This week is the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and, though ReadWriteWeb isn't a gadget-centric blog like Gizmodo or Engadget, we're going to be in attendance to keep an eye out for a select few trends and hoping that even more pop up and surprise us. While some of you might be hoping for that ever more realistic 3D TV or that new pair of noise-cancelling, wireless headphones that stream music, we have our own ideas of what we're looking for.
Here are the top three trends we're going to be on the look out for at CES this week, so stay tuned.
A big problem in the Internet TV realm, however, is that we're still battling over which screen content shows up on. If you choose to view content on your computer, you can watch most of the latest in television content, completely free, on network websites like NBC or ABC. These same websites, however, are blocked on Internet TV devices like Google TV. The disparity seems illogical to anyone that knows they can simply connect their computer directly to their TV and have the best of both worlds.
So, what we'll be on the lookout for are solutions to this problem. Already, we've seen proof of concept technologies like Snapstick, but a major problem still remains - will they be adopted by the hardware manufacturers? Or will relationships between major content providers, networks, and hardware manufacturers keep solutions like Snapstick from taking off?
To be sure, apps will be omnipresent at CES in televisions, tablets and mobile phones. Apps are a conduit for the Web and consistent with the growth of Internet connectivity, I expect to see apps gain significant inroads in cameras, printers, in the vehicle and digital displays like photo frames. I also expect to see apps gain significant inroads at CES into things like mobile and digital health, and sports and fitness. Monitoring will be a theme at this year's CES and I expect to see apps play an important role enabling individuals to along many facets of monitoring.
Internet-connected, "appified" everything, huh? That brings us to our third thing we'll definitely be on the lookout for...
We're looking to see two classes of products here: an increased selection of Internet-enabled devices, such as Fords and Nikes, as well as devices meant to connect other objects and bodies to the Internet. We'll likely see more in the way of the AutoBot, which allows you to control aspects of your car with your smartphone, and other devices meant to retrofit that part of our lives that doesn't yet live online. A big one here, of course, is ourselves - we're expecting to see devices that help users monitor the one thing they care about more than anything else: themselves.