CES 2013: Check Out This Year's Five Most Outrageous Gadgets
by David Zeiler
Money Morning
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You know
you're going to find a lot of crazy gadgets at the annual Consumer
Electronics Show, and CES 2013 has delivered.
Some of the
products are actually clever and could do well in the marketplace.
Some are simply absurd, proof that just because something is possible
doesn't mean it's a good idea.
Sorting through
the avalanche of CES 2013 reports coming out of Las Vegas this week,
we've identified five of the most head-turning things people have
been talking about:
Five Outlandish
Products from CES 2013
The Diet
Fork: Dieters of the world, rejoice! We now have a fork that
vibrates as a warning when you're eating too much, or too fast.
Called the Hapifork, it costs a mere $99.99. Sensors in this battery-powered
utensil monitor the fork's movements. It even has Bluetooth so you
can transmit the data of your eating habits to your iPhone for further
analysis. (Yes, there's an app for that.) ;So what's the biggest
advantage of using an electric fork? "Your mind doesn't have
to do the work," explains inventor Jacques Lepine.
Nailed
It: When the first iPhone launched in 2007, many women with
longer nails complained that its touchscreen designed for
fleshy fingertips was difficult to use. Now a company called
Tech Tips (get it?) has come up with a nail treatment called Nano
Nails that turns the fingernail itself into a touchscreen stylus.
Not only does it make it easier for women with long nails to use
a touchscreen, it's actually more precise than a fingertip. That
could make some men jealous. Will we see a "Mano Nails"
product designed for men at CES 2014?
Too Much
of a Good Thing: Panasonic drew stares when it unveiled a 20-inch
tablet at CES 2013. One has to wonder about the practicality of
a tablet the size of a desktop computer monitor. At 5.3 pounds (an
iPad 4 weighs 1.45 pounds), holding this beast for any length of
time will get very uncomfortable.; No word on cost or availability,
but this misbegotten device won't survive long in the real world.
Too Much
of a Good Thing II: Likewise, many TV manufacturers seem to
think we want ginormous, wall-sized screens. At least three companies
unveiled 110-inch TVs at CES 2013 this week. In case you were wondering,
such a monster is about 8 feet wide and 4.5 feet tall (but amazingly
thin). At that size, people in modest dwellings the majority
of Americans would need to put their sofas in their front
yard to view the darn thing properly. Still, don't be surprised
to see 130- or 140-inch screens at CES 2014.
Don't Fear
the Water: Show of hands: How many have ruined a smartphone
by accidentally leaving it out in the rain or dropping it in a sink,
toilet, tub or swimming pool? Perhaps the most compelling advance
at CES 2013 is the waterproof smartphone. Utah-based startup HzO
showed off a waterproofing technology it hoped to sell to other
manufacturers, including market leaders Apple
Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung Electronics (PINK: SSNLF).
Meanwhile, Chinese handset maker Huawei showed off two phone models
that are waterproof, dustproof and resistant to drops. Now that's
outrageous technology worth getting excited about.
Reprinted
with permission from Money
Morning.
January
17, 2013
Copyright
© 2013 Money
Morning
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