


CES 2010 and the parallel show run from January 7-10th, with a special press day on the 6th (Day Zero, we call it). Click to visit each of UHF's live reports. The report will appear early the next day, if not before.
CES Preview
Day 0 (Jan.6th)
Day 1 (Jan.7th)
Day 2 (Jan.8th)
Day 3 (Jan.9th)
Day 4 (Jan.10th)
And here we are again, or we soon will be, in Las Vegas for the Consumer Electronics Show. Last year's CES was not exactly the best in the show's existence, and that was no surprise. It took place just as the Western capitalist system had crumbled around our ears. What saved it from utter disaster was the fact big companies had booked space the previous summer, before the cracks began to appear. Having already paid they came, at least most of them did. But what would happen in 2010? There might now be cautious optimism (we emphasize cautious), but then again the big companies would have made their decisions months ago, when black crows were still circling the carrion on Wall Street.
Shapiro says he had been figuring on 130,000 visitors at last year's CES, but got only 113,000. We're always suspicious of neatly rounded figures, and indeed the figure we heard last Winter had one less digit in it, but whatever. The target for 2010: 110,000. Yes, that's less than the number of visitors Shapiro claims CES had last year. How's that for excitement?
Specifically, CES has set up a new section called iLounge (that's the name of the company that is co-sponsoring the section), dedicated to everything having to do with the iPhone, the iPod and the Macintosh, including software. The section had barely been announced when it was sold out, and the alloted space was doubled. However consumers can't attend CES, at least not officially, whereas they can not only go to Macworld but buy things on site.
Oh, and 3-D video, which is the technology du jour.
The Venetian, of course, is where most of the high end exhibits will be. The desirable rooms are in the hotel tower, where they typically occupy several floors. The unlucky ones get stuck in the ballrooms, which are subdivided by partitions with all the sound-stopping power of construction paper.
This year could be different. Traditionally it's difficult to convince a hotel to take a high end show, because exhibitors are prone to leaving the rooms worse for wear. Vegas hotels are hungry this year, though, and T.H.E. Show has moved into the Flamingo (the legendary casino once owned by Bugsy Siegel (in The Godfather, Moe Greene is based on him). The Flamingo is right on the Strip, a five-minute walk from the Venetian, no shuttle needed this time. Show management says it's sold out, but of course we don't know how much space they had booked.[ON TO DAY ZERO] [TO THE UHF BLOG] [BACK TO THE UHF HOME PAGE]