CES 2016: the final word
Attendees - some 170,000 of them - are now heading home. And there seems to be a general consensus that CES 2016 signalled a transition year, but not a revolutionary one. The big ideas - like virtual reality, reinventing the car, or home robotics - were promising but still half-baked, a bun in the metaphorical (smart) oven.
"We're in an in-between phase, where categories like drones, virtual reality, and wearables are growing and advancing, but still have a long way to go," wrote Rachel Metz from MIT Tech Review.
The New York Times' Farhad Manjoo described CES 2016 as an "awkward adolescence" for emerging technologies. And that's absolutely right. VR has yet to go mainstream. Drones are out there, but set to be locked in regulatory hassle for the next year at least. And wearables? Well, let's just say too many companies are still thinking about function before fashion.
CES 2016 was like it is every year: Big, overwhelming, full of terrible ideas, wasted money and overhyped nonsense. Gone are the days where you find the "next big thing" at CES. But if the technology business is alive and well, CES is still very much its pulse.
Until next time, Vegas...
Dave Lee