Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles (gentle music) - CES 2021 is over. CES 2020 was also virtual. Now, a virtual thing is not technically real. So if it was never real in the first place, can it actually be over? Yes, CES 2021 is over. And because it was virtual, we were expecting it to be a pretty slow show but it turns out there were some really interesting trends and things that happened this year. Now, CES is not a show where you should expect there to be huge flagship announcements, of products that you can go out and buy right away. That's just not what the show is. It's a show about the parts of gadgets like the screens and the processors. It's a lot of promises basically. And that doesn't mean that it's vaporware, but it does mean that what you learn from CES is about the trends and things that are going to happen a little bit later, not things that you can go out and buy right now. But that said, I do think that some of those trends are really interesting. And so I wanna talk about a few of those promises. The first big trend of CES is the same trend as every CES, and that there are a lot of concept devices. These are things that might not necessarily get made but that doesn't mean that they're vaporware. It means that some companies have produced some things that are really interesting and that might turn into products or might tell you what a future product is going to look like. And the concept that ran away with the show was Razor's Project Hazel. It has an N95 rating or at least it's supposed to, if it ever gets certified. It uses little gaskets to breathe but there will be filters on them. It's clear so that people can see you speaking, which is really interesting. It has a silicon thing over your nose so hopefully it won't fog up glasses. It also has a microphone and a speaker that razor says it's working with THX to tune so that your voice doesn't sound muffled when you're wearing the mask. That it sounds natural. Of course it's rechargeable. Of course it comes in a case with a UV light to disinfect it or whatever. And of course, because it's Razor, it's gonna have RGB lights that you can set to do all sorts of fancy color things. This is a cool idea. I don't know if they're actually gonna make it. And it's part of another trend that I just wanna mention on the side, which is there were a lot of COVID gadgets this year and I was very, very nervous going into CES that what we were going to see is, we'll call it COVID profiteering, a bunch of gadgets that don't actually help anybody, that are very scientifically unsound, that are just taking advantage of people's fear of this pandemic. Luckily, it wasn't as bad as I thought. We have seen a few things like thermometers built into doorbells that I don't think are very useful because the science, external thermometers like that, isn't very good. We also saw a bunch of UV gadgets to disinfect stuff and that's fine, but overall, companies were relatively good about not taking advantage of people's fear of the pandemic. I don't think Razor did either but I will tell you that the problem that we have with the pandemic right now, isn't enough smart tech. The problem is that people aren't being smart themselves. They're not wearing masks, they're not social distancing, not as much as we need. So please do that. And Razor as cool as this Project Hazel thing is, I am more impressed with the fact that you switched one of your factories over to making masks for healthcare workers and that you gave away a million of them. Thank you for doing that. And if you decide you actually wanna produce this Project Hazel smart mask, yeah, I'll take some flaky lights on my face, why not? We saw a bunch of other regular kind of CES concepts. Of course we saw concept cars and we also saw a bunch of concept screens. Like for example, LG has a semi-transparent screen which is a very good idea. They're showing it off again that's even more transparent than before, but for some reason they think you're gonna wanna put it at the foot of your bed and have it rise up on a motor. Sure, why not? The main thing that we see with concept screens is that they bend and fold. And so TCL, which is trying really hard to prove that it's a big deal now, showed off a bunch of different bendy screens that showed up off thing that was like literally a scroll. Maybe someday, I don't know. The rolly screen that I'm most impressed with is LG's rollable phone. It's a phone where it sort of rolls out to become a tablet-size thing or rolls back into the regular form factor that you expect. It is just a concept but LG says they are going to sell one this year. LG also makes the Wing though so they're probably not gonna sell that many of them but just getting one out the door will be interesting. I want a phone that turns into a tablet and a foldable is one way to do it and a rollable is a really interesting, different way. (gentle music) The next big thing that happened at CES has to do with processors and laptops. So let's talk about processors and laptops. We had keynote presentations from Intel, AMD, and Nvidia. And you put all them together, what I think you're going to get are gaming laptops in 2021 that are very, very interesting and very good, I hope. So Intel, it has a bunch of new core chips and you probably know by now that Intel has had a rough go of it lately. They had to sell off their modem business to Apple. They're competing with Apple, with Apple's new M1 chip which is very good in terms of performance per watt and Intel is having a hard time getting down to the 10 and seven nanometer process for making its chips which we know are more power efficient or more powerful per watt. Anyway, Intel, they're doing their best with kind of what they got. They do have some interesting things coming but we will have to see if they are like significantly better or if we're still playing the waiting game with them. Then there's AMD, which has another generation of its Ryzen processors running on the seven nanometer process, which means that they can be very powerful without completely destroying your battery. I'm very interested to see what these are like and I'm also kind of hoping that they're actually easier to find 'cause they weren't in a ton of laptops last year but the ones that they were in were very, very good. Finally, there is Nvidia, which is bringing down some GPU's to gaming laptops that are actually more powerful than I would have guessed as early as they're coming. I want to figure out to take it a little bit longer for this much power to come to gaming laptops. And by this much power what I mean is, proper 1440P resolutions running at 90 frames per second. That seems like it's completely a doable thing on gaming laptops this year in form factors that aren't like three inches thick and weigh eight pounds. Now, after all these announcements were made, there were a ton of laptop announcements because all those parts were public and so all the companies are making laptop talks about all of those parts. We're interested in a bunch of them but the one that I'm most interested in is the successor to this guy right here,