Heres what we wanted to see from CES, but didnt
Heres what we wanted to see from CES, but didnt.
LAS VEGAS — The $19,000 high-end floating bathtub from Japanese manufacturer Toto was cool, but a cutting edge tech gadget? Not really.
The mammoth technology convention formerly known as the Consumer Electronics Show was stacked with home and bath products this year. While a new Kohler toilet is Bluetooth-enabled and lets you flush by asking Alexa to do just that, it was hard to lump these appliance upgrades in with some of the technological leaps that really made a mark in our lives.
After all, this is the show that gave us VCRs, Blu-Ray and DVD players, the Ring video doorbell and all those giant TVs.
You could still wander the convention halls and find plenty of the tried and true: amazing big-screen TVs that look more awesome than even movie theaters, and software.