
DEUTSCHE MESSE AG
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The conference center gets ready for hundreds of thousands of visitors over the next week
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Let Us Entertain You
Gadget makers roll out their latest gee-whiz offerings, delivering multimedia bells and whistles in one neat electronic package
By JENNIFER SCHENKER
TVs are becoming PCs, PCs are turning into TVs and phones and personal
digital assistants are morphing into portable multimedia devices. But it is
not just the devices that are converging. In the home, Internet, telephone,
television and stereo systems are fusing into a networked unit that can be
controlled either centrally or on the move.
Many of the gadgets and gizmos that will help entertain us will be on display
this week at the CeBIT trade exhibition in Hanover, Germany, which
attracts more than 600,000 people each year.
Nokia will be showing off its Media Terminal, a souped-up set-top box for
the living room, which enables full Internet access over TV broadcast
networks. Features include a split screen that can show both TV and the
Internet, a remote with built-in keyboard, the ability to pause or replay live
broadcasts, digital TV that records to a hard disc, video on demand, a file
audio player, e-mail, 3D games, digital radio and connections to devices
such as printers and cameras. For its part Hitachi will be showing how smart
cards can be inserted into set-top boxes to purchase music from the
Internet via the TV.
Meanwhile, Philips, Panasonic and LG are all exhibiting flat-panel lcd
monitors with built-in TV tuners, making it easy to view television
programs on your computer screen. "We don't see people watching TV for
hours on end in front of their computers but they might like to watch a
quick bit of entertainment or a sports event, says a Philips spokesman.
Integrating mobile phones with TV is the next step. Once Bluetooth a
short-range radio technology that allows electronic devices to communicate
with each other automatically is widely deployed, viewers who order
tickets to a pop star's concert via their TVs could arrange to have the
electronic tickets sent directly to their mobile phones. That's what they
would present at the door.
Or, instead of going to the concert you could just download MP3 music files
from the Internet on mobile phones like the latest model from Samsung
being shown at CeBIT.
And once faster data services are introduced, handsets like one from Sendo,
which uses Microsoft's smart phone platform, will be able to receive
streaming video, allowing movie trailers or a soccer goal to be beamed to
fans on the move. Meanwhile, Palm's next generation of handhelds allows
users to view and edit images taken with compatible digital cameras. These
applications and others can be accessed by inserting Secure Digital Cards or
MultiMediaCards into a slot in the Palm no PC necessary. In addition to
digital cameras, future add-ons include video recorders and global
positioning systems. And Kodak is introducing a portable device that
doubles as a digital camera and an MP3 player, evidently for adding a sound
track to your pictures. If these product launches keep up, using every form
of media simultaneously may become as easy as watching TV.
With reporting by Jeff Chu and Steve Homer/London
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