Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles this week angry man tries to open email holograph takes on human form and the X Factor reaches Nemo I've had enough enough of old tech to going obsolete so it seems even desktop computers days are numbered oh right let's see what they got for us this year the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas is the place to find out it's where the new products and concepts are launched for 2018 and some of them might just change the world one of the highlights of CES for me is always finding out how bendy LG is this year previously they've been slightly bendy and then they were quite bendy this year I think they've nailed it it's a 65 inch rollup 4k display and the image quality really is very very good and it does roll completely up into remitted ly a fairly chunky box it's an oh le D display the only display tech that can be fully flexible the circuitry is built on a segmented back so it's a bit like a retractable garage door you can actually choose how far the screen rolls out as well as a widescreen TV it can be used as a thin notification bar a wider format 21 by 9 cinema screen and of course nothing at all the argument is that you can make use of the space behind it when you're not using it and of course in South Korea a lot of people live in high-rise blocks of flats can you imagine lugging a 65 inch TV up the stairs or even getting into the lift much easier if you can roll it down into a handy tube elsewhere there are plenty of other things to see and play with here at CES here's a phone from Chinese company vivo which doesn't have a fingerprint scanner on the back that's because it has one built into the screen the O LED display shines light onto your thumb and an optical scanner buried underneath registers what it sees here's the link flow Fit 360 a necklace with three cameras that together live stitch to make a 360 video so you can record a true first-person view of your experience so others can feel like they were truly there to now it's important to catch the eye at shows like these which is hopefully what this thing is doing this is the hyper vision display by kee Nomo and it's capable of projecting life-size images high above the show floor all right sexy thank you that's enough from you now listen here's the science bit here we've got 24 rapidly spinning LED strips and as they go around they're flashing different colors which gives you the illusion of a persistent image and in the flesh I have to say it does really look rather good all right don't build up your part old super great okay enough flimsy flimsy lamb from me let's get Lara lonesome now with some of the big announcements from this year's show and what a week it's been with news from Tech's biggest players including the likes of Intel saying it will release software fixes to repair security issues surrounding its chips we've had press events that have gone wrong with disobedient robots from LG Khloe is now gonna talk to me Chloe doesn't like be evidently and Sony's robot dog wasn't that responsive either a ball was an autonomous robot and will quickly become a member of your family by table big nor be there meanwhile the lack of female keynote speakers has caused controversy amongst attendees a situation which has led to raised eyebrows compounded by the inclusion of robotic pole dancers at a strip club near the event and on the show floor as usual TVs were everywhere but this one really stood out Samsung wall is a hundred and forty six inches wide and can be made even larger by adding modules and finally Toyota's unveiled its new autonomous a pallet vehicle it can be used for ride-sharing deliveries or even a moving storefront that comes directly to you that was Lara now one of the big themes at the moment is wireless charging that normally means putting your phone on a path but it is also possible to send power through the air one of the problems with wireless power is that that power is sent in every direction at the same time so wherever your device is it only receives a tiny fraction of that power well here's a system that gets around that by sending focused beams of power to one particular point the power transmitter can be built into ceiling tiles walls tables or parts of the furniture all it needs to know is which direction to point the power in now here's the science bit to work that out the device needing the power sends out low power signals in all directions most of which are blocked by nearby objects but the signals that do bounce around and reach the transmitter come in at particular angles now by sending the power back at exactly the same angles that power bounces about and eventually gets back to the device the makers told us that they can achieve 2 watts of power at a distance of one meter which impressively is about half the power of a smartphone charger I'm using this light to detect the power beams between the transmitter and the blank box receiver think about your home where you have smoke detectors think about that smoke detector that starts beeping at night because it runs out of battery you can power there to remotely never have to charge the battery again but with high power beams Lansing about your home you may be wondering easy safe this technology is entirely safe and we look to get FCC approval for safety that certifies the technology as safe so if you have accepted Wi-Fi into your home accepting code the technology wouldn't be the same in the future the power receivers could be made into any shape including that of a double-a battery and that means that ordinary devices could be converted to wireless power without any modification at all for a long time bricks and water shops have been trying to keep up with online retailers who have the added benefits of being able to keep track of their customers habits as well as provide very easy ways of paying well here's one way that we could see some of those features brought into the real world by retrofitting existing stores I poly just uses off-the-shelf cameras one up here to track the customers and others underneath here to take a look at the products and the customers interactions with them but the real work is happening here in the AI algorithms where it's recognizing all the products off the shelf and the customers interactions with them but the AI is using the main camera here to keep track of what customers are doing throughout the store it can recognize faces identify clothes and follow their movements through the combination of the customer being recognized and the products that they're picking up being identified when they get to the checkout they don't even need to scan the items they just need to pay and if they agree to being remembered for next time then all they need to do is go and pick up their products and they can take them away one thing which isn't making such a big noise this week is virtual reality is VR in the last chance billions have been poured into VR but the headsets just aren't selling in the way the companies had hoped there are multiple problems the setup is too difficult content is not compelling enough and unless it's treated very carefully the VR experience can and has made me feel sick the manufacturers are not going to give up on this though the oculus go will be launched around March now that's a bit like Samsung's gear VR I mean you don't need a phone for it to work it's all built in and it will be around $200 HTC announced here that they're to release the vive Pro later this year it's a 3k headset which will improve resolution significantly and keep the vibe ahead of the field and while oculus allows three degrees of movement which is that way that way and that way HTC has just launched its vive focus in China which allows six degrees of movement which is that that and that and also three dimensions of movement in space and that's using inside out tracking which means there are no sensors or lighthouses telling you where the headset is the headset itself works out where it is in the environment now this is the next level for VR still with magic leap releasing its augmented reality hololens alike later this year and with tons of AR activity here like this from horizon a cheap flat pack way of building your own AR headset using a cardboard kit and a phone VR continues to face a tough battle with AR which just seems a bit more ready to make its mark if you ask me oh I feel better for that anyway it's time to move on now here comes Lara with some high-tech ways to stop thieves this year's show a fair few anti-theft devices have been launched and I've got my hands on some of them and this is a prototype burglar prevention system it aims to replicate what a house looks and sounds like when your home so through the app you can preset it with the way that you live your life when you're going to be playing music watching a film talking in the kitchen and when the lights are going to be going on and off or you could simply wild about what's happening in the house eventually the plan would be that a group of synchronized devices could work through the house to make it look like natural movement from room to room but of course that would add to the cost this is a smart safe now I have to admit when I received it I did think this is very light very flimsy and how could it possibly be a safe because you could just steal this if you have something valuable inside but anyway it seems that the technology here could actually be used in bigger stronger safes and this particular model is possibly better for putting medicine in or just something that you want to keep away from the kids or other people visiting your house so how it works it of course can x-pyr a smartphone app which means that you can remotely open the safe should you wish to actually do that and you'll also receive alerts if anybody tries to tamper with it so let's set it up somewhere that it can remain in a steady place this particular model has wings that extend to hold it into place so if I put it here at the back of the shelf and do this let me put something in here let me try and cancel with it and see what happens it's quite firmly attached although a little bit more forcefully pull it out yeah there we go all right although I'm off with a sesh Oh looks like it could be quite easy to open as well Omar you've got any ideas let me try and find something that might be a bit better for security it's not just about the home though this bag aims to keep your belongings safe when you're out and about so if you're on a train or a plane and you've had to leave your bag somewhere else then you might want to activate this tamper alert which uses this RFID card to turn it on and off so if anybody tries to open your bag and it sounds like that but if the issue is actually you forgetting things then this loss prevention device aims to come to the rescue now you can attach it to any given item and the company's software will learn your habits so what time and where you take that item and if you do something that seems out of the ordinary they can send your reminder before you've even had a chance to forget it eventually they're even hoping to be able to do things like access travel details through your email so you could get a reminder to pick up your passport without running the risk of leaving without it the device does still seem a little bit big right now but they are trying to get a smaller version ready ahead of launch great if it works which was generally the theme with most of what I tested that was Lara and this is the valo copter it's a passenger drone made by a German company and this one actually has flown but constantly reminded that the future of transport is going to be amazing here at CES although there's no guarantee that that is true case in point remember the Faraday future electric car no show business anyway while Faraday gets its future in order enter Buyten now this is a startup staffed by some pretty impressive people who've come up with basically a computer on wheels will this car actually work well Dave Lee was given exclusive access to it before and during CES now I'll be honest this wasn't the most thrilling test-drive of my life worried about being spotted before their big CES unveiling the team behind the bytes and car only let us drive slowly around an unmarked warehouse just off the Las Vegas Strip but it was very interesting the company has created what's essentially a mobile supercomputer they say it has more in common with your smartphone than it does a typical car and I agree for the first time I've been impressed by a car not because of its performance on the road but because of its operating system though the reason behind button is we want to be the company bringing into the market the first real smart car vehicle has been designed and created by a suitably qualified team made up of former BMW and Apple engineers inside you'll see the dashboard has been completely reimagined the gesture control system does look a bit imprecise and quite fiddly not ideal when you're driving along a motorway at 70 miles an hour this looks like a really distracting driving situation so isn't this actually quite dangerous to have this in front of you so the key is about customization when you are in drive mode we will actually disable certain features you won't be able to get in to watch videos for instance what we want to try to build is a platform where when there is autonomous driving all occupants in the car including the driver have the ability to interact some of the most exciting features of the bytes in-car actually going to be disabled until we live in a world of fully autonomous driving so perhaps think of this vehicle as bridging the gap between our dumb driving past and our smart driving future now of course you can't reveal a car at CES without an expensive lavish launch event this one went by without a hitch and people seemed impressed it's a really interesting idea but they're really trying to target it at an affordable price point $45,000 about half the cost of the Model S when that came out again two hundred to three hundred five miles of range so they're hitting all the right marks and adding all this cool technology and so I think they've got a pretty good message here if you think all this seems a little familiar you're right this was the scene at last year's CES when I covered new car company Faraday future back then they told us everything was going swimmingly and that their big new factory was going to be built soon but in less than a year the factory in Nevada has been scrapped and while the company assists it's still pressing ahead Faraday future is in serious danger of becoming a thing of the past so what will happen to bite them the biggest challenge facing them right now is to do with charging Tesla has more than 8,000 superchargers for its cars dotted all over the world bitin has none they think Tesla should share theirs and when it comes to actually making the car bitin is building its own factory in Nanjing China and they've promised their car will be put into production by the end of 2019 and one-day cost $45,000 I guess we'll just have to wait and see how that goes that was Dave Lee and there'll be plenty more transport on next week's click in the meantime I'm having the nails done this is the o2 nails printer choose any image you want and they'll print it onto your nail of course I chose a picture of myself okay Richard Taylor and Nick quick be that refreshing so this device is actually creating a vacuum in my mouth it's sucking at my gums but the same time circulating a flow of water around my teeth it's intended for users with reduced mobility or people that in general have difficulty brushing their teeth because it replaces need to brush and floss - the guys are working on integrating sensors into future devices so that oral hygienist or dentists will be able to diagnose and treat for gum disease and it's quite ticularly - this is mirror and it's being marketed as the world's first smart baby feeding monitor you put your baby bottle any baby bottle into the device has a temperature sensor to make sure that the milk in the bottle is the right temperature for the baby and has a motion sensor which flashes red if you're holding the bottle at a ridiculous angle but perhaps the most interesting feature is that it's Wi-Fi enabled if there is a nanny feeding the baby at home and the mums at work the results of the baby feeding are uploaded via Wi-Fi to the mums smartphone at work so she can tell exactly how much the baby has drunk so what you're seeing here is a magical chess board by square-off and allows players to play with each other regardless of where they are in the world so right now Bob years off playing it by his phone and an electromagnetic arm underneath the board is dragging the different pieces to the correct square pretty clearly now you know what CES can really take it out of you and I for one am already pretty sleep-deprived so what I have in front of me here is a device that is packed with all sorts of technology and the claim is that it will provide within 20 minutes the equivalent of maybe two to five hours of sleep and there's going to be some electrodes that are put behind my ears here effectively through this device that are transmitting signals up to my brain so I'm gonna try this on and I'll see you in 20 minutes I tell you what Rich's got the right idea walking around here I'm absolutely exhausted definitely feeling more relaxed than I was like 26 minutes ago of course I don't know how relaxed I would have felt with the just over 26 minute power now but Vegas hold two world-class talent and singing superstars and then there's Richard Taylor in me this karaoke box uses professional auto-tune on your voice which frankly makes you sound a bit like cher on a bad night next stop Caesars it's not just neon eliminating the strip this week intel has put on a light show of its own easing 250 custom-made LED strap drones obviously flying above the famous Bellagio fountains the unmanned aircraft dance in sync with the water jets and the music we caught up with the boss behind this madness on the eve of the performance so there are a few challenges with this space it's a very tight space you know we were only we're only allowed to fly within the fountains and we actually created a two-layer geofence so that if the drones were to ever go out the motors drops and the drones falls into the water well that was a pretty spectacular way to end the show don't you agree don't forget we live at BBC click on Twitter hope you enjoyed our show and we'll see you soon
B1 UK power device vr lara faraday headset CES 2018 and the future of virtual reality - BBC Click 1556 101 johnyang8781 posted on 2018/01/19 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary