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    The 'CES curse?' Gadget show has poor record

    NEW YORK (AP) — The largest trade show in the Americas must be a great place to show off new products, right? Wrong. The International Consumer Electronics Show is quickly becoming a launch pad for products that fall flat.

    When the annual conclave kicks off next week, organizers expect more than 140,000 people — roughly the population of Syracuse, N.Y. — to descend on Las Vegas. They will mill around 1.8 million square feet of booths and exhibits, equivalent to 31 football fields.

    The 2,800 or so exhibitors are hoping to set the tone for the year by showing off tons of tablet computers, throngs of 3-D TVs and untold numbers of slim, light laptops called ultrabooks.

    But a look back at the products heavily promoted at CES in recent years reveals few successes.

    — In 2009, "netbooks" — tiny, cheap laptops — were a hot category at the show. They did have a good year, but interest was already waning when Apple Inc. obliterated the category with the launch of the iPad in 2010.

    Another big, eagerly awaited launch at the 2009 CES was Palm Inc.'s webOS software, running on a new generation of smartphones. Those devices debuted later that year to good reviews and dismal sales. A year later, Palm was sold to Hewlett-Packard Co., which killed the product line in 2011.

    — In 2010, TV makers made a big push with 3-D sets, hoping to ride the popularity of 3-D movies such as "Avatar." Sales turned out to be disappointing as buyers balked at wearing glasses and found little to watch in 3-D. The technology isn't going away, but 3-D looks to be just another feature among many of today's high-end TVs.

    Other manufacturers at that show hoped to ride the success of Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle with their own e-readers. They failed, though Barnes & Noble Inc. made some inroads later in the year with its Nook. That rivalry played out away from CES.

    — In 2011, there were more than 100 brands of tablet computers on display, all trying to ride the coattails of the iPad. Many of them didn't even make it to the market; those that did couldn't make a dent in Apple's market share.

    Amazon's Kindle Fire tablet did start to crack Apple's hegemony late in the year, but it wasn't shown at CES.

    Verizon Wireless got attention at the 2011 show with the first consumer devices to use its ultra-fast "4G LTE" data network. Although those did well over the year, the company upstaged itself by announcing, a week after the show, that it would start selling the iPhone.

    A big part of the "curse" of the show is that the company that has been driving trends in the industry, Apple, doesn't show products there. It doesn't have a booth, and its executives don't give speeches. It hasn't had an official presence at all since the 90s, though some of its employees go.

    It's not that Apple dislikes CES in particular. It just doesn't do trade shows. When it has something new to sell, it puts on its own press conference. That way, it can control everything.

    Microsoft Corp. seems to be adopting the same strategy. It revealed last month that the 2012 show will be the last one that its CEO will kick off with a keynote speech. That ends a run of 15 straight years. It's also the last time Microsoft has a booth at the show.

    The problem with the show's timing will be acute for Microsoft this year. A new version of Windows won't be ready until the fall. In his keynote speech Monday evening, CEO Steve Ballmer can, at best, show very raw prototypes of the products that will run Windows 8.

    What's left in the show booths are companies that don't quite have the clout or money to draw people to their own events, plus ones that put out new products at a reliable annual pace, such as TV and car makers.

    The Consumer Electronics Association, an industry trade group, has organized the show since 1967. Its president, Gary Shapiro, disputes the idea that it's losing relevance.

    "Nearly every consumer electronics innovation in the history of our industry was unveiled at CES," he said.

    Among recent product successes revealed at CES, he mentions Samsung's Flex-Duo smart oven, Eye-Fi's memory cards that upload photos wirelessly, GM's OnStar service, Parrot's AR remote-control flying drone, Microsoft's Kinect Avatar, Samsung's LED TVs, Sonos' wireless music system and Corning's Gorilla Glass for smartphones.

    "With some 20,000 products introduced at each show, many can and should be failures. That is the American way," Shapiro said.

    And besides, attendance is up. The show is set for its third year of growth from the recession-stripped nadir of 2009 and could touch the record numbers hit in 2006.

    That matters because the attendees are all industry people. Consumers aren't allowed in. Having everyone who matters in Vegas for a couple of days in the year makes it easy to set up face-to-face meetings that would take weeks to organize otherwise. In that context, it matters less that the show hasn't been a great staging ground for new products.

    "I'm pretty comfortable that we're the most important event for technology in the world," Shapiro said. "It's difficult to come out with someone really important who's not there."

    Apple CEO Tim Cook's absence may make him the exception. His predecessor, Steve Jobs, was certainly never caught loitering on the show floor. But the company contingent will probably be strong. Last year, the Apple's retail store division alone sent 159 people, according to the CEA.

    So what potential flops will be hyped at the show this year?

    — Windows 8 will be an important new product in 2012, but the late-year launch means PC and tablet makers hoping for a CES boost have to wait.

    The new operating system is built for touch screens, the kind made popular by iPhones and iPads. Windows 8 will also run on cellphone-style processing chips, the type used in most tablets. That should improve battery life considerably over the PC-type chips that Windows runs on today. However, many analysts believe Microsoft has already lost this market to Apple.

    — As a stopgap, PC makers will show off ultrabooks. They're essentially Windows versions of the MacBook Air laptop, which uses chips instead of a spinning hard drive for storage. That makes the machines lighter and thinner but also more expensive. Expectations for ultrabooks are modest — Gary Balter at Credit Suisse believes they could make up 10 percent of laptops sales this year.

    — Having failed to catch the iPad wave last year with $500 tablets, some tablet makers will try to catch the Kindle Fire wave with smaller, cheaper tablets. But the profit margins are tiny at that price, so bigger Asian manufacturers are setting their sights on the tablet version of Windows 8, hoping it will provide them better opportunities, said Rhoda Alexander, an analyst at IHS iSuppli.

    — TV makers will be talking about "smart," Internet-connected sets, but they're not exactly new.

    However, we'll see the first full-size TVs that use organic light-emitting diodes in place of LCDs. LG Electronics has confirmed that it will be showing off a 55-inch set, to be sold late in the year. The price hasn't been disclosed, but is likely to be high. OLED sets can be painfully thin — in LG's case, less than a third of an inch — and should boast improved image quality as well.

    We'll also see TVs that are "smart" in the sense that they respond to gestures or spoken commands. However, until cable set-top boxes get smart, too, we won't be able to abandon remotes.

    Paul Gagnon, an analyst at DisplaySearch, said TV manufacturers are trying to get ahead of Apple. He and other analysts believe the company is working on a TV set that could be introduced this year. Some speculate that "Siri," the voice-control application in the latest iPhone, is a dry run for a voice-controlled TV.

    Apple hasn't commented on the speculation. It has agreements with Hollywood studios for sales and rentals of movies through iTunes, but to create a TV that's unmistakably "Apple," it would likely require broader agreements with content providers, such as rights to stream live TV. Even Apple might not be able to challenge the content industry's way of business.

    "They've been able to break down those digital barriers with music and other applications, but TV is going to be one of the tougher areas," Gagnon said.

    In other words, an Apple TV could be an expensive flop. Staying away from CES is no guarantee for success.

    ___

    Peter Svensson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/petersvensson

    ___

    Online:

    http://cesweb.org

     

    28 comments

    • Rory  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      What a joke. CES has been around for decades. Apparently the last three years is all the writer has paid attention to.
    • Khanh  •  Redwood City, California  •  1 mth 15 days ago
      Stupid article. Most products shown at any show will fail. That's just a given. No way most of the products shown anywhere can be successful.
    • Narg  •  1 mth 10 days ago
      The story here doesn't take statistical consideration of ALL gadgets announced, in or out of CES. I'd wager that CES statistics probably follow identically the statistics of any gadget released at any other time. I guess the author just needed to #$%$ about something, and made this up.
    • David  •  San Francisco, California  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Windows versions are like Star Wars movies in this respect: Every other one is crap.

      I'm still running XP on my desktop; my laptop came with 7 and that seems to work okay; but by all accounts Vista sux, and before that 2000 likewise, and so on going back.

      Based on this pattern, I'll skip Windows 8 - the one that follows, though, will probably be good.
    • mongo46538  •  Huntington, Indiana  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Too much junk out there to begin with... soon people will remember that life was much more simple and enjoyable with out all this crap.
    • Mike  •  Orlando, Florida  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Those products suced. The CES has launced many products. The author did not do his homework (typical digital writer with no communications degree). How about the: VCR, laserdisk, Ataro Pong, the camcorder, CD, DVD, Amiga, C-64, NES, Teris, X-Box, Blue Ray?
    • SacramentoGoldMinerFan  •  McClellan, California  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Electronics gadgets may be getting to a point of diminishing returns. As I see it the benefits for some of the gadgets are too small for the cost in money and learning time. Also, the changes come faster than the market can absorb before there is something new.

      One of the limits on the 3D technology is that many people cannot benefit since they have only one functioning eye to view the screen. Cataract surgery patients are one example where one eye is for distance and the other for reading. In fact these people would have to use glasses to watch a simple program so there is a disadvantage.

      Electronic notepads are nice but for a simple grocery list so is a pencil and the back of an envelope.
    • Trofimov  •  Monterey Park, California  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      People, CES is just a legit cover for the AVN show!
    • G  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Windows 8 is going to be a complete disaster for Microsoft.

      They need to close the desktop book with Windows 7. Then resurrect Courier ASAP.
    • SilverAcorn  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Unless Apple can reinvent the "television" in ways that haven't been already attempted in the past 60 years, then it's very unlikely that an "Apple TV" will generate enough leverage to alter the content providers way of doing business. Their product line is too small for CES anyway. As an off-and-on attendee, a show with over 2,800 companies annually hawking their latest wares is bound to have a few success stories and a lot of flops! And as Mr. Shapiro has pointed out, this is really a show for the businesses that sell the products, and has little to do with consumers beyond providing eye candy to watch them salivate!
    • Brokintongue  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      went one year and spent 99% of the time in the XXX convention below.... god i wanna do that again.
    • mike  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      The real curse is being awarded in an Innovations award. It seems to be the kiss of death for a product. Yet, we continue to submit products. Go figure.
    • George  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      ❤AVN Expo❤
    • Earle  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      I'm salivating over a $9k glass cube that loops a few hours of holographic images.
    • RunnerX  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      no more new gimics, give us products that actually work, or that dont break when you take them out of the packaging!! I dont want anything new, i want my stuff i already have to do what it was advertised for!
    • Brokintongue  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      maybe CES should be more open to the public instead of just vendors. 3 years in a row we tried to get tickets but they are not available to non businesses. Perhaps if more "consumers" were let in the consumers would know what to buy in 6 months.
    • Zachary  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Technology changes so fast I barely have the time to hate what I have. Much as I like the idea of a flat screen TV, my tube TV works just fine and it's 10 years old. Getting a tablet, iPad or ultrabook means my laptop is useless, which it isn't. It works just fine. My Droid Incredible is kinda wonky, but its taken me a whole year to figure out it's quirks and I still haven't mastered it.

      Not sure how much we need our gadgets to do that warrants upgrading every year.
    • Ray  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      If Microsoft had dominated the Apple Orchard, they surely would have been taken to court for Monopolistic behavior. Oh, that happened already? Guess they learned. Just keep business happy, consistently good products (except for Vista), good profitability Year after year. Yawn..... So boring...
    • Mike  •  Orlando, Florida  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      If you want into a CES, just buy some business car papaer at office max and print up a couple of buiness cards. Make it cound electronic like 'digital devices done right' or whatever. When you get there, you sign in. They just want to see a business card. that's it. Come on people. if china can hack all of our computers then why can't you figure this out. BTW: This is what I do to get in.
    • AF  •  Newhall, California  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      Please get rid of 3D nonsense
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