Subscribe to Windows IT Pro
January 07, 2005 12:00 AM

WinInfo Short Takes: CES 2005 Special Edition (Part 1)

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #45035
Rating: (7)

An often irreverent look at some of the week's other CES 2005 news...


Gates Keynote: O'Brien Was Hilarious, Gates Was ... Gates
    Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates's keynote address at the International 2005 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) dispensed with the usual routine in which he blathers on for 90 minutes and puts everyone to sleep. Instead, Microsoft brought out late-night TV talk show host and comedian Conan O'Brien to "host" the keynote address, ad lib, and prompt Gates when appropriate. O'Brien, it should be noted, was hilarious, and although we can't begin to relay the number of times he had the crowd rolling on the floor, a few select quotes might help: "The theme this year is that gadgets are no longer just for geeks. If you look around [this room] now, they're also for nerds and dweebs." And: "I was just checking out the show, and this convention is not exactly for the ladies. I think I saw more women at Elton John's bachelor party." Needless to say, Gates's appearance onstage brought the humor and fun level down a notch or 10. Gates was his usual stiff self, and as O'Brien continued to ad lib, Gates kept trying to get back on track. Sigh. But we'll leave you with another great O'Brien line: "It was fun watching Bill walk through the casino this morning. All the slot machines starting chanting 'All hail the Chosen One.'"


Gates Keynote: What Can Go Wrong Does Go Wrong
   And speaking of the Gates keynote ... my, my, my. Several technical glitches had audience members wondering whether Microsoft had even prepared for the event. Demos didn't work. The Internet connection wouldn't work, ruining another demo. A Media Center photo slide show refused to launch ... on three separate occasions. An Xbox game crashed, hard, to display a weird text debug screen that's no doubt unique to the special Xbox machines that programmers use. The net effect was embarrassing for the company and, as we discussed with people the next day, the problem is that consumer electronics don't ever break down. When was the last time your DVD player didn't boot? But the secret about these technical glitches is that none of them had anything to do with Microsoft software problems. The photo slide show problem was a result of interference from the show lights, which hadn't been on at full blast during the many rehearsal sessions and made Gates' remote control malfunction. And the Internet connection failure started the second the presenter walked away from the demo to start another part of his talk.


The Real Problem with the Gates Keynote Address
   So while the Microsofties were freaking out about the technical problems during the keynote address and the way the public might perceive those problems, we thought that the Microsoft faithful were missing the point entirely. Technical problems are horrible but the keynote address contained much bigger issues that we think speak volumes about the divide still separating the consumer electronics and PC industries. Specifically, Gates and presenter Sean Alexander, who otherwise did an excellent job despite some technical problems, blurted out the names of various complicated technologies without pausing to explain what they were. PlaysForSure? Windows Media Connect? IPTV? These types of terms might be commonplace in Redmond, where everyone is living the digital lifestyle, and they might even be acceptable at more technical events, such as developer shows. But Microsoft needs to understand that the wider outside world isn't hip to the company's crazy technical terms. Bring it down a level, Microsoft. CES is about real people, and you're just confusing them.


CES 2005: Bigger Than Ever
   And what's up with all the norms? In the 5 years that we've been attending CES, the show has been getting bigger and bigger, but this year's event takes the cake. Not only are hundreds of thousands of showgoers clogging the hotels, streets, and convention space in Las Vegas, Nevada, but an unheard of number of "normal" people ("the norms") are here as well--a first for such a major show. The result is bedlam. Taxi lines rival those at Disney World. Lines for the newly reopened monorail stretch two city blocks in some locations. The traffic leading up to the convention center is so thick we could write Short Takes while driving the car (theoretically, of course). In fact, CES is so big this year it almost isn't fun to be here. Almost.


Panasonic Teams Up with Microsoft
   Panasonic has teamed up with Microsoft to bring the software giant's Windows Media Digital Rights Management (DRM) technology to the popular Secure Digital (SD) flash memory-card format. The idea is that customers should be able to securely transfer music and other content from any of the dozens of Windows Media-compatible online content stores and play it back on SD-compatible devices, such as Panasonic portable digital media players. Today, SD cards use a form of copy protection called Copy Protection for Recordable Media (CPRM); under the new scheme, Windows Media DRM-encoded content that's copied to SD cards will automatically be converted to CPRM format, without any user intervention. Panasonic, along with SanDisk and Toshiba, is a codeveloper of the SD format.


Security Problems? What Security Problems?
   One thing we're not hearing a lot about at CES is security problems and what Microsoft is doing to fix them. Although the company publicly issued its Microsoft Windows AntiSpyware Beta just moments before Gates started his keynote address Wednesday night, that product wasn't mentioned once during the presentation. And in a day of meetings with various Microsoft groups yesterday, the subject didn't come up, either. Meanwhile, security holes in Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE), WINS, and other Microsoft products and technologies are raising eyebrows around the industry. But this week is supposed to be fun, right?


DirecTV Goes It Alone with DVR
   If you were wondering why TiVo's new TiVoToGo service is available only to non-DirecTiVo customers, wonder no more. Although TiVo partnered with satellite giant DirecTV on the DirecTiVo product, DirecTV has decided to navigate the digital video recording (DVR) waters itself. This week, DirecTV revealed that it's developing its own DVR technology, which the company will market in a new product later this year. DirecTV says it will still market the DirecTiVo product, but that it will concentrate its core marketing and sales efforts on its new DVR. Put more simply, DirecTiVo is dead.


Microsoft to Phase Out Pocket PC, Smartphone Branding, Not Products
   A Microsoft executive said this week that the company will gradually phase out the Pocket PC and Smartphone brands and will instead concentrate more heavily on the Windows Mobile branding. Scott Horn, senior director of Microsoft's Mobile and Embedded Devices group, said this week at CES that the move is a natural one to take because the devices were converging. "We are emphasizing Windows Mobile as device categories are coming together," he said. However, because the different device types--Pocket PCs, Pocket PC Phone Edition devices, and Smartphones--have confusingly similar, yet different, functionality, the company will try to do a better job of differentiating them. In the future, Horn said, most Windows Mobile devices will offer phone capabilities, which isn't the case today.


Microsoft Smart Watch Finds Its Way Onto Our Wrists ... and Into Our Hearts
   Well, not really. But both of us received Special Edition CES 2005 Swatch Paparazzi Smart Personal Object Technology (SPOT) watches, which feature the Windows colors and some cool Las Vegas-inspired watch faces, so we're checking them out this week. The latest-generation SPOT watches are much smaller and more svelte than the first-generation designs, which is nice because the first-generation products were humongous. Microsoft is randomly giving away 3000 SPOT watches at the show, which, as Keith noted, will likely triple the number of people who use the devices. (Keith wants to point out that he is, in fact, the owner of a first-generation SPOT watch, and his comment is meant only to be humorous. However, I'd like to point out that Keith's watch was a Christmas present--from me.)


CES 2005: More Coming Soon ...
   As we write this, it's early Friday morning and we still have a lot of show to experience, so we'll be back on Monday with a rare second edition of Short Takes that will cover the rest of our time at the show. Have a great weekend.
 

Related Content:

ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jan 13, 2005

    "That other OS you mentioned doesn't seem to be a good pick if you are an idiot that can't even install an update so easy that a grandma could. "
    With the other OS, even grandma could be in control!

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jan 12, 2005

    Boy you windoze apologists sure get emotional: "... if you are an idiot that can't even install an upgrade so easy that a grandma could." As a 25 year IT veteran with a background from the mainframe days, I've pretty much seen and heard everything. I just wanted to share my thoughts concerning the direction of MS operating systems and the future of microsoft. Us mainframe types laughed at the mickey mouse DOS and early windoze software as pretty much kiddy stuff. That all changed when Dave Cutler and his DEC team joined microsoft to develop Windows NT. This in my opinion was the first real product of microsoft. Things greatly improved from NT 3.5 to 4.0, because the NT team was separate from the kiddy winodoze development team. The NT team focused on developing a robust, high performance OS suitable for mission critical deployment. That all started to change, however when the kiddy windoze folks decided to merge with the NT folks. The result has been the gradual contamination of the original NT focus on simplicity and reliability. I could already see the windoze contamination starting with Win2K.
    The epitome was that abortion called windoze ME, which was released because microsoft needed a revenue fix. The recent experience I had with XP and the failure of SP2 to produce a reliably working system indicates to me that the business community has to look elsewhere for their mission critical operating systems. (I tried to get the XP SP2 upgrade working without success so far, and a cursory internet search tells me I'm not the only one. I have kept the disk intact, and will eventually determine why I can't connect to the internet, even though I have tried all the published fixes, i.e, resetting ipconfig and winsock configurations. The truly weird thing is that I can ping to and from the system, DNS is working, and I can connect the system to our NT domain. Also Firefox can't connect to the internet, so I don't suspect it has to do with IE. I will put my network sniffer on the system to do further diagnosis.) I predict that microsoft will fail because the core focus has been lost. The people working on the new OS'es are no longer programmers but merely coders unable to write robust, reliable code. You can't then patch robustness and reliability into such kind of operating systems. Therefore, I predict that microsoft will ultimatly meet its demise unless it splits apart into three companies, one to do the OS's, one to do business applications, and the third part to do the entertainment stuff.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jan 12, 2005

    "The only problem with windoze is that is was written mostly by microshaft (M$) programmers."

    Man, I am sure glad I'm using Windows then from Microsoft.

    That other OS you mentioned doesn't seem to be a good pick if you are an idiot that can't even install an update so easy that a grandma could.

    No wonder you are switching over.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jan 11, 2005

    The only problem with windoze is that is was written mostly by microshaft (M$) programmers. Definition of M$ programmer: make the program as complicated as possible and still "function." Having just spent the last four hours upgrading my laptop to XP SP2 and then finding that IE can no longer connect to the internet...I think it's time to install the penguin.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jan 10, 2005

    "Huh.. bad sales figures with your OS? Apple refuses to lisence Mac OS X.. DUH!"

    So? Apple might be the only manufacturer selling Apple computers, but in no logical sense should that be restrictive of sales. If the demand was there, then Apple would be producing the number of computers required to satisfy that demand. Unfortunately, demand has been going lower, not higher hence poor sales figures with their PC line. You are just proving my point with your daft rationalisations.

    "You want to talk about Apple refusing to make a PC specifically for the business community to compete with Dell.. What the hell are you talking about?"

    I think the more important question is WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT?

    I never said anything of the like. Are you taking to yourself here? Congratulations on winning that point arguing with yourself. Marvellous debating skills! Now go take your pills and have a nap… Trust me you need it.

    To reiterate for the THIRD time for my “simple is best” Apple friends, I said that Apple users typically go rabid at the suggestion of anything negative about their platform. I said that any supposedly reasoned individual in that community should not encourage that behaviour. It only discourages neutral people like me from joining that community.

    Now the rest of your response contains all the irrational, defensive bantering and stomach churning idolisations of the platform that I’ve come to expect of an Apple user. It really has absolutely nothing to do with what I was talking about, other than making you a text-book example of your average died-in-the-wool Apple cult-job wacko.

    I challenge the poster I was originally talking to (and not this wacko that has chosen to respond to me) to tell me in a straight face that he thinks Apple user’s aren’t deserving of their status as wack-job cult members when there are Apple users like this tool running around.

    Steve

You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here

advertisement

advertisement

Windows is a trademark of the Microsoft group of companies. Windows IT Pro is used by Penton Media Inc. under license from owner.