Tiesto performs for CES conventioneers and clubgoers during the DreamlandXR Closing Night Party at Hakkasan Nightclub at the MGM Grand on the Las Vegas Strip in the early hours of Friday, Jan. 10, 2020. (K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal) @KMCannonPhoto
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Sofia Ongele explains ReDawn, which uses a Chatbot named Dawn to help users find resources after a sexual assault. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Crave has a sex tech booth with a Build-A-Vibe workshop where you can build your own vibrator that can be hooked up to a computer and programmed.
CES attendees talk navigating the convention center and the pending addition of the Boring Company underground people mover. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Dr. Samir Qamar of Las Vegas presents MedWand, a medical device that allows physicians to examine patients remotely anywhere in the world, at CES 2020. (Elizabeth Page Brumley /Las Vegas Review-Journal) @elipagephoto
From a BotBoxing incorporating virtual reality into workouts, to a golf caddy that is designed to follow its golfer, CES 2020 had various items on display in sports technology. Here are some of the highlights. (Heidi Fang/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Former NHL player and Golden Knights TV Analyst Shane Hnidy put electronics to through a torture test to see how durable they are along with CNET’s Jeff Bakalar. They revealed their results at CES 2020. (Heidi Fang/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
A round up of high-tech luggage from CES 2020. (Rachel Aston/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Bell Nexus EX4 and Hyundai SA-1 flying taxi prototypes from CES 2020. (Mick Akers/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
CES 2020 marks the first-time sex technology products can qualify for awards or be showcased as part of the health and wellness category. Sex tech is celebrating CES’ lift on what had previously been deemed “immoral, obscene, indecent, profane,” by the Consumer Technology Association.