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CES Highlights: Last Day

CES Roundup: Day Fin
CES is closed, and while we still have some news to clean up and hit after the doors have been locked and the sidewalks rolled up, let's give you a roundup of the notables from the last day of the show.

CES Booth Tours - CES is a lot of news and announcements, sure, but it's also a lot of opulence. If you couldn't make it to this year's show in sunny (but cold) Las Vegas, check out this series of articles that let you virtually explore the show -- without the sore feet and excessively blaring bass.

Wireless Charging Demonstrated - Collect a few gadgets and before long your life will become a sea of tangled AC adapters. The solution is wireless charging, and Powermat is one of the handful of companies that have products poised to revolutionize the industry. You simply lay your gadgets onto a charging pad and, without connecting anything, they'd have full batteries in no time. Outside of plugging the mat itself into the wall, there are no wires, so you won't have to worry about different adapters for different gadgets, changing your charging station from spaghetti to simplicity. Check out the link for a video.

Viliv's Tiny S7 Tablet - We're in love with Sony's little VAIO P, a high-end netbook that's one of the slimmest we've seen yet. But, it's also on the high end of acceptable pricing for the line of gadgets, coming in at a not-so-affordable $900. We expect the Viliv S7 to be far, far cheaper than that, yet it's nearly the same size and offers a bonus touch-screen and a swiveling screen that turns it into a tablet. It's not as much of a looker like Sony's product, but it has potential and is due to release sometime this summer.

Eyes-On with the NVIDIA's New 3D Glasses - 3D is making a huge appearance this year, and NVIDIA is at the forefront on the gaming side with its 3D Vision glasses. Each pair features two lenses made of LCDs that flicker to block one eye or the other. They synchronize with newer LCD gaming monitors that also switch rapidly between left and right views, giving an illusion of depth that we found to work quite well in some games (particularly slower-moving games with simple graphics), but can be really messy in others. It's an interesting effect, but we think the price -- $200 plus the cost of a new monitor -- is a bit steep.

Gibson's Dark Fire Guitar Tunes Itself - Tuning a guitar can be a slow and painful process -- unless you're rich and famous and have a gaggle of roadies to do it for you. Regardless of your income or fame level, or even if you don't play guitar, you'll want to check out this video of Gibson's Dark Fire Guitar. It can tune itself in seconds with just a strum and has a number of sound and interface options, making it not only a beautiful axe but an impressive piece of tech, too.

CES may be done, but we've still got plenty of stuff to tell you about, so keep checking back in the next few days for more previews, hands-on impressions, and more 2009 goodness.

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Weirdest Techie Heists and Scams

    Elderly Amish Man Caught on Film With Prostitute, Blackmailed
    When a 75-year-old Amish widower slept with a prostitute, he -- we feel certain -- felt pretty bad about it the next morning. As if that guilt weren't enough for the old man, the prostitute and her boyfriend demanded $67,000 from him, claiming that they had filmed the scene with wall-mounted cameras and would upload the recording to the Internet. The pair was later arrested and, we can only imagine, the Amish man abhorred technology more than ever.

     

    Bank Robber Gets Away With the Help of Craiglist
    In October, a bank robber -- wearing a safety vest, blue shirt, face mask and goggles -- eluded police with the help of Craiglist. Just outside the bank, while the robbery was in progress, stood a group of men who were responding to a Craiglist day labor opportunity. As the advertisement required, they were all wearing safety vests, blue shirts, face masks and goggles.

     

    Nude New Zealander Arrested After Responding to Fake Sexy Text Message
    Late in 2007, a Wellington, New Zealand man received a racy text message from two anonymous "ladies," giving him only an address and a request that he show up naked. Well, he indeed showed up naked... at the home of one appalled, unsuspecting New Zealander. Both the nude Romeo and the sadistic texter were arrested, though neither were prosecuted.

     

    Fake Craiglist Ad Costs Man Most of What He Owns
    Last Spring, a post appeared on an Oregon Craigslist board stating that the owner of a specific house was leaving all of his worldly possessions (still in said house) to whoever wanted them. When homeowner Robert Salisbury rushed home -- on a tip from a woman suspicious about the offer of a free horse -- he found his house being ransacked by 30 strangers. We suggest he take that horse and collect some vengeance Clint Eastwood-style.

     

    17-Year-Old Jailed for Stealing Virtual 'Furniture'
    When a 17-year-old Dutch boy hacked into several accounts on the Second Life-style site 'Habbo' in 2007, the the law got involved. The boy was discovered to have stolen $5,800 worth of virtual furniture and knick-knacks. Apparently, crime -- whether actual or virtual -- does not pay.

     

    Phishers Going After Your Phones in New 'Vishing' Trend
    Over the past year, sneaky spammers have begun to forsake the worn-out territory of e-mail in favor of cell phones' fertile frontier. The result? "Vishing." Get it? Voice mail phishing. It might be more ominous if it didn't sound like a James Bond villain saying, "Wishing."

     

    Burglars Break Into Restaurant, Steal HDTV, Leave Money / Food Behind
    Around Halloween of last year, a truckload of thieves drove into -- that's right, into -- a Pennsylvania Mexican restaurant, where they -- apparently uninterested in the cash register -- stole a mid-grade 47-inch HDTV and fled the scene. We've all heard about how this generation is lacking in ambition, but this generation's thieves, too?

     

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