Students from Southwest Career and Technical Academy, Northwest Career and Technical Academy and Rancho high school presented their inventions in front of a panel of judges at CES 2019, as part of the Future Innovators competition.
A beer fridge that knows you are low and will automatically deliver more to your home and a trash/recycle to toss the empty ones that opens to your command. What a time to be alive.
Lora DiCarlo is a women-run start-up that creates a vibrator-like device designed for female pleasure called the Osé. This year they were awarded the CES Innovation Award in the Robotics and Drone Category, but a month later the Consumer Technology Association, which runs CES, rescinded the award and their booth. Haddock and her team believe it is a reflection of gender bias and sexism in an industry with a long history of male domination.
If you love your tablet and your smartphone but hate carrying the two around, FlexPai offers the perfect solution. Found at CES 2019, FlexPai is the world’s first commercial foldable smartphone. The product is a combination of a mobile phone and tablet, that can be used folded or unfolded.
Smart toilets, bathtubs, and mirrors that take everyday comfort to the next level. CES Innovation award winning flotation tub positions your body as if it were in a gravity free environment sending your brain into a meditative state.
Mixologiq has developed a machine that claims to make any cocktail. It will cut the fruit, crush the ice and pour the liquor and/or juice. The company is as CES hoping to raise money to get the machine in production. (Mat Luschek/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
While CES offers the latest technology for TVs, video games and virtual reality, the convention also showcases products for parents. These products help ease the worries many first-time parents have when they are expecting or have already delivered their babies.
Uber plans to begin the testing phase of its uberAIR program in 2020 in Los Angeles and Dallas. The service will use Bell’s “Bell Nexus” flying vehicle, which debuted Tuesday at CES in Las Vegas.
Google’s booth at CES in Las Vegas features a 3-minute roller coaster showcasing the many ways you can use Google Assistant. (Richard Brian/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Holographic TVs, Table Pong and facial recognition software are some of the things on display in the Innovation and Gaming hall at CES 2019. (Heidi Fang/Las Vegas Review-Journal)