What The Tech App of the Day: Are You Dead Yet/ Demumu
If something unexpected happened to you today, would anyone know right away?
If something unexpected happened to you today, would anyone know right away?
BY JAMEY TUCKER, Consumer Technology Reporter Every year, the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas gives us a glimpse into the future of gadgets. We see faster cars, bigger TVs, and futuristic-looking devices. But some of the most impressive technology this year wasn’t about speed or flash—it was about independence and accessibility. Here are a few brilliant gadgets…
A new Mastercard cybersecurity survey found that 43% of Gen Z and 39% of millennials say
they have engaged with scam attempts.
While CES is best known for flashy gadgets, big announcements, and viral demos, many
companies come to Las Vegas for reasons viewers never see on TV.
A lot of what we see at CES will never make it to store shelves. But every now and then, something strange, clever, or unexpected turns into the next big thing.
As CES wraps up, robotics companies will leave Las Vegas with massive amounts of data
gathered from real human interactions on the show floor.
As health tech continues to move into the home, the focus is shifting away from treatment and
toward prevention.
This is what CES is really all about. Not just massive booths and headline grabbing
announcements, but smaller companies with big ideas.
The week at CES always starts with CES Unveiled, the event where the most unusual ideas
show up first.
For more than half a century, CES has been where some of the most important consumer technologies first
appeared. It is also where a few very ambitious ideas quietly disappeared.