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CES: Products to watch

CNET News.com CNet

Published: 09 Jan 2002 10:29 GMT

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The debut of a hot new device or product category -- usually the talk of the annual show in Las Vegas -- often sets the tone for consumer electronics for the rest of the year. This year's crop includes a wide range of products such as computer displays, handheld computers, portable storage devices, and digital cameras and music players:

  • Consumer electronics maker Sonicblue launched its first portable digital-music player with a hard drive. The $395 Rio Riot includes a 20GB drive that the company says stores roughly 5,000 songs. The Rio Riot is available from the company now and should hit shots in February.
  • SanDisk, which makes flash-memory cards, unveiled a portable storage device that plugs into a PC's USB slot and accepts one of four memory card capacities: 32MB, 64MB, 128MB or 256MB. The Cruzer will hit the market in the second quarter, with prices ranging from $59 to $199, depending on the capacity of card it can read. The Sunnyvale, California-based company also announced three ImageMate dual-slot memory card readers designed to accommodate multiple storage formats.
  • Graphics chipmaker Nvidia launched the nForce 415-D, a new version of its chipset for Advanced Micro Devices' Athlon XP processors. Motherboards using the new nForce are expected later in the month, the Santa Clara, California-based company said.
  • As expected, Sharp Electronics said its Zaurus SL-5500 handheld computer will be available later in the first quarter. The new Zaurus SL-5500 combines a colour screen, 206MHz StrongARM processor and 64MB of memory, along with an MP3/video player and voice recorder applications.
  • Palm is holding a series of fashion shows to tout its latest handhelds dressed in designer cases from Coach and others and to trot out add-ons, such as Eastman Kodak's PalmPix camera. Fashion show attendees will also take part in a demonstration of new infrared content-distribution technology from Wideray. Those toting Palm devices and sitting up to 150 feet away can receive an application by pointing their handhelds at the runway. Santa Clara, California-based Palm also launched a new version of its eBook reader.
  • Display maker ViewSonic introduced the VX3600 MegaMonitor, a high-definition cathode-ray tube display. The 36-inch display will cost $6,999 and ship later this quarter. ViewSonic also showed off a prototype of the Airpanel 150, a 15-inch wireless liquid-crystal display based on Microsoft's Mira technology.
  • Toshiba is reducing the price of its digital cameras. The company is cutting the price of the PDR-M71, a 3.2-megapixel camera, by more than 20 percent to $399. Toshiba is also offering a $100 mail-in rebate for its PDR-M81, a 4.2-megapixel camera, which cuts the price to $599.
  • Toshiba also has developed a large-capacity rewritable optical disc. The disc enables people to store up to 30GB, including three hours of recorded digital images.
  • Samsung Electronics and Planetweb, which makes software for consumer electronics, announced a licensing agreement. Samsung will use two Planetweb applications, Digital Photo Manager and Digital Audio Manager, in a new line of Samsung DVD players set to ship later this year. The applications allow consumers to organise and view digital photos on a television or to listen to digital music on a home stereo.
  • News.com's Gwendolyn Mariano and John G. Spooner contributed to this report.

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