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Marketing Mayhem at the Consumer Electronics Show
Intel snagged the Black Eyed Peas to play at the convention.
(By Albert Watson)
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Of slightly more interest was a doohickey from Spotwave Wireless that supposedly boosts cell phone signals to extend your phone battery time. Even that didn't get me fired up, considering my phone already has ample juice to match my gab time.
Among the cooler gadgets I've seen is the SkyScout, a handheld star-viewing assistant. Point it at any bright object in the sky, and it will identify the object using global-positioning-system technology. A new biometric system from Fujitsu called PalmSecure identifies people by capturing vein patterns in their hands using near-infrared rays.
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, the opening speaker Wednesday night, came with a vast marketing army, trumpeting where Microsoft aims to take everyone with its new Windows operating system called Vista, due for release this year. All of its major rivals -- except Apple Computer -- also are here, including Sony, which is hosting one of the biggest booths.
There were more news conferences Wednesday than a lone reporter could attend in months. While big companies tried to lure reporters with celebrities, fancy food and highly scripted presentations, the little guys had to work harder.
A start-up called MusicGremlin picked me up at my hotel in a white stretch limo and took me to my first appointment -- just so co-founder Robert Khedouri could do a back-seat demo of what he calls his "record store in your pocket." MusicGremlin's software lets its portable music player bypass computers and pull music directly from the Internet.
That's a goal big companies here are tackling, too -- streamlining music downloads so you don't need a PC to snag a fresh song -- but only MusicGremlin went to the extreme of giving demos inside limos equipped with traveling Wi-Fi signals.
"We're a small company; we don't have a booth on the show floor," said Karen Novak, the PR rep who talked MusicGremlin into hiring five limousines to ferry reporters around Sin City this week. "What is the one thing everybody really needs and can't get here? Transportation."
The lines to hail a cab -- and even those to get on the Las Vegas Monorail system -- are a nightmare.
Of all the advance pitches, Kodak's paper campaign seemed the slickest -- the film giant mailed a series of glossy photos showing black-suited spies handing off suitcases and sexy, tattooed young folks hanging out in a bar. They accompanied mysteriously worded invitations to Kodak's party at the Ghostbar Wednesday night, where details of its secret "Project Gemini" were to be revealed. Kodak even sent black plastic admission badges hanging from black lanyards, as if to illustrate its claim that the event would be "highly exclusive."
But I still have no clue what Project Gemini is about because the Ghostbar hoo-haw was to start at 10 p.m. Vegas time, or 1 a.m. Eastern time, which meant Kodak was winding up its digital gears just as my personal analog clock was set to wind down -- and I needed to conserve energy to wade through the tens of thousands of gadgets that go on display starting Thursday.
Oh, did I tell you about Loc8tor, the pocket fob that lets you find anything if you remember to stick a postage-stamp-size tag on it in advance?
I just might start with that. If I plaster myself with Loca8tor tags, maybe I can keep track of my senses amid the marketing lunacy engulfing the Consumer Electronics Show.
Leslie Walker welcomes e-mail atwalkerl@washpost.com.



