Full Coverage: CES 2015
The 2015 Consumer Electronic Show brought a wave of high-tech tools to bring connectivity to your everyday activities. Bluetooth-enabled toothbrushes and window cleaning robots were just some of the new electronic toys to bring connectivity to the digitally-enabled.
- 1
Sandy Liang mans a little booth at the Westgate Hotel convention hall in Las Vegas.
- 2
When people think of virtual reality, they think games.
- 3
Much of geekdom is still waiting with bated breath for the Apple Watch to be released, which should happen early this year.
- 4
If your child is too young to have a phone, how about a robot?
- 5
Teaching kids to talk tech is all the rage these days.
- 6
Nobody knows what “television” means anymore.
- 7
Hoping to attract more customers by offering less TV, Dish Network executives announced Monday that they will soon launch a slimmed-down -- OK, emaciated -- online TV service for $20 a month.
- 8
The Sleep Number bed for kids tells you everything from a child’s quality of sleep to finding monsters under the bed.
- 9
Owlet socks help parents keep track of their baby’s heart rate and breathing.
- 10
At 2015 CES, more than 150,000 people from over 140 countries will see the latest smartphones, TV sets, virtual reality gear and automotive electronics.
- 11
- 12
Forget 80-inch televisions or Wi-Fi-connected blenders.
- 13
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler strongly hinted Wednesday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas that he would propose net neutrality rules that treat broadband Internet service providers as utilities subject to more rigorous regulation than they have been to date.
- 14
Remember when electric toothbrushes were cool?
- 15
The Typo detachable keyboard case -- you know, the one that looks like a BlackBerry and was thus sued by BlackBerry -- is back after a redesign.
- 16
— Everywhere you look at CES, it seems there’s nothing that can’t be connected to the Internet: Tennis rackets, coffee makers, watches, jewelry, baby clothing, pet accessories, oven ranges and infinitely more appliances and household goods are all getting high-tech upgrades.
- 17
The electric weight-sensing skateboard, with a top speed of 20 mph, is controlled by pushing on the foot sensors.
- 18
If a new gaming console running on Google software succeeds, people who play computer games locked up in their rooms should find themselves spending more time in the living room, and mobile game players should become less isolated.
- 19
Wonder Workshop has developed a pair of robots to help kids from kindergarten into their tweens learn to code.
- 20
Times staff writer Andrea Chang takes a look at the Typo 2 detachable keyboard case for iPhones at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
- 21
The Hovertrax has similar moves to a Segway.
- 22
The Oral-B Bluetooth-connected toothbrush syncs with a smartphone and stores data to help users brush better.
- 23
Mercedes took a bold step into the future of self-driving cars at the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show with the introduction of a radical concept car.
- 24
Intel’s chief executive pulled a button off his jacket, played hands-free pingpong with a drone and chatted with someone through a robot during a keynote presentation Tuesday afternoon that pitched the computer chip maker as a solution for nearly every buzzed-about technology of the moment.
- 25
CES has gone to the dogs.
- 26
CES is officially underway.