CarPlay, Monster offerings, and a Bluetooth water bottle: A day at CE Week

Posted:
in General Discussion edited June 2018
At the annual CE Week tech event in New York, Monster announced two public funding offerings, Pioneer showed its wireless CarPlay units, and a Sonos exec spoke about AirPlay 2 and HomeKit.

welcome to CE Week


This year's edition of the CE Week event had a distinct feel of change. The East Coast-based summer tech show in New York City has a new venue in the Javits Center, and a new owner with Germany's IFA running the show as part of a new joint venture with the Philadelphia-based media concern CT Lab Global Media.

AppleInsiderwas in New York for the first day of the show on Wednesday. CE Week used to be conducted in partnership with the then-Consumer Electronics Association, and like most years, it could best be described as "like CES, only much smaller and quieter." While this year's event got off to a sleepy start, that changed when Noel Lee rolled in on his trademark, gold-plated Segway.

Two Monster offerings

Head Monster Noel Lee holds court


Neither Monster nor "The Head Monster" Lee had been advertised in advance as exhibiting or participating in CE Week, but Lee appeared for a hastily called event Wednesday afternoon. Held in a small side room of the Javits Center's River Pavilion, Lee detailed Monster's way forward, which will include two different Hail Marys: an Initial Public Offering AND an Initial Coin Offering.

Monster, of course, was the original manufacturing partner of Beats Electronics, a partnership that revolutionized the headphone category. However, Beats dropped Monster in early 2012, leaving Monster with no equity, and therefore in no position to profit when Apple acquired Beats for $3 billion two years later. This resulted in a lawsuit by Monster against Apple in early 2015 that has continued in a series of countersuits. The court battles are ongoing but have mostly broken Apple's way.

In addition to the courtroom wars, Monster has also been needling Apple, including at CE Week, by advertising its own headphones with a picture of Apple earbuds with a line through them, and the slogan "you deserve better."

Monster's anti-Apple campaign


As Ted Green of the consumer electronics industry website Strata-GEE reported earlier this month, citing public filings for the ICO, Monster finds itself in significant financial dire straits, with the company having lost $26.7 million in 2017.

The company's answer to its financial woes is both an IPO AND ICO, as Monster will issue both stock and a cryptocurrency offering, called Monster Money. Monster hopes for the crypto play, which Lee described as "a way for consumers to get invested," to be the first cryptocurrency "legitimized" by the SEC.

Both offerings, Lee said, represent a break from Monster's 40 years as a privately-held company that had never before taken outside money. "We need some money that's from outside the bank of Noel Lee," he said, referencing reports that he's been floating the company his own money for some time.

Monster had spent big on a Super Bowl commercial in January -- which it showed again at CE Week -- and has some other efforts on tap in its attempt at a resurgence. These include a series of "dance your ass off" dance contests based on the Monster Blaster speaker and a series of "alternative retail" ventures, which will include selling products at such nontraditional venues as Hard Rock Cafes, sports arenas, and even on cruiseships.

The company will also continue to utilize celebrity endorsements. Their current stable includes rapper Iggy Azalea and NFL star Marshawn Lynch.

A new evolution in Pioneer head units

Pioneer's in-car head unit


Also at the event, Pioneer demoed its latest CarPlay-compatible units, which arrived on the market last month. The three units include wireless, Wi-Fi connectivity, while two of the units, AVIC-W8400NEX and AVH-W4400NEX, work with both CarPlay and Android Auto. In addition, the units allow users to use Siri to control their HomeKit-connected devices, straight from the car.

"Anything you can do with Apple HomeKit, you can do with Siri from the car," Pioneer's vice president of marketing, Ted Cardenas, told AppleInsider.

How Pioneer works with HomeKit


As for what might change with the units once iOS 12 arrives, Cardenas noted that "the nice thing is that the software updates are pretty well-integrated," although if, as rumored, USB-C becomes part of the next iPhones, that "might change how we connect," he said.

Cardenas also joked that Pioneer, in 2014, had missed out on becoming the first partner to place CarPlay in a car by one day. He attributed that to Apple's Eddy Cue being on the board of Ferrari and giving it to them first.

"The Ultimate Apple Dock"

The udoq


AppleInsider showed a hands-on back in March of the Udoq modular docking system, which works through a series of adjustable adapters. The product's inventor, Marcus Kuchler, demonstrated the Udoq at CE Week, revealing that the product's Indiegogo campaign, in which the Udoq is offered for $99, runs through July 22.

Smart home thoughts

CE Week's living room panel


A panel was held Wednesday on "Listening in the Living Room: How Smart Speakers are Striving to Be The Next Great Platform," and on the panel, both the moderator John Quain and panelists Andrew Vloyanetes (head of sales for Sonos) and Gary Schultz (Business & Product Development for iHome parent company SDI Technologies) spent most of the proceedings characterizing the smart home as a two-horse race between Amazon and Google.

However, the panelists agreed that Apple will eventually have a shot in the space.

"Don't count Apple out," Schultz said. "The first HomePod is the start of something. Airplay 2 is their next evolution of how they're integrating with products inside the home," although Schultz urged Apple to open the system up further to third-party apps.

"At Sonos we believe two operating systems, three operating systems, can coincide inside the home," Vloyanetes added.

It's a speaker -- and a water bottle!

iHome's Aquio speaker


Speaking of iHome, the longtime Apple accessor maker had some new speakers at CE Week, including a dual alarm clock, but the one that had people at the show talking was the Aquio, a water bottle with a Bluetooth speaker attached to it. The bottle, available in four colors, sports a modular waterproof Bluetooth speaker that unscrews easily. It arrives on the market in July for $69.99.

CE Week concludes on Thursday.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    Notice they use obsolete old Apple earbuds in the 'You deserve better' poster.  Pretty, cheap shot and totally inaccurate.  Pretty much sums Monster up.
    razorpitwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 5
    bonobobbonobob Posts: 382member
     Because of their extremely overpriced cables, I have always assumed that all products from Monster are also extremely overpriced, so I never look at them as a purchase option. I doubt this helps their bottom line. 
    dysamoriawatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 5
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,167member
    Good on pioneer getting wireless CarPlay across a number of head units.  Unlike their mates at Kenwood.
    It is annoying that Kenwood has much better screens and features, yet pioneer has the better CarPlay setup.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 5
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    Great, because it's not annoying enough for people to blast phone calls and music from their phones in public while sitting in public spaces, walking or biking on public paths, using mass transit... now obnoxious people can carry a Bluetooth water bottle speaker to make themselves even more obnoxious. Wear headphones when you're in public, FFS!!
  • Reply 5 of 5
    tallest skiltallest skil Posts: 43,388member
    That Udoq thing is really interesting. FINALLY a product dock that lets you do it one-handed and doesn’t force you to wrangle with cables. And can fit everything you own! The price is nuts, though. I’ll wait for established brands to do their own versions of the tech, because it’s super cool.
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