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Home » » CES: Pushing through the crowds

CES: Pushing through the crowds

When you're five foot five inches tall and not all that wide, it's sometimes hard to push your way to the various vendors at the CES Unveiled press preview.
However, I did managed to get a good look at the enTourage eDGe, a "dualbook" which features two displays: one a 9.7-inch e-ink display; the other a 10.1-inch color LCD touchscreen.

It looked fascinating: you can draw directly on the e-ink screen using a stylus (so you can make notes on a book or scribble stick figures in the margins). The other side of the device uses Google Android and lets you browse the Web (using a virtual keyboard). It includes, according to the PR materials, built in WiFi, Bluetooth and "future support for 3G." The device is priced at $490 (if you go with a blue case; other colors add $40) and is due to ship in February. This could be the answer to those (like me) who object to the idea of carrying around both a netbook and an e-reader.
I also managed to get a look (okay, so I had to used my elbows a bit, so sue me) at Lenovo's IdeaPad U1, the Windows 7 laptop that detaches from its keyboard and becomes a Linux tablet. This drew a lot of attention; while there are a number of tablet/notebook combinations in which the display swivels and settles on top of the keyboard, this is the first I can think of where the display actually detaches.

There were also a number of smaller devices by hopeful vendors -- for example, a small keychain device called the Zomm which signals if you get too far from your mobile phone (so you won't leave it in your car); acts as a speakerphone so you can easily answer the phone while you're driving, and provides a panic button (and a link to emergency services) if you find yourself in a hairy situation. It is due sometime this summer for about $80.
But of course the thing that drew the most attention was Parrot's A.R. Drone, a large UFO-like gaming device that hovered about five feet above the floor (via four propellers) and was surrounded by a circle of tech journalists who couldn't resist the idea of their own flying saucer.

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