote... is that not right?
Re:OGG Portable Players (Score:1)
-dave
Re:OGG Portable Players (Score:2)
Intel's Cheap(er) LCD's (Score:4, Interesting)
According to Intel, this time next year we will be enjoying 55" LCD and plasma screens for under $1,000.
I can't find the link right now, but I read an article saying that Intel had come up with a new semiconductor that would make these displays possible. The best part was that they should be on the shelves in the next 12 months (take that with plenty o' salt).
Did anyone else hear about this or know anymore?
Re:Intel's Cheap(er) LCD's (Score:5, Informative)
they are LCOS (Score:1, Informative)
They cannot be used in place of direct-view LCD (i.e. hang on the wall or laptop types).
Re:Intel's Cheap(er) LCD's (Score:1)
Re:Intel's Cheap(er) LCD's (Score:1)
http://biz.yahoo.com/rm/031217/tech_intel_televis
also, by semi-related I mean, it's not the article I read, but it's related...
Re:Intel's Cheap(er) LCD's (Score:4, Informative)
here is intels official site: Intel LCoS [intel.com]
The article in NYtimes made claims that this would produce sub 1000 dollar RPTVs by Christmas 04' I think this is a bit optimistic however it does bode well for us avgeeks.
LCoS is Liquid Crystal on Silicon. The best way to describe it would be a cross between DLP and LCD without the colorwheel and micromirrors of a DLP system.
I would also like to note that this technology has nothing to do with flat panel displays(LCD/Plasma)
More Links
Yahoo Article [yahoo.com]
CNET Article [com.com]
DLP without the mirrors and colorwheel? (Score:2)
It actually reads more like a reflective instead of a transmissive LCD system.
But I get your point.
About time, too! (Score:2)
This might be the thing that finally get the critical mass of widescreen TV's needed to deploy 16:9 ATSC-standard HDTV and get a large viewing audience. I can see two years fro
$1800 not $1000 (Score:1)
Better CES reviews (Score:2, Informative)
I commend timothy, a so-called "editor" at Slashdot, for trying to write a summary of his experiences at CES. However, the following reviews are done by more qualified journalists. I recommend them instead.
Wireless Week [wirelessweek.com], High Fidelity Review [highfidelityreview.com], Stereophile [stereophile.com], CNN [cnn.com].
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Seth Finklestein
Media-Savvy Internet Pundit
Re:Better CES reviews (Score:3, Interesting)
So CmdrTaco is the founder, Cowbody Neal and company are clearly technically savvy. What do timothy and michael bring to the table? I.e., what makes them editors? Not a flame -- an honest, and I think fair, question?
-Bill
Re:Better CES reviews (Score:2, Offtopic)
michael petrifies them.
any questions?
Re:Better CES reviews (Score:4, Interesting)
While it's nice that you have other sources of information available regarding CES, and believe them to be better than timothy's work, the fact remains that he's a staff member of Slashdot and is generating content for the site.
How can he be expected to improve his skills over time, writing about the important events in technology, without making at least an effort to write more stories?
Slashdot and many sites like it consist mostly of links to other content-generating sites, themselves writing articles and doing the actual on-the-prowl research. One of the ways Slashdot can definitely improve itself is to encourage more and more "home-grown" articles, written by staff members, and then work with the staff from the many, many comments that each story generates. While this "learning curve" probably turns off folks who are expecting a full-on technical publication staffed with the top-flight of writers, the fact is that this site is nontheless popular and might as well make the occasional attempt to tell the story from their own, unique point of view.
I do agree that an opening paragraph in which the writer says "The following (link) (link) (link) write-ups are out for CES, and here's my impressions" would be a small mark better, allowing readers to get comparitive views (something that the publications you mentioned will not do), but I think disparaging his "editor" title was uncalled for.
- Jason Scott
textfiles.com: Your Cure For a Broken Heart
Re:Better CES reviews (Score:3, Interesting)
Slashdot: "I went to CES"
You: "So did better people than you"
Which makes at least a bit more sense knowing that you consider yourself personally wronged by michael and pos
Re:Better CES reviews (Score:2)
However, you can't win them all.
Sim City? (Score:3, Funny)
Man, a CES show in my city, I knew it was too good to be true!
Re:Sim City? (Score:1)
yes. I wish I was kidding.
HP declares war on sharing culture at CES (Score:5, Informative)
Carly clearly show where HP stands on the issue of consumer rights.
If you watch the video she shows an example where HP DVD burners won't make back-ups of VHS tapes.
Since when did backups become illegal? HP is obviously choosing to ignore fair use rights.
Re:HP declares war on sharing culture at CES (Score:2)
They just fucking don't care as long as they get paid. That is why they are destroying HP.
Re:HP declares war on sharing culture at CES (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:HP declares war on sharing culture at CES (Score:1)
Still, it sucks, and both the EU parliament and US congress should wake up and realise citizens should come first, always.
Nice Mp3 player. (Score:5, Informative)
* Platform independant Software
* Ethernet Socket (in addition to usual connectors)
* Smaller footprint than iPod
* Supports non DRM file formats including ogg, and flac.
Only minor gripe is that it doesnt look as nice as the iPod. (Although there is nothing inherently ulgy with the way it looks)
Rio Karma [digitalnetworksna.com]
technically speaking its a better player.
Re:Nice Mp3 player. (Score:2, Informative)
My only gripe is that right now we are using the Java client. She could care less, since it works great on her Debian laptop, but I want a free software client app for the Karma. There is a project to develop a set of open source client libraries for managing the Rio Karma. It is called KarmaLib [sourceforge.net].
Re:Nice Mp3 player. (Score:2)
Looks aside, the form factor is certainly much better, rounded square like that fits on palm MUCH better than longish iPod-lookalikes (=everything else out there), and it's even got a grip.
I've also heard it really beats the crap out of iPod when it comes to sound quality.
I agree with other posters gripe about lack of mass-storage drive, though - it REALLY lessens the devices usefulness
Re:Nice Mp3 player. (Score:2)
The Rio Music Manager has been a little tough for her to learn, but she's getting it (she's not too technical). My only complaint about that software is the inability to transfer a playlist from the PC to the Karma. You use the PC to create a playlist on the Karma
Improve the LCDs please! (Score:1, Interesting)
- Better support for non-native resolutions. I mean come on...if I want to show ~800x600 in a 22" display I should have the benefit of no screwball artifacts.
- Consistent lighting. The Samsung 213T is a really nice monitor. Unfortunately, every one I've seen has a slight flicker to it...like it's running at 60Hz (this despite using a DVI connector).
Please plea
What's the life of those things (Score:3, Interesting)
Are these LCD/plasma things gonna work in 10 years? 15? 20?
Re:Improve the LCDs please! (Score:2)
my gripe is the price, $1100. half that and bring the world into the future please someone!
I think I speak for all of us.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I think I speak for all of us.... (Score:1)
--
Re:I think I speak for all of us.... (Score:1)
Waiting for OLED (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not shelling out any cash for a new display until I can get a true flatscreen display. This means I'll be waiting ~5+ more years for OLED [kodak.com], and flexible FOLED [universaldisplay.com] to hit the mainstream market.
Of course, this better and cheaper tech will canibalize the huge investments in current LCD/Plasma/etc, but that's not my problem. I'm just glad that the era of expensive, heavy, highly-toxic, energy-wasteful displays is almost over.
--
Re:Waiting for OLED (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Waiting for OLED (Score:1)
Re:Waiting for OLED (Score:1)
Hardly the same cost. You'll/we'll be paying higher environmental/energy/muscle costs for the plasma. (But of course you probably drive an SUV too.)
--
Re:Waiting for OLED (Score:1)
Re:Waiting for OLED (Score:4, Informative)
but I await anxiously the day SOLED [universaldisplay.com] displays hit the market..it will allow for trully LARGE high resolution displays that still look good even close up.
(I did a report on OLED technology for my materials class last semester.. the biggest problem we found facing OLED adoption is that blue only seems to last about 2,000 hours, whereas red and green have both surpassed 20,000 hours.. however, Nokia and Kodak both have OLED-based products on the market today)
Re:Waiting for OLED (Score:2)
Title misreading strikes again (Score:2, Funny)
Weirdest units ever... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Weirdest units ever... (Score:5, Funny)
If the projector were really (somehow) made of cheddar cheese, it wouldn't work too well, now would it? So they make it from moon cheese, which is both bright (hence the moon's high visibility at night), and lightweight (due to the moon's low gravity) - both being highly desirable in a projector.
Sheesh!
Re:Weirdest units ever... (Score:1)
Re:Weirdest units ever... (Score:2)
Re:Weirdest units ever... (Score:2)
And even if it were a tungsten-halogen lamp, 2000-hour lifespans are certainly not unheard of - at work, I have a whole cabinet full of HPL 575w lamps, which are rated to last 2000 hours. (okay, okay, they're the long-life versions - the regular versions only last 300 hours)
Any news on the Zaurus 6000? (Score:2)
It'd be nice to know more about pricing and release date...
Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm glad to see that LCD projectors have come down in price. Since I watch a lot of movies but very little else, buying a big flat panel TV would be a really bad compromise: I'd still have this big thing sitting in my living room (even though smaller than a really large TV), and I'd have to pay some ridiculous price for it. No thanks... I just got a nice LCD projector. Do yourself a favour, dump the TV, and get a 1200 lumen entry-level model for 1100 Euro's, and a good roll-up projection screen for another 200. You'll never even think about flat-panel TVs anymore...
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:2)
At least, not until the bulb burns out, and you find that replacements cost hundreds of dollars. If you watch a lot of TV, you might well end up spending the price of a flat-panel display over the life of the unit.
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:2)
Bulb costs ammortized over their expected lives end up being about five to ten cents an hour now.
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:1)
Then again, maybe these things just need the geek overclocking ethic i.e. more fans and better cooling for longer life. *Shrug*
Just replaced a bulb unit in a compact infocus at work... It was used lightly over a year and a half, although to be
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:3, Informative)
At 3000 hours, a bulb will last you over a year
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:2)
Our DLP projector keeps track of bulb usage and shuts down when the bulb reaches its rated life whether it's still working or not. According to the manufacturer (NEC) this is because a bulb can damage the projector when it goes "poof." I don't know if this applies to other units.
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:2)
What about Plasma burn in? I don't know much about it, other than Plasma is a lot newer than projecters (in the market overall, obviously plasma is targeting home users more, while projecters target offices) so it doesn't have a track record. I do know that they have to compenstate for burn in because after just a few hours it is a factor. I don't know how far they can compensate though.
Projectors have their cons as well (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Projectors have their cons as well (Score:2)
2) Typical bulb life on modern units is 3000 - 4000 hours. Even using it
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:1)
A very similar thing happened to me recently with a set of knives (Bear with me). I had saved up for a set of 12 Global knives which were previously retailing for around 300GBP. Unfortunately, having recently appeared with a number of TV chefs and on various other TV
Re:Flat panel TV's still at early-adopter prices? (Score:2)
My LCD curiosities (Score:5, Interesting)
Another quesiton -- why can't I buy a desktop LCD monitor with the same size and native resolution as they make for laptops? My laptop display is maybe 15" but does 1400 x 1050. All the 15" LCDs I can find are only good for 1024 x 768 (there might be an oddball that does 1280, but usually they soak you for the 17" model).
And speaking of laptops, why haven't the laptop industry made its VGA and video-out ports on its laptops *bi-directional*? I can think of plenty of times when it would have been great to just use my laptops display. And while we're doing that, let's just integrate a TV tuner into the display chip (a laptop with an All-In-Wonder type chipset).
The real immediate future: LCoS (Score:2)
The real breakthrough will be Liquid Crystal on Semiconductor (LCoS), which will offer the same advantages of DLP (namely no convergence problems and "screen burn" problems that plague CRT-based rear-projection TV's) bu
HandHeld's Personal Video Players (Score:2, Interesting)
It's a pretty cool little device... Myself and another coworker were at MacWorld, and my coworker told me that he was talking with a friend of his from Apple... The Apple guy said that he had seen at least a few of these, but his eyes bugged out when he fou
Re:HandHeld's Personal Video Players (Score:1)
Yipes! At least they're working on getting MPEG to play on the units.
Re:HandHeld's Personal Video Players (Score:2)
Anyway, looks a nice gadget, but something like that REALLY needs a hard drive version.
RIO Karma (Score:2, Informative)
The author could have least heard a speech or 2... (Score:2)
First Pictures of Phantom Game Console from CES (Score:2)
speaking of PVRs... (Score:3, Interesting)
In a few words, it uses an ethernet connection to connect to a computer with the video data, then just forwards it to the TV over RCA or S-video cables.
Who needs a VCR that takes up space if you can record TV directly to your computer and then watch it on the TV in the comfort of your living room (that is, if you have one
Re:speaking of PVRs... (Score:2, Interesting)
linkified: MediaMVP [cesweb.org]
Re:Porn Awards - AVN (Score:1, Informative)
timothy
Re:Porn Awards (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Porn Awards (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, but I think what everyone here is looking for is the product that bridges the gap. Whatever happened to virtual reality sex anyway?
Re:Porn Awards (Score:1)
Re:The technology gap (Score:2)
Re:Porn Awards (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Porn Awards (Score:1)
Re:There's no greater sin than (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I had to laugh... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I had to laugh... (Score:1)
It's no more offtopic than those "in Soviet Russia..." posts, that often *don't* get modded down.
Please save your mod points for demoting posts that inflame or contribute more noise than signal.
Re:I was also at CES (Score:5, Funny)
I checked at the Vatican Press Office [vatican.va], but apparently God has not issued a statement on this. Readers are cautioned to wait for an official statement before placing faith in Bill's denial.
Re:I was also at CES (Score:2)
Re:Real world vs. fanboy fantasies (Score:1, Informative)
Dude, you're embarrassing yourself. Let it rest.
Re:Let it die (Score:1)
--
Post-scarcity? (Score:1)
Post-scarcity? What energy source that isn't scarce would such economies use?
Likewise, I gave up on SimEarth after a half hour because I couldn't figure out how to replay the first six days of how it really happened [answersingenesis.org].