CES 2020 is in the books, and if there’s only one major takeaway, it’s this: in the absence of one clear Next Big Thing, there are a lot of ideas getting thrown at the wall. Many of them are intriguing, but overall it seems like we’re waiting for some parts of the consumer electronics ecosystem to mature. That trend expresses itself differently in different types of product categories, but it was pretty consistent across all of them. Here are 8 more big takeaways from this year’s Consumer Electronics Show, courtesy the experts at The Verge, who took it all in:
1. TV makers keep looking for the next expensive thing
You probably already know the drill: every year at CES TV companies do their best to come up with the next big thing that makes people upgrade. This year it’s a reminder that rolling TVs are coming and so is 8K and so are radical new designs that are bezel-less or ultra-thin. You can get a killer 4K HDR TV for under $300, depending on what size you want. Samsung and LG will sell you something very expensive if they can, but broad adoption of the Next Big TV Tech isn’t going to happen this year in part because we don’t really know what that is yet.
2. Foldables aren’t ready yet, but flexible screens are coming
You’ve heard it before but it bears repeating: most of the foldable PCs we’ve seen were merely prototypes and the software for them is not finished, either. The pressure on Microsoft to get Windows 10X right so that these PC makers can get their new designs out of the concept stage and onto store shelves is going to be intense. That pressure is doubled because Windows historically has a Good Version / Bad Version tick tock with Windows. Windows 10X is going to be a first cut at supporting a new, innovative form factor. Microsoft’s last big swing at changing Windows for a new form factor was arguably Windows 8 on the Surface, which didn’t go so well. It’s a very different company now, though. Something to watch.
3. The battle between AMD and Intel will intensify
AMD is taking another shot at legitimacy on laptops while Intel is taking another shot at legitimacy on graphics. Both are getting ready to support the new form factors mentioned above and Intel in particular is trying to invent new ones itself. New form factors always lead to a little bit of chaos, a reordering of winners and losers, and new interface paradigms for computers. But at this point in 2020 it feels like everybody is gearing up for all that chaos. By the end of the year I think we’ll have a much clearer picture of how chaotic it’ll really be.
4. Concepts were everywhere
The major cars seen at CES 2020 were concepts or prototypes. The most interesting phone thing at the show — the OnePlus Concept One — literally has “concept” in its name. Samsung’s cute little Ballie robot can be put firmly in this category, along with a few other things at the show. All this is very unsatisfying and consumers really want to see actual products they can see/feel/buy. But even as concepts most of what was on display didn’t really feel like it had a firm direction or purpose.
5. Quibi is ambitious but unproven
Quibi is the thing we’ll most likely remember as the Big Launch of CES 2020. That’s fitting, because Quibi’s launch was fairly concept-y. You couldn’t get a look at the app, for example. But however ambitious you think Katzenberg and Whitman are, you’re not thinking big enough. Ambition is not the same thing as success, though, and the stakes for Quibi’s actual launch later this year are going to be very high.
6. Smaller companies are chafing under big tech – and fighting back
Sonos absolutely stole the story of the show with its lawsuit against Google coming out just hours before the CES show floor opened. It started a conversation not just about Sonos and Google, but more generally about how small and mid-sized tech companies live in a world created by big tech giants (just like the rest of us). Right now, it’s successful companies like Spotify and Sonos that are pushing the hardest as they probably feel the most confident they won’t get crushed in a fight without anybody noticing it happened. In 2020 you will probably see more — and smaller — companies find ways to push back, perhaps with the help of regulators.
7. Sex tech de-stigmatization is inevitable
Our cultural norms have progressed to the point where we have been having healthier conversations about sex in all sorts of contexts, including tech, and that was evident at this year’s show. Last year, the powers that be at CES showed how out of touch they were before the backlash forced the CTA to get with the times. That doesn’t mean that the lobbying group is suddenly a paragon of cultural innovation — far from it. But the point is that even the CES organization had to adopt a more inclusive stance. Good.
8. Tech companies fetishized AI, 8K, and 5G a little less, finally
Those three buzzwords are so totemic that Foxconn just sort of blurted them out in defense of the its factory fiasco in Wisconsin. For some time it was impossible to hear any other tech company tout a product without using one of those terms. But this year, it seems like the bubble burst on all three. Lots of companies still tout AI like it’s magic, but nobody is buying it. Companies still insist on mentioning AI in their press releases, but don’t wait for you to ooh an ahh anymore. We all know it’s just another way of saying “computer models do it” and with a few exceptions (like Neon), nobody is pretending otherwise. As for 8K, the lack of content for those screens and interest in spending gobs of money on them meant that even though it was everywhere, nobody was entranced by it. And as for 5G, well, the networks have started lighting up the service and everybody was forced to admit that the heavens didn’t open up and rain down pure sparkles of innovation. Which meant that while 5G was everywhere, nobody acted like it was anything other than what it is right now: somewhat faster data.
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