When CES first began, some 48 years ago now, it was much easier to surprise people.
Back
then, without the endless stream of blogs and social media, major
stories that defined our technological future made their glorious debuts
here. Like the VCR, for instance - first shown at CES way back in 1970.
Who could have foreseen the impact that piece of technology would have
on the world?And 11 years later, the CD was shown here before anywhere else.
These days, you rarely see entirely new things at CES. And so the show's purpose has changed somewhat - shifting into an event that is as much about spotting momentum rather than new products.
But perhaps somewhere in the vast halls of the Las Vegas Convention Centre we've seen this year's VCR - a technology that will have impact well beyond what we can predict.
"We're in an in-between phase, where categories like drones, virtual reality, and wearables are growing and advancing, but still have a long way to go," wrote Rachel Metz from MIT Tech Review.
The New York Times' Farhad Manjoo described CES 2016 as an "awkward adolescence" for emerging technologies.
And that's absolutely right. VR has yet to go mainstream. Drones are out there, but set to be locked in regulatory hassle for the next year at least. And wearables? Well, let's just say too many companies are still thinking about function before fashion.
CES 2016 was like it is every year: Big, overwhelming, full of terrible ideas, wasted money and overhyped nonsense.
Gone are the days where you find the "next big thing" at CES. But if the technology business is alive and well, CES is still very much its pulse

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