The revered Intel booth let visitors explore intelligence in
everything from wearables, robots, drones, 3D printing and a slew of new
computers with human-like sense.
The “Most Eye-Catching” booth at the 2015 International Consumer Electronics Show according to Find The Best in Time magazine was Intel’s.
“Only one space in all of CES is both foreign and inviting, like a
time capsule from the future that instantly feels right at home,” stated
the article, describing Intel’s booth, which led the top 20 list.
“To walk through Intel’s corner is to experience the very best version of the show—the most eye-catching booth at CES.”
There was a 3D-printed, robotic Spider Dress with legs and it knew how to use them.
Computers you controlled with your face and hands.
A tunnel walled with enormous screens that literally put you into a real-time virtual world.
These were just some of the new technology experiences inside the Intel booth.
Dutch designer and roboticist Anouk Wipprecht’s spider
dress is the ultimate cocktail attire. By measuring your body’s
biometrics, including temperature and heart rate, it can repel or
attract anyone within spider-arms reach.
“Fashion and tech are merging at the moment, beyond blinking dresses
or cute skirts,” said Wipprecht, who demonstrated how the dress came
together during a live appearance on CNET.
“I’m showing how fashion can be thought-provoking, something that pushes people to think and share their feelings.”
Rapper 50 Cent teamed up with Intel in 2014 to create SMS Audio Biosport in-ear headphones. These super-smart headphones
produce exceptional sound and have fully integrated biometric sensors
with a heart-rate monitor built into the ear buds. The best part: no
battery charge required.
Business Insider called it “a genius way to fix one of the biggest problems in wearable tech.” The headphones won CES Innovation awards in two categories: Headphones and Fitness, Sport & Biotech.
When MICA, My Intelligent Communications Accessory, was announced
at the 2014 New York Fall Fashion Week, it was a sort-of coming out
party for fashion-forward wearable tech. It was born out of a
collaboration between fashion house Opening Ceremony and Intel, which
was announced at last year’s CES.
It’s a feminine fashion accessory with communications capabilities.
It lets you get text messages, Google and Facebook reminders, calendar
alerts from TomTom and business recommendations by Yelp. The bracelet
officially launched in late 2014 and booth visitors can check it out at CES.
At just 6 mm, the Dell Venue 8 7000 is the world’s thinnest tablet.
The 8.4-inch screened tablet runs the Android operating system and is
the first tablet to have an Intel RealSense
3D camera that lets people capture images with adjustable depth and
focus capabilities. Ever wondered how high you jumped in that photo?
This tablet will tell you.
The Wall Street Journal’s Joanna Stern
wrote, “In a sea of slim and speedy Android tablets, the Venue’s real
differentiator is the group of stereoscopic cameras, which, in
combination with Intel’s new RealSense technology, brings photos to life in ways others can’t.”
The Dell Venue 8 7000 earned a CES “Best of Innovation” award.
While you won’t see it at Intel’s booth, the company this week
introduced the Compute Stick, a powerful PC packed into a package the
length of a car key. It can plug into an HDMI port and transform any TV
or monitor into a computer. Compute Stick, which CNETcalled,
“an undeniably cool little gadget,” comes installed with Windows 8.1,
has 2GB of RAM and 32GB of storage. It connects to the Internet via
Wi-Fi, and it has USB and micro USB ports, plus a micro SD slot for
additional storage.
Curved screen TVs were big at CES this year, but Samsung’s ATIV One 7
All-In-One is a curved-screen PC. Its 27-inch screen looks bigger with
the curvature and gives the user a more immersive computing experience
with less screen glare. It has built-in 10W speakers, four USB ports and
Samsung’s handy SideSync, which lets you receive texts and calls from
your phone on your PC.
The PC showed off the dazzling Corel Painter 2015, which won PC Mag’s editor’s choice
for being an “impressive tool digital artists, who want to recreate the
experience of painting with oils, sketching in charcoal and working
with other real-world art media, on their computer.
Working towards Intel’s vision of a password-less world, True Key
is a password-management app that helps relieves the pain of
remembering multiple passwords by managing your codes and using facial
and fingerprint recognition to authenticate your personal devices. Intel
is also working with home security giant ADT, to bring RealSense and
True Key technology to your front door, enabling multi-factor
authentication for a digital deadbolt.
CCS Insight called the Lenovo P90 is a “notable design win for Intel”
for the smartphone’s giant battery and being the first smartphone with
the 64-bit Intel Atom processor.
“It’s impressive,” reported the Verge.
“The P90 Is the first phone running on Intel’s 64-bit Atom 1.8GHz
quad-core processor, and supports LTE-Advanced (FDD and TDD), which
offers theoretical download speeds of 150Mbps.”
Soon, leaving home without all those different power cords for your
phones, tablets and notebooks could become a problem of the past. Wireless charging technology lets you place your personal device on table and start charging.
Similar to how the Wi-Fi revolution in 2003 let people connect their
mobile computers to the Internet without wires, new wireless-charging
technologies aim to free people from having to rely on their power cords
at all.
Wireless Power, or “Magnetic Resonance,” is where electricity
transfers safely between two objects through metal coils. Magnetic
Resonance technology provides positional flexibility, charges through
most tabletops, and can simultaneously charge multiple devices of
various sizes and power levels.
In his keynote kicking off CES, Krzanich highlighted new
wireless-charging collaborations including Hilton, Jaguar Land Rover,
San Francisco International Airport and Marriott to deploy
wireless-charging pilots.
Wireless charging stations could soon become common in airports,
cafes, hotels and other public places. The technology can be easily
fitted under existing tables or counter tops, which essentially makes
them wireless charging pads.
When Hewlett-Packard executive vice president of printing and personal systems Dion Weisler
joined Brian Krzanich on stage to show off their RealSense-powered
Sprout PC and forthcoming line of commercial 3D printers, the crowd got a
cumulative chill of excitement.
Inside Intel booth, people could see the Sprout in action. It combines an all-in-one desktop PC with a 5th
generation Intel Core i7 processor and Intel’s RealSense imaging
technology, plus a combination scanner and projector, and a
touch-sensitive projection surface called a Touchy Mat.
The harness clip in this baby’s car seat is loaded with an Intel
Smart Chip, which has a built-in Bluetooth sensor that alerts your
mobile device if your baby unbuckles herself, or if she’s too hot or
cold or if the battery is low.
The most important feature, however, is that it will send an alert
should the Smart Clip still be enabled while falling out of range with
the smartphone, preventing a forgotten passenger left behind.
Cute as a button but mighty enough to power the wearables revolution. That’s what the forthcoming Intel Curie Module aims to do.
At his keynote, Krzanich disclosed plans for Curie, a complete
low–power chip with compute, motion sensor, Bluetooth low energy and
battery-charging capabilities. And it’s the size of a button.
Its size and capabilities will allow innovators flexibility, low
production cost and long battery life. The Intel Curie module can enable
efficient and intelligent wearable solutions for a broad range of forms
— from rings, bags, bracelets, pendants, fitness trackers to even
buttons.