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Playing DS Games On The Nintendo 3DS - BWOne.com

Nintendo 3ds Deal Or No Deal

Consumer Electronis Show 2011   by Narialmy

The good thing about braving the crowds at the Consumer Electronics Show 2011 is that you get to see a lot of the future's gadgets. And if you see the same thing over and over again, that's a trend. Last year, every TV maker embraced 3D and web connectivity. That trend continued this year with more than half of all new TV models including those features. This year, we've sniffed out similar trends that could play out throughout CES 2011 as companies execute on their grand ambitions on CES Las vegas :

1. Tearing down walls between industries and platforms.
The chips could power a wide variety of gadgets, from high-end PCs to smart TVs, tablets, and smartphones. Intel's near monopoly generated billions of dollars in profits, which Intel is using to invade its rivals' turf in smartphones.
Another example was Samsung's deal with Comcast and Time Warner Cable to put their programs on Samsung's TVs and other gadgets. By providing web-based content to Samsung, the cable companies can break out of their geographic territories. A user in Comcast's territory could watch shows in Time Warner Cable's region. This kind of deal liberates content, breaking down artificial barriers.
Still another example was Vizio's deal with OnLive to include OnLive's server-based games in Vizio TVs. OnLive can provide console-quality games via a broadband connection directly to the TVs, with no extra hardware built into the TV. The result is a low-cost platform that can play high-end games. That disrupts not only the game retailers, but the game consoles themselves.
2. 4G LTE arrives.
Verizon has launched its 4G LTE service in 38 cities, offering mobile broadband download speeds of 5 - 12 megabits a second. That's pretty impressive, and it means that users will be able to spend more time surfing and less time waiting when they're trying to get information on the internet. Lowell McAdam, chief operating officer of Verizon, said that faster broadband will spur innovation and create jobs for those who exploit the networks. That's a long wait.
3. Tablets get real beyond iPad.
Pundits predicted that 2010 would be the year of the tablet. Now the rival tablet vendors are showing their stuff and Apple hasn't yet revealed its second-generation device in this exploding category.
Motorola is reportedly aiming at selling 1 million Xoom tablets in the first quarter of 2011. Many of the new tablets will also have Nvidia dual-core Tegra 2 chips. The Motorola device supports features such as Flash, which is ubiquitous on the internet. The combination of tablets, faster chips, Flash, Android 3.0, and 4G LTE could help tip the balance against the iPad in the competitive market.
4. Android grows up.
Fragmented and slow, Android software generated a lot of complaints in the past year. The Android Marketplace was a poor cousin of the App Store. It allowed users to return paid apps within 24 hours. The problem was that many users could finish playing with an app during that time. The policy destroyed the opportunity for developers to make money. Over time, Google released seven major versions of the software. With the Android 3.0 Honeycomb version of Android, many of the problems will be fixed. The new version is designed from the ground up to support multitasking. It reminds me of the first real version of Microsoft Windows, version 3.1.
5. Glasses-free 3D pushes the bleeding edge.
James Cameron's blockbuster 3D movie Avatar finally broke through a wall of skepticism in the theaters. But the home market has been hard to crack. Toshiba showed off a glasses-free TV set that seemed like a good thing. If you stepped out of it, the images became blurry.
Still I've only encountered a few cool 3D experiences. The Nvidia Nvision 3D glasses work great on a three-monitor set-up with a gamer PC loaded with Nvidia's fastest graphics cards. Watching flight simulators or racing games on three monitors is a very cool experience. Nintendo's glasses-free 3DS handheld game system, launching in March, also does an excellent job of maintaining a 3D image. The quality of the imagery is great for watching 3D movies on the run. That's because MasterImage 3D divides a screen into a series of cells that can be manipulated in a fine-grained manner. These are small islands of coolness in a sea of vast hype.
6. Motion controls move to the PC and beyond.
Microsoft Kinect shipped more than 8 million units in 60 days, proving that Xbox 360 gamers want motion control. Asus tapped PrimeSense (pictured, PrimeSense CEO Inon Beracha), the supplier of 3D motion control chips for the Kinect, for its Asus Wavi motion-control system, which takes PC content and moves it to the PC.
7. Smartphones blur the line with computing.
The Motorola Atrix 4G phone came with an interesting dock that has a screen and a keyboard. You can use it as a virtual laptop. Sporting a dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2 chip, the device blurs the line between the computer and the phone. Sure, it's a smartphone. But it could very well be the beginning of smartphones that are more powerful than a lot of the computers we own.
8. Car computing gets smarter.
From OnStar's smart rear-view mirror, which allows you to make hands-free emergency service calls or normal calls, to the Ford Focus with Sync voice-activated controls, cars are getting equipped with full-fledged computers. You can also use your MyFord Mobile smartphone app to preheat or precool your car and monitor its charging while the electric car battery is plugged in. OnStar has a pricey $19 a month subscription fee and costs $299. But it's certainly a lot cheaper than buying a new car to get fancy computing capability.
9. Wireless networking becomes mature.
Some of the newest wireless devices are finally allowing us to get rid of some wires in our tech gear. Talked about for years, fast wireless networks such as ultrawideband, Wireless HD, WHDI, and near-field communications are coming to fruition. Alereon's UWB chips power the Central Station, which allows you to drop a laptop near your desktop-style dock and then have it immediately recognized and connected. Near-field devices have extremely short ranges so you can't confuse them easily when pairing.
10. The anti-Apple coalition is getting stronger.
Apple has always cast a large shadow over CES 2011. When Apple came up with the translucent iMac years ago, the next year's CES featured lots of translucent PCs.
As Apple innovated with the iPhone and the iPad, its rivals seemed like the Keystone Cops. They couldn't get anything right, and the net result was that Apple commanded around 95 percent of the tablet computer market during the fall. The iPhone is in a neck-and-neck battle with Android.
Palm, under the ownership of Hewlett-Packard, is preparing to launch new WebOS tablets. Rivals are likely to deploy 4G LTE smartphones and tablets sooner than Apple will. You can bet that Apple will stay in the lead when it comes to cool product design.

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