Architects

CES showcases innovations: Can any of these help you do your job better?

The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) took place this past week in Las Vegas. Known for launching new products and technologies, many of the products showcased there set the bar for future innovators.
Jan. 13, 2014
4 min read

The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) took place this past week in Las Vegas. Known for launching new products and technologies, many of the products showcased there set the bar for future innovators.

The show also signals trends to watch in technology applicable to the design and building industry. For instance, last year Panasonic debuted their 20-inch 4K tablet, which was built primarily for designers and construction professionals as a high-end solution for marking up drawings in the office. It launched this past November and goes on sale this month. The $6,000 price tag may be too steep for most, but after getting the chance to do some redlining with it, I was impressed. For those who absolutely crave the pen to paper experience, it’s pretty sweet.

This year, though, it feels like all the anticipation about wearable technology and integrated content just fell flat. However, I did find a couple interesting new products worth mentioning.

For one thing, solar-powered electronics seem to me like a logical solution for our energy-hungry devices. As jobsites become more wired for the Internet, battery life is more important than ever. Still, finding a solar power adapter that is small yet powerful has been tough. EnerPlex Surfr seems to be on the right track. Designed for the iPhone, it is a solar-powered battery case that attaches to your phone, charging by USB or natural sunlight. For emergency power, the case can be exposed to the sun for 30 minutes to gain 5 minutes of talk time. Or you can charge to full capacity via USB and double the battery life of your phone. I’m excited to see where solar power technology will take us one day, both in our personal lives and on the jobsite. 

Also, I don’t know about you, but I’ve always wanted a “Rosie” from the Jetsons to help with housework. Turns out my waiting days may be over. iRobot Scooba 450 is the newest cleaning robot that not only vacuums your floors, but also mops them as well. Now, before you roll your eyes and ask what this has to do with building and design, hear me out: It covers any hard floor surface, from tile to wood, and is said to do a superior job by going over your floors not once but twice, to scrub out stubborn stains. It’s a bit pricey at $600, but c’mon, it’s a robot that helps around the house. A single charge can give you up to 40 minutes of cleaning in 350 cubic feet. It also can map out a room with a single setting of large or small.  

So besides realizing my Jetsons dream, here’s why this is interesting to me. In the last year and a half, I’ve spoken to more construction teams who are experimenting with robotics and automation on the jobsite. From Robotic demolition teams to drones, construction teams are not afraid to look into the future for solutions to their challenges today. Just last month I spoke to a construction firm in Dallas who was piloting the use of drones on the job site for material handling and visualization. Google has set their sights on an automated future, buying more than eight robotics companies during the second half of 2013, including Boston Dynamics. These purchases coincide with the news that they recently spun off Google X, which is said to be revolutionary technology that will transform the AEC industry. Without more detail than that, it’s a pretty tough claim to substantiate. But then again, they are Google.  

At CES this year, there were indeed innovative products that pushed the bounds of reality and practicality. But it’s crazy, swinging for the fences–companies like this who risk failure and bring to the world the products that truly revolutionize the way we work and live. What trends towards future innovations are you keeping your eye on?  

About the Author

Sasha Reed

As Vice President of Strategic Development at Bluebeam, Inc., Sasha Reed collaborates with leaders in the architecture, engineering and construction industry to guide Bluebeam’s technology, partnerships and long-term goals. She joined Bluebeam in 2007 and co-created the Concierge Approach, a distinctly branded process of customer engagement, product feedback and solution delivery to which much of Bluebeam’s success is attributed, and which today is replicated at every organizational level.

Sasha is known industry-wide as a “conversation facilitator,” creating platforms for exchanges necessary to digitally advance the industry, including the BD+C Magazine Digital COM Blog, which she authors and manages. She’s been a featured presenter at numerous national and international conferences, including the 2014 Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA), Federal Project Delivery Symposium and NTI Danish BIM Conference. Sasha also co-chairs the Construction PDF Coalition, a grassroots effort to provide a common industry framework from which to create and maintain construction PDF documents, serves on the City College of San Francisco BIM Industry Council, and is Advisor to the Board of Direction for the National Institute of Building Sciences BuildingSMART Alliance.

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