I'm sure some of you here have already seen coverage of most of the new technology that was displayed at this past CES. Of all the incredible stuff that I saw so far from this year's CES, two particular technology demonstrations come to mind, due to the fact that they could very well have a strong impact on the video gaming industry, at least in the long term.
First up, is Intel's 2010 Core i7 processor. Boy, did they do an upgrade on this baby! Who ever thought that a single CPU could play, stream and render massive amounts (hundreds of them) of bandwidth intensive, High Definition multi-media feeds all at once! Oh, and on top of that, easily rival the best, top of the line discreet graphic cards out there, by playing the most graphically demanding 3D video games at high frame rates, with all effects turned on, all done strait from the CPU alone! I know, that's some pretty tough talk there, heck......I don't believe it myself. Well, apparently the mighty Intel has gone out of their way to back up their claims:
Source #1: http://dvice.com/archives/2010/01/intel-infoscape.php
Source #2; http://scoop.intel.com/2010/01/intel-infoscape-all-the-buzz-at-ces
The second other tech demo that wowed me, was Panasonic's radically big 152 inch plasma TV! But what makes this big screen monster special is not so much it's huge size, but it's native screen resolution. You see, this one TV makes a so called "Full HD 1080p Screen Resolution" TV look like obsolete shit already. How? Oh,.....it's resolution is set at a new HD format called "4K", which translates to 4096 x 2160 pixels! In other words, we are talking about a TV with a "2160p" screen resolution! To quote the source article: "that's 8 million pixels, four times the resolution of today's puny 1920 x 1080p 2 million pixel displays". But sadly to say, this TV will not see the light of day as far as mass production is concerned, it's only meant as a demo prototype. But hey, the fact that it even exists is incredible enough for me. Who knows, maybe in 10 to 15 years from now it might come to market.......
Source: http://dvice.com/archives/2010/01/biggest-news-at.php