Every once in a while a consumer technology emerges that goes
beyond mere clever gadgetry and has the potential to fundamentally
alter our habits and lifestyles. Examples: the VCR, the microwave
oven, the cellphone. This year at the Consumer Electronics Show in
Las Vegas another such transformative gizmo emerged, one that
literally reaches out to the stars and penetrates deep into the
primordial genetic code of nearly every male gadget freak on the
planet: the Garmin iQue 3600 PDA. Men, as we know, are biologically
programmed to get lost and refuse to stop to ask directions. (No
wonder it takes millions of sperm to find a single egg.) With the
Garmin iQue 3600 clipped to his belt, no man will ever be lost again
nor be nagged to stop at the next gas station to find out where he's
going. This wondrous product will also remind him that Valentine's
Day is approaching and lead him, using turn-by-turn voice guidance,
to the florist to buy roses.
But wait, there's more! The iQue 3600 integrates its
global-positioning satellite-mapping and -tracking technology with a
full-fledged Palm-based PDA. It can also be programmed to act as a
universal remote control. And with a golf-course mapping program
called StarCaddy, it can tell its owner to within a few yards how
far he is from the green and even suggest the proper club to use!
Not for men alone, the iQue 3600 is practical for storing
appointments, to-do lists, and contact information; tracking
finances and investments; and showing off pictures of the kids on
its high-res color screen. It's a voice recorder, an MP3 player, and
an e-book reader. (It does not slice or dice, however.)
Here's the bummer: The Garmin iQue 3600 won't be available until
May or June and will cost about $550. It's one of a dozen or so
products unveiled at CES that I think are the most interesting new
consumer technologies of the coming year. I haven't tested them,
mind you, but all products are perfect until the moment they
actually go on sale.
Consider, for example, the SplashPad, from a British startup,
SplashPower Ltd. Technically it's an inductive power transfer
system. In plain English it's a universal wireless recharging
station for Splash-enabled cellphones, PDAs, MP3 players, and other
mobile devices. Just toss them anywhere on the SplashPad--a
portable, thin mat with a cord that plugs into a regular AC power
outlet--and your devices recharge just as quickly and fully as if
you had plugged them into the clunky power adapters that are always
somewhere else when you need them. The chaps at SplashPower insist
that the mat's magnetic field won't erase your credit cards or
polarize any cat that chooses to snooze on the mat. The catch:
SplashPower has to persuade gadget makers to build a SplashModule
into each device (it costs mere farthings and is less than a
millimeter thick). The pads, slated to arrive later this year, are
expected to cost $25 to $50.
Along a similar wavelength, there's Samsung's multi-talented Yepp
YP-900GT, which can teach Apple's popular iPod a thing or three.
Like the iPod, the YP-900GT ($430, on sale this month) stores its
music on a hard disk--in this case a ten-gigabyte platter that can
hold the equivalent of hundreds of CDs compressed in the MP3 or WMA
formats. (A 20-gig version is expected in the second half of 2003.)
And here are some twists: One, it can also rip MP3 files directly
from a CD player, bypassing a PC; two, it can beam those songs
wirelessly to the FM radio in your car; three, it's a voice
recorder.
The best DVD player I saw at the show was Samsung's DVD-HD931.
Okay, Samsung's product names are drab, but the picture quality is
stunning. This $349 player, available in June, converts regular DVD
discs to high-quality definition (720p, or 1,080 interlaced). It's
also a DVD-audio player. Of course, you'll need a stunning digital
TV to go with it; Samsung has one of those too, the wide-screen,
56-inch, rear-projection HLN-567W (coming in April for $4,999). It
uses Texas Instruments' second-generation Digital Light Processing
chip and some fancy image-processing voodoo from high-end
home-theater maker Faroudja, all in a set that weighs just 105
pounds and is 20 inches deep.
That's almost obese compared with the newest flat-panel plasma
and liquid-crystal display (LCD) televisions. Plasma sets are
getting bigger and cheaper, but there are still troubling concerns
about plasma's reliability, long-term picture quality, and
repairability. LCD seems a much better solution, but LCD sets are
smaller and much more expensive. For those who can afford $9,000,
Sharp's 37-inch widescreen, high-definition Aquos LC-37HV4U was
flat-out my favorite on the show floor.
Sony's new DCR-DVD100 Handycam camcorder records directly to a
blank DVD disc. The DVD100 and higher-end DVD Handycam models will
be available this summer and will start at under $1,000.
For those who like their cameras small and their subjects even
smaller, Olympus is the company to see. Its three-megapixel Stylus
Digital 300 (about $400, on sale this month) and four-megapixel
Stylus Digital 400 ($500, in April) are digital versions of the
world's bestselling point-and-shoot 35mm film camera. For extreme
close-ups, the Olympus MIC-D digital microscope camera ($995) plugs
into newer Windows computers and allows amateur scientists to see a
bee's knees on the PC screen and to digitally photograph an amoeba.
But could I tell anyone about all this, given the din on the show
floor? Sure, if UmeVoice's amazing theBoom earphone with microphone
($150) were attached to my cellphone. It's the same technology that
enables Wall Street traders and Black Hawk pilots to whisper and
still be heard when everyone else is shouting. It even silences
background noise.
The upshot? A guy could call home from the rowdy bar where he's
watching the big game with his buddies, and his wife would really
believe he was at the hardware store. Is this a great year for guy
gadgets, or what?