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Smaller is smarter at the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show

An app that can unlock your front door withย a digital keyย and the latest wearable sex techย OhMiBodย are just some of the next generation of high-tech gadgets and devices on display this week at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES). So what are some of the big things to look out for from the show, held each […]
The Conversation
Smaller is smarter at the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show

An app that can unlock your front door withย a digital keyย and the latest wearable sex techย OhMiBodย are just some of the next generation of high-tech gadgets and devices on display this week at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES).

So what are some of the big things to look out for from the show, held each January in Las Vegas, in the United States? And how far has our technology evolved over the past year?

The Internet of Things

This yearโ€™s CES presented theย largest ever showcaseย of Internet of Things (IoT) products.

The smart home.ย CODE_n/Flickr,ย CC BY

The IoT is all about connectivity. It aims to use the internet to connect a whole range of devices and appliances, as well as things like the lighting and window coverings in your home.

Large growth is expected within this sector, which Dr Michael Cowling, a senior lecturer in mobile computing at Central Queensland University, said was โ€œlong overdueโ€.

โ€œThis year [at CES] is all about the gadgets,โ€ he said. โ€œSo many little gadgets that can do a specific job. Thatโ€™s great for diversity.

โ€œItโ€™s quite different from previous CES. Previous years itโ€™s been more big showcase things, like last yearโ€™s curved TVs from big companies Samsung or LG. Now weโ€™re talking about small start-up companies.โ€

One such company isย Petnet. It has produced a device that allows pet owners to monitor the food they are giving their cat or dog, as well as being able toย remotely give themย their dinner.

Other smart appliances for the home includeย Milky Weigh, a device for your fridge that can tell you how much milk you have left while youโ€™re out shopping.ย 

Tracking your health and wearables

The plan for Wearables is to beย seamlessly insertedย into our everyday lives. A major feature in numerous wearables is their health-tracker capabilities.

Bragi Dash Smart Headphonesย won an award for best innovation at the 2015 CES. These are wireless headphones with an accelerometer, heart rate monitor and an oxygen saturation sensor built in.

Swarovski Shineย is a bracelet and the first solar-powered wearable. It also includes sleep-tracker capabilities.

Vessylย is a cup that communicates with an app to measure your calorie intake. These are just some of the technologies to come out of CES this year that are focusing on peopleโ€™s health and well-being.

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Dr Kourosh Kalantar-Zadeh, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at RMIT University, said that he sees โ€œthe next stage of health as the surveillance of your healthโ€.

He compared this next step forward for diagnostic sensors to theย continued development of GPSย systems.

โ€œRemember a few years ago, people followed their GPS into a lake,โ€ he said. โ€œBut they have became much more accurate since then. Itโ€™s the same for diagnostics.โ€

He was โ€œamazedโ€ at the new sensors coming to the market with much higher sensitivity, and sees this trend continuing.

โ€œThe biggest thing for me is biomedical in the next five years, as the technology is allowing them [the sensors] to become more selective and accurate.โ€

The future of entertainment

A big feature at last yearโ€™s CES wasย curved screens for TVs, but these have received a mixed response over the 12 months with some critics labelling itย a gimmick.

This year, the main focus for new televisions was to get even better quality images with a continued interest inย 4K TVs.

A new addition to the line-up is the use ofย quantum dot technology, which is a cheaper alternative to OLED with higher definition.

โ€œThis year saw TVs with much better resolution and also much better colour, as they introduced quantum dots, so they have very sharp colour,โ€ Dr Kalantar-Zadeh said. โ€œThey were able to expand on this into very large dimensions.โ€ย 

Quantum dots.ย Wikimedia Commons,ย CC BY-SA

3D printing

Itโ€™s only in the past few years that 3D printers have become commercially available. The focus at last yearโ€™s event was on getting plastic filaments for consumer printing. This year, the CES showcased new materials and techniques.

Roboย has blended colours into its print, whileย XYZPrintingย now uses laser-cured liquid plastic to create a more structurally sound product. It has also created a food printer.

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Makerbotย is using composite filaments to create products thatย feel like real wood.

Dr Matthew Sorell, a senior lecturer at the University of Adelaide, said real progress was being made in 3D printing although it was still early days in what the technology could do.

โ€œIโ€™m reminded very much of having a nine-pin dot printer 30 years ago,โ€ he said. โ€œThat was what you could get as a consumer, whereas nowadays we all have a laser or an inkjet. Pretty much everyone has a laser printer in the office.โ€

Dr Sorell sees 3D printers following a similar progression, where we are still in the early nine-pin dot stage.

โ€œ2014 was just โ€˜here we areโ€™,โ€ Dr Sorell said. โ€œ2015 is really showing the evolving technologies of what we can do.โ€

3D printers are evolving.ย Creative Tools/Flickr,ย CC BY

While 3D printers are becoming moreย affordable and diverseย in their applications, it can be difficult for consumers to create their own designs.

Designs can be shared across communities such asย Thingiverse, but new products at the CES such asย Scanifyย could also help the consumer. Scanify is designed like a point-and-shoot camera, but will take a 3D image of an object in under a tenth of a second, which you can then print out as an exact replica.

This article originally appeared on The Conversation.ย