CES 2015 is finally here and boy, have we been busy the past few days. Engadget's editors have been hard at work pounding the show floor here in Las Vegas to bring you what we think should win the coveted Best of CES awards. Now, we're ready to announce our finalists for all 15 categories, which range from best home theater product to the most innovative tech we've seen at the show. Tomorrow, we'll announce our winners of each category, along with who will win the Best of the Best award. The recipient for that will be chosen amongst the category winners.
But we want to know what you think too. So there's an additional category called People's Choice, where you can vote for your favorite product in our pool of finalists. To vote, simply head on over to this poll to make your voice heard. The product with the most votes will win a special People's Choice award, which will also be given out tomorrow at a ceremony onstage.
Introducing the Best of CES 2015 finalists!
BEST STARTUP
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Zolt replaces your bulky laptop power brick with something significantly smaller. And as a bonus, it can also charge two other devices while your laptop is powering up. |
AmpStrip packs in a heart rate sensor, step tracker and sleep tracker in a single Band-Aid-shaped sticker. Yes, a sticker. |
BEST DIGITAL HEALTH & FITNESS PRODUCT
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Bragi's "The Dash" smart headphones were a big hit when they launched on Kickstarter last year, raising over $3 million. Here at CES, the waterproof, touch-controlled, media-playing, fitness-tracking, do-it-all earbuds have been shown to the public for the first time. |
The Garmin Vivoactive is the company's first-ever dedicated smartwatch that has a color touchscreen and the ability to get emails, texts, notifications and more. Staying true to Garmin's roots, it also has a built-in GPS radio, a waterproof design and apparently has tremendously long battery life. |
Quell's new wearable pain reliever sends small electrical pulses to your pained calves. It can be worn 24/7 and promises 40 hours of pain relief in a single charge. |
BEST WEARABLE
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Lenovo's beautiful Vibe Band VP10 gives a new spin on the standard wearable by offering Bluetooth notifications on an E Ink screen. It also tracks your steps, calories, distance traveled and sleep quality. Plus, it's waterproof and comes in an array of stylish metallic colors. |
Alcatel OneTouch's smartwatch bucks the dominant wearables trend by skipping Android Wear in favor of its own proprietary software. What that means is that it can't run some of the more out-there apps we've seen, but do you really need a watch to be able to start your car? With stylish looks, solid features and a cheap price, it's certainly an interesting device. |
Bragi's Dash smart headphones are so impressive, that they deserved to be in the wearables category, too. They're waterproof and touch-controlled and can do things like play media and track your fitness. |
BEST AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY
Mercedes F 015 Luxury in Motion |
QNX continues to wow with its ADAS (Advanced Driver Assist Systems) improvements. New on this year's demo car are all-digital rear and side-view mirrors. These new displays eliminate blind spots and, as an added perk, light up green if the coast is clear for a lane change. |
BMW 360-degree collision detection If all vehicles came equipped with BMW's new 360-degree collision-detection technology, there might not ever be accidents on the road. It uses an array of scanners to figure out its surroundings and the equipped car will do the best it can to avoid any and all obstacles. |
Audi finally offered us a glimpse at its "retail" Audi Tablet. Scheduled to ship as an option on the 2016 Q7, this unibody aluminum tablet is quite likely the finest handheld we've ever used. Not only is the matte display beautiful to behold, but it's also been crash tested. |
BEST HOME THEATER PRODUCT
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With a compact design drawn straight out of science fiction, Samsung's pair of new speakers have a ring radiator that pumps music in every direction. |
Maybe you remember TiVo Season Pass. Well, now it pulls in episodes not just from what has or will be broadcast, but also puts any episodes available already on internet sources on the same screen. Old binge-viewing habits meet new. |
BEST (CONNECTED) HOME PRODUCT
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The Parrot Pot is a smart ceramic pot that'll dispense the exact amount of water that your plant needs. That, combined with its 8,000-plant database, means you don't need a green thumb to have a beautiful, thriving house plant in your home. |
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BEST SOFTWARE / APP
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Handwriting recognition on tablets has always been a tough nut to crack, but Lenovo might have finally done it. WriteIt is a new Windows app developed by the company that could actually understand and translate complex written scrawls into text. |
BEST INNOVATION (DISRUPTIVE TECH)
Mercedes F 015 Luxury in Motion |
We've nominated this as a Best Connected Home product, but Energous' WattUp wireless charging system deserves to be on this list too. Not only does it broadcast WiFi through the home, but it'll also charge devices -- no wires necessary. |
Intel first showed off its RealSense 3D camera last year, but it's only now becoming ubiquitous; the technology can be found in many flagships announced this week at CES, from tablets to laptops to all-in-one desktops. The use cases run the gamut too: So far, we've seen RealSense used for gaming, green-screening conference calls, building 3D models and adjusting the focus in pictures. |
Gogoro's introduction of its SmartScooter and battery-swapping infrastructure is so innovative that it needed to be in this category too. The ability to easily swap out old batteries for new ones could make electric vehicles much more mainstream and, in turn, transform urban transport as we know it. |
BEST MOBILE DEVICE
Dell Venue 8 7000 series tablet |
LG's curved phone gets upgraded in all the best ways. A higher-resolution screen that's consciously smaller, higher-quality design and internals that include a top-of-the-range mobile processor from Qualcomm. Oh, and there's also a beautiful red color option. |
Your next smartphone could come loaded with the newly announced NVIDIA Tegra X1 chip, a next-gen mobile chipset that's the first to offer a teraflop of processing power. |
BEST TV PRODUCT
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Sharp's new 4K TVs showcase an interesting pixel-splitting trick that apparently results in a near-8K picture. It also promises better upscaling and an improved LED backlight. |
It's not CES without a Samsung television, and this year the company has come out with a gorgeous curved model that uses nanocrystal semiconductors for a crisper, more colorful image. |
Sony's latest Bravia televisions are some of the thinnest we've seen yet, measuring out to only 4.9mm thick. They also have a new X1 4K processor that apparently upgrades the picture quality of any 4K source. |
BEST GAMING PRODUCT
Razer's Forge TV is an Android TV box. But unlike the rest, it can stream PC games. With Android onboard it also folds in access to Spotify, Netflix and all the rest. A dedicated gamer TV box. |
It's the Simon memory game, but this time it's on the side of a sneaker -- wearable gaming, of a sort. Unfortunately, they only come in kids' sizes. |
NVIDIA's X1 chip is its most powerful mobile processor yet. Expect to see it in NVIDIA hardware (say, the next Shield) as well as a whole range of devices beyond just gaming. |
BEST OFFBEAT PRODUCT
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Belty is an activity and fitness tracker in a slightly different form factor, with the added ability to monitor changes in waist size. Cooler yet, it features a motorized buckle that loosens and tightens, maintaining a consistent level of comfort, based on your seating position and how much you've managed to put away at lunch. |
Smart everything. This time, smart flashlights. The Fogo does the fundamental flashlight things, but also adds in GPS, a walkie-talkie and auto-adjusting brightness -- because it can. All this, and the creators told us that this is just the start. |
It's the Simon memory game, but this time it's on the side of a sneaker -- wearable gaming, of a sort. Unfortunately, they only come in kids' sizes. |
BEST MAKER-FRIENDLY TECHNOLOGY
Combining the elements of plastic printing with other materials has been done before, but with the gravitas of MakerBot, it's more exciting. With iron composite filaments, you can even magnetize your products. Use maplewood filaments, and there's a faint scent of the wood still there. Your homemade prototypes got an upgrade. |
The 3Doodler sequel improves on the original substantially. More control, substantially smaller and less power hungry, it looks less like a prototype and more like a viable present for the artist you know. |
Chocolate printing, combining the 3D-printing knowledge 3D Systems with, love it or hate it, Hershey chocolate. The machine can use white, milk and dark chocolate, heating a special mix and printing shapes in an environmentally controlled 3D printer. |
BEST PC
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Dell's redesigned XPS 13 Ultrabook might not be the lightest 13-inch laptop in the world (that honor goes to Lenovo), but it might well be the smallest. Thanks to some nearly invisible bezels that measure just 5mm wide, Dell was able to cram a 13-inch display into an 11-inch laptop. The result is a 2.6-pound machine that's more than a third of a pound lighter than the MacBook Air, with a smaller footprint, to boot. |
We've seen detachable laptops, but ASUS' 12.5-inch Chi hybrid still manages to impress. At 0.3 inch thick for just the tablet (or 0.65 inch with the keyboard dock), it's even thinner than the similarly sized Surface Pro 3. Making all this possible is Intel's low-power Core M chip, which allows for not just skinny designs, but fanless ones too. Best of all, perhaps, is the price: Even with a 2,560 x 1,440 screen option, it'll ring in at just $799 -- not bad at all for what's essentially a flagship Ultrabook with a detachable keyboard. |
BEST ROBOT OR DRONE
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Zano is a tiny drone that can launch from your wrist. Kickstarter made the prototype happen, and now it's a very real proposition. |