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Check out what's happening at the CNET booth
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CALENDAR
CES events listings
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BEST OF CES
Call for entries - 2010 Best of CES Awards
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(Credit:
Lenovo)
CES 2008 may not have been a show for big wows, but there was plenty to talk about, at least on the computers and hardware front. For starters, Lenovo introduced three IdeaPads, the company's first consumer-oriented laptops for the U.S. market. (Lenovo also announced a corresponding line of desktops, predictably named IdeaCentre, for release in Europe, though we expect the line to reach our shores soon.)
HP caught our attention with the sub-$1,000, HD-equipped SlimLine desktop. Dell gave us a peek into the future with its 16-inch laptop prototype and the XPS 630 gaming desktop. Gateway launched its FX gaming brand into the mobile space with three new laptop configurations, while Alienware showed off its 15-inch gamer. We saw new ultraportables from Fujitsu and Asus, plus UMPCs from Toshiba and Samsung. We even got a glimpse at the tiny, Linux-based Everex Cloudbook. Desktops got smaller as well, if the Asus Nova P22 small-form-factor PC is any indication.
On the component front, Intel made a splash with the announcement of its first 45-nanometer notebook chips, known as Penryn; we shared our early test results for the new mobile CPUs and reported on plans for Penryn from Toshiba and HP. Intel also gave us a look at three high-end PCs that feature its components. Not to be left in Intel's wake, both ATI and Nvidia announced new graphics chips, the latter offering a peek at its Hybrid SLI technology.
Accessories that caught our eye included the Logitech diNovo Mini input device for home-theater PCs, the Ricavision Vave 100 Windows SideShow Universal Remote Control, and a Zyxel digital media adapter that lets you stream HD video and music from your PC to your home theater system.
This year's show also saw new storage devices, monitors, and security devices; click here to read all computers and hardware coverage from CES 2008.
PC makers rarely flood CES with new product announcements, preferring to hit either the lucrative holiday season just before, or else timing their latest wares to new technologies from component makers such as Intel, AMD, and Nvidia. That's not to say there won't be plenty of new laptops and desktop to see at CES, and we expect a few surprises along the way.
Best of CES 2007: Microsoft Windows Vista
(Credit: CNET Networks)Home theater PCs are still waiting for their moment in the sun after years of false starts. They're limited by lack of clean cable TV input and copy protection woes, so vendors are forced to leverage other features and unique content delivery systems. Cable card, the buggy, DRM-heavy method for delivering HD-quality cable TV content to your PC, hasn't exactly set the world on fire so far.
Putting the consumer first is a mantra we expect to see more companies follow--handy all-in-one desktop systems are on the rise, with recent well-received entries from Dell and Gateway, while Dell will continue to move beyond the online-only (well, and those mall kiosks) world into more retail stores.
On the laptop side, convertible tablets are still hot, even though nearly all of them are built for, and marketed to, industrial customers. Despite the frenzied press every new tablet receives, we still don't know anyone who actually uses one. In a world of commodity products, having a swiveling touch screen is at least something a bit different, even if you're not one of the handful of medical professionals, note-taking students, or graphic artists who actually needs a tablet.
Gamers have always looked down on laptops--even super high-end Alienware ones--but the latest Nvidia 8800 graphics cards for laptops can actually hold their own against their PC counterparts, and we should see this new technology in some surprisingly affordable systems at CES. Solid state hard drives will also take another step towards becoming standard equipment, although users will have to get accustomed to living with less storage space (although we remember when 64GB was huge for a laptop hard drive).
With Dell and HP (and Acer, if we look globally) duking it out for the No. 1 spot in consumer's hearts, PC makers have finally realized that the user experience is all important, especially since--big shocker here--most laptops have pretty much the same exact components inside. Cool designs, such as the Dell XPS M1530 or the Alienware m17x, become the real selling point--not benchmark scores.
The coolest new laptop of early 2008 may not even be at CES at all. Anything we see in Las Vegas will be outshined by a new ultraportable Apple laptop--should one actually exist. If it does, it'll be at Macworld, not CES, but it'd easily be the biggest laptop story of the year if true.
Finally, what happened to last year's Best of CES winner in the Computers and Hardware category? Despite the advancements offered by Microsoft Windows Vista, its reputation as a not-quite-fully-baked resource hog has hindered its adoption among consumers. The disdain is so great that some major manufacturers have reverted to Windows XP on new systems. We still like the look as well as many of the features of Windows Vista, but in practice it hasn't quite lived up to its promise. Consensus holds that buyers should wait until Redmond releases a Service Pack (or two).
View complete CES 2008 coverage from CNET.
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