We're heading to Las Vegas in January to catch all the action from 2007 International CES -- the world's biggest gadget show. From 8 - 11 January, around 150,000 visitors from over 130 countries are expected to stampede across 1.5 million square metres of exhibition floor, hunting down the latest consumer electronics and identifying trends for this year.
With dozens of editors from CNET around the globe hitting the show floor, we'll bring you up to date news, videos and photo galleries on the hottest products from CES. Be sure to keep an eye on coverage from CNET.com.au's Jeremy Roche for a local perspective on what to expect in 2007.
After tiring of the endless my-TV-is-bigger-than-your-TV booths at CES 2007, we put on our glasses to inspect the smaller devices the Las Vegas show had to offer, such as mobile phones and audio accessories.
During my whirlwind trip last week to the US to attend the biggest consumer electronics expo of the year, CES 2007, and Apple's annual gathering of Mac aficionados, Macworld, my feeling that Australia is being left behind intensified.
Nokia unveiled three new N series "multimedia computers" on the first day of CES 2007, two of which are phones, the other being an Internet Tablet that may never see the light of day in Australia.
Not deterred by a mile-long queue, journalists, retailers and industry members waited patiently in line to enter a modestly sized exhibition room for CES Unveiled, a preview event held in the Sands Expo Center two days before the opening of CES 2007 in Las Vegas.
At a press conference the day before the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas opens, Sharp unveiled what its calling the world's largest LCD television, a 108-inch (274cm) gargantuan set, under its AQUOS brand.
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