Welcome to CES 2024. This multi-day trade event put on by the Consumer Technology Association is expected to bring some 130,000 attendees and more than 4,000 exhibitors to Las Vegas. The latest advances and gadgets across personal tech, transportation, health care, sustainability and more will be on display, with burgeoning uses of artificial intelligence almost everywhere you look.
The Associated Press will keep a running report of everything we find interesting from the floor of CES, from the latest announcements to most quirky smart gadgets.
Roberta Wilson-Garrett used to be a morning person who would leap out of bed at dawn. Until, that is, she was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease six years ago.
Now her hands twist and tremor, making the morning, when her medicine is wearing off, especially difficult. It takes hours for her to get ready for the day. All her coffee mugs have lids on them now.
Boston-based GyroGear, a medical tech startup, debuted a hand-stabilizing glove at CES 2024 that it hopes will help people like Wilson-Garrett regain control of their lives.
“It makes life normal for me again. The things that you take for granted, I don't take for granted anymore,” Wilson-Garrett told AP on the show floor as her right hand shook. "It gives me back a piece of my old life when I have the glove on."
When Wilson-Garrett slipped on the black glove, her right hand relaxed, and she was able to hold a pen and write her name.
The GyroGlove is now available for $5,899.
Can generative AI tell your future? A fortune teller showcased by South Korean manufacturing and IT services giant SK Group at CES this week gives us a glimpse.
SK's AI Fortune Teller, which is powered by high-bandwidth memory technology, claims that it can tell
Read more on tech.hindustantimes.com