The best products and moments from CES 2023 | The DeanBeat

The CES 2023 tech trade show is in full swing in Las Vegas, drawing large crowds to North America's largest tech festival.

I walked around a lot to find the coolest tech. At or before CES 2023, I recorded around 80 press events, interviews and sessions. I walked 87,447 steps in five days, which is over 38.81 miles. By comparison, at CES 2020, I walked over 60 kilometers (over 84,385 steps).

I wrote 43 stories. I gave two interviews. And moderated a panel. My feet hurt.

Now is the time to analyze and make sense of it. Hope you like these ideas, and since the show continues until Sunday, there's still time for the techs to check it out themselves. Here's my list from last year at CES 2022.

This year featured almost 3,000 exhibitors, compared to 1,900 in 2021 and 4,000 (in person) in 2020. I dragged my wheelie bag everywhere and it managed to save me from slippery floors (thanks to a kind of balancing of the tripod) three times. Here are the 18 things that caught my eye.

Unistellar telescope reduces light pollution with AI

The Unistellar telescope reduces light pollution in the night sky.

It's been a while since I've written about telescope technology. Celestron has always made steady advances with technology, like telling you which constellations you were looking at in the night sky. Now your smartphone app, like Night Sky, can tell you. But Unistellar showed up at the Showstoppers press party with a cool tech: a telescope that uses machine learning to reduce the blur you see when there's too much light pollution around you.

Ludovic Nachury, communications manager for the Marseille, France-based company, told me that city lights are still the biggest problem preventing you from seeing the stars. People go out of their way to head into the desert to use their telescopes accordingly. But with machine learning, AI can improve image processing and reduce that light pollution and give you clearer images to look at in the night sky. An app helps you see it even better, letting you see galaxies, nebulae and star clusters from a downtown location. This is another example of AI invading all products and ending up in places you didn't expect. The version on display at CES 2023 sells for around $2,500. The company started in 2017 and started delivering telescopes in 2019. It now has a new model and 50 people.

CarbonX makes better tires for electric cars

The best products and moments from CES 2023 | The DeanBeat

The CES 2023 tech trade show is in full swing in Las Vegas, drawing large crowds to North America's largest tech festival.

I walked around a lot to find the coolest tech. At or before CES 2023, I recorded around 80 press events, interviews and sessions. I walked 87,447 steps in five days, which is over 38.81 miles. By comparison, at CES 2020, I walked over 60 kilometers (over 84,385 steps).

I wrote 43 stories. I gave two interviews. And moderated a panel. My feet hurt.

Now is the time to analyze and make sense of it. Hope you like these ideas, and since the show continues until Sunday, there's still time for the techs to check it out themselves. Here's my list from last year at CES 2022.

This year featured almost 3,000 exhibitors, compared to 1,900 in 2021 and 4,000 (in person) in 2020. I dragged my wheelie bag everywhere and it managed to save me from slippery floors (thanks to a kind of balancing of the tripod) three times. Here are the 18 things that caught my eye.

Unistellar telescope reduces light pollution with AI

The Unistellar telescope reduces light pollution in the night sky.

It's been a while since I've written about telescope technology. Celestron has always made steady advances with technology, like telling you which constellations you were looking at in the night sky. Now your smartphone app, like Night Sky, can tell you. But Unistellar showed up at the Showstoppers press party with a cool tech: a telescope that uses machine learning to reduce the blur you see when there's too much light pollution around you.

Ludovic Nachury, communications manager for the Marseille, France-based company, told me that city lights are still the biggest problem preventing you from seeing the stars. People go out of their way to head into the desert to use their telescopes accordingly. But with machine learning, AI can improve image processing and reduce that light pollution and give you clearer images to look at in the night sky. An app helps you see it even better, letting you see galaxies, nebulae and star clusters from a downtown location. This is another example of AI invading all products and ending up in places you didn't expect. The version on display at CES 2023 sells for around $2,500. The company started in 2017 and started delivering telescopes in 2019. It now has a new model and 50 people.

CarbonX makes better tires for electric cars

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