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us watch_us watch 25/02/2016 18:25 Page 1 Back to the future ’ve been going to the annual Consumer Electronics Show, held each January in Las Vegas for almost 20 years now and will admit up front that it is getting harder and harder to not become a bit jaded. There is a finite limit to the number of different cases for an iPhone that I can realistically compare and many of them come in colours that do not exist in nature. I still remember with growing nostalgia CES 1999 when both TiVo and ReplayTV demonstrated the first digital video recorders and the latter won ‘Best of Show’. On-demand video streaming has nearly made the DVR obsolete but it taught a generation of television viewers that they were no longer slaves to a TV schedule and introduced the concept of binge viewing that Netflix has adroitly turned into one of their key selling points. A few years later, I remember fighting the mob around Samsung’s OLED prototype display, then only as large as sheet of paper but still marvelling at the deep blacks and contrast levels. And I got too enthusiastic about the introduction of 3D TV sets, the failure of which will become a classic Harvard Business School case study on how to screw up a major innovation in TV medium (could be combined with analysing how the format war between HD-Video and Blu-ray accelerated the decline of the DVD window). So what does this brief stroll down memory lane have to do with CES 2016? Almost I Larry Gerbrandt paid his annual visit to CES, and was struck as much by what he didn’t see there as what new technology was on display. everything seemed like just an incremental improvement rather than a breakthrough. LG’s 77 inch curved OLED 4K was observe which displays are the most crowded and this year any vehicle that incorporated driving-assist sensors, Wi-Fi impressive but I don’t plan on upgrading until the new HDR video standards are implemented across TV set makers, UHD/4K Bluray disc players and content delivery platforms in a consistent fashion (see 3D and HDDVD/Blu-ray case study reference in prior paragraph). The closest thing to a ‘must have’ innovation was the Pro Trailer Backup Assist installed in a Ford F-150 pickup truck. Billions of US dollars have been invested in autonomous driving technology over the last decade and it has finally gotten to the point where they are useful, reliable and even affordable. One useful guide at CES is to hubs or battery power were the clear winners. The fact that GM used CES to debut the 2017 Chevy Bolt all-electric car (with a US$30K price point) is an indicator of where future CE innovation may have the greatest impact. Americans spend almost as much time in their cars