286 booths, and nary an iPhone in sight. In fact, a lot of the gadgets on display here were first released in 2007. Welcome to CAN InfoTech: the CES of Nepal.
BoingBoing’s photo tour of the January conference, held in a country with a near-50% unemployment rate and a per-capita GDP of $1,200, paints a picture of a sort of proto-CES, in which Apple is a new and novel brand, many of the attendees don’t have mobile phones, and electric generators are a prime attraction.
I’m not sure why, but I assumed a trade show like this would be inflected with a different feeling. Instead of complaining about ebook reader overload or a crowded trade floor, attendees would glimpse a technological future that a lot of the world lives in, and that they too could one day enjoy. But no: A trade show is a trade show, all the way down the economic scale. It’s a way for innovators and hucksters alike to get the word out, for better or for worse, about the thing they’re trying to sell right then.
https://gizmodo.com/there-are-officially-too-damn-many-ebook-readers-5443102
Head over to the source for the full photo set, because it’s utterly fascinating, from the 2008-vintage Sony catalog on display to the cellophane-wrapped display laptops. I’ll never complain about CES again. (This is a lie.) [BoingBoing]