Sony wants to be cool, and hopes its major first commercial 3-D TV series, the Bravia LX900 will win consumers. It produces high-def 3-D images with using a frame sequential display, active-shutter glasses and Sony's high frame-rate technology.
Focusing on the success of an enhanced Windows 7 and home entertainment enhancements, Microsoft's Steve Ballmer makes it clear in his CES keynote that Apple's iPhone hasn't killed off Windows. He outlines plans to connect the "three screens" through which people experience media today (TV, PC and mobile devices).
Wired.com checks out two products featured at this year's CES -- Microvision's SHOWWX laser pico projector and enTourage's twin-screen eDGe combo netbook with e-reader.
Between the insatiable consumer demand for the newest gadgets and the closed-off nature of business there, Japan seems to keep all the goodies to itself.
Roomba may be from Boston, but most of our favorite robots hail from the Land of the Rising Sun. Of course, not all Japanese mechas are created equal. We put these four imports to the test.
The Philip K. Dick family is charging that Google ripped the name of its new Android OS-based phone — the Nexus One — straight from the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep that later became the sci-fi classic Blade Runner. It's not the first time the two have collided.
Wired.com checks out two Lenovo netbooks featured at this year's 'CES Unveiled' preview event: the IdeaPad S10-3t touchscreen netbook and tablet combo, and the Skylight smartbook.
Google introduced a new smartphone that's full of hot features, but it's just an unsatisfying baby step in a plan to change how people buy and use mobile computing devices.
Design the coolest arty Smart car and win 1,500 euro. To make it easy for non-designer folks, there's a design configurator you can use to mock up your vision.