It's Thursday, January 09, 2020. Hey, good morning! The Consumer Electronics Show is a place where dreams are m... pitched to dismissive investors and crowdfunders. There are thousands of companies, startups and interest groups all jostling for the eyes of CES attendees and the assembled media. And it’s easy to get excited. Flying taxis, home robots, folding phones. The future, the day before it happens. Sometimes everyone gets too excited, and I think that’s particularly true for Neon, a spin-off company from the Samsung-backed STAR Labs program. Artificial human avatars sounds totally Blade Runner, but the current state of its digitally generated Neons is more like Amazon Alexa with teeth and eyebrows. Hype is a fickle mistress. But we’ve got some incredible nominees in the official Best Of CES 2020 awards. You can make a difference by voting right here for the people’s choice. You can watch the results, live, later today at 8pm ET / 5pm PT. -Mat Here's our list of nominees for all 15 categories. Our editors have been hard at work the past few days finding the latest and greatest gadgets here at CES 2020. Now we're ready to announce our finalists for the official Best of CES awards. Below you'll find our selections for all 15 categories, which range from best TVs to the most sustainable products we've seen at the show. We'll announce our category winners tomorrow, which is also when we'll reveal the recipient of our Best of the Best award, the most coveted prize of all. That special award is selected from our pool of category winners. And if you want your voice heard, too, no worries! There's an additional category for the People's Choice, where you can vote for your favorite of our compilation of finalists. Check out all the finalists right here. | | Finally, mobile videos that look good either way. What the heck is Quibi? That's the question we've all been asking. This mobile-centric streaming video company steadily amassed a whopping one billion dollars in funding, with notable names like Steven Spielberg and Guillermo del Toro signing up to make some very short shows (up to 10 minutes) for the service. What did all of Quibi's supporters know that we didn't? Devindra tries to find the answer. | | But it wasn’t entirely the company’s fault. The big story ahead of CES even opening was a Samsung-backed company that was barely half a year old, pitching incredibly realistic ‘artificial humans’ that not only looked the part but had intellectual and emotional wisdom to match. The reality, at least at this early stage, is relatively impressive, but not quite close enough to the heady conceptual showreel. Neon might have played its hand a year too early. Mat tries to figure out why everyone got so excited. | | Sponsored Content by Stack Commerce | |
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