We Would Not Have Survived CES Without This Gear

We Would Not Have Survived CES Without This Gear


New gadgets take the spotlight at CES. And though we’re occasionally blinded by the bright, shiny things, we know where our loyalties lie. Behind the barrage of posts and sprinting between booths, the real stars of the show are the tried and true bits of gear we’re using behind the scenes. Each of us has our own beloved item — tech or otherwise — that we’ll swear is the only reason we made it out of Vegas alive. Spoiler: There are a lot of batteries mentioned in this post.


Luke Hopewell

iPod Nano (6th Generation)

There’s a cacophony of noise at CES. Between the booths, the hawkers, the gadgets and the PR folk, it’s deafening. When you get back to your hotel at godknowswhen, you want a familiar voice that you know and trust to talk you down. I turned up my favourite podcasts, relaxed with the voices of my digital friends and drifted into uneasy but welcome sleep only to do it all again the next day.
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Skype

I have done more than a few interviews, catch-ups and media appearances this week, and doing that on my smartphone would have meant bill shock strong enough to kill me when I got back to Australia. Skype might be an obnoxious platform to deal with, but the credit is cheap and the interface is slick. It saved my bacon more than once.
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Joe Brown

Vmoda Faders earplugs


Noisy does not begin to describe CES, and even cacophonous is an understatement. The show is a sensory assault, and running the Gizmodo US strikeforce takes focus. I spent most of the show with these either in my ears or hanging around my neck; the portable peace and quiet was invaluable. [$US20]
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Gunnars


Staring at a screen all day hard on your eyes. Staring at a screen all day when you’re exhausted from busting your arse to cover CES as a blinding pace while you’re so hungover you can feel your pulse in your eyes is even harder. I can’t emphasise the amount of relief you feel putting on a pair of Gunnars when you’re already fatigued; the mild magnification takes some of the burden of focus off your ocular muscles, and the yellow hue softens the glow of your screen. It’s the optical equivalent of taking your shoes off after a long day on your feet. [$US60]
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Eric Limer

Nexus 7


Maps and spreadsheets are pretty much a perfect use-case for a 7-inch tablet, and my Nexus got me out of a couple of jams this CES. The bigger screen makes it way easier to see the whole picture without having to zoom in and scroll around, and that at-a-glance-ness made it perfect for checking, rechecking, and rerechecking times and locations on the go. And it fits in my back pocket. [$249]
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Microsoft Explorer Touch Mouse


Microsoft Explorer Touch Mouse: You Apple kids are all used to your trackpads and never using a mouse again and blah blah blah blah. In my Linux-using mind, there ain’t nuthin’ more claustrophobic than being stuck with a touchpad, especially when you’re on a deadline. It took me a while to get used to it (months ago) but the Microsoft Explorer Touch Mouse served me well in my time of need, and helped me swear at my computer just a little bit less. [$27]
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Mario Aguilar

Mophie


My phone and my mobile hotspot need power — and they really burn through their batteries when they’re trying to cut through the choked airwaves of the show floor. I never once went back to the press room for a charge thanks to my 6000mAh Mophie Juicepack Powerstation Duo that could charge both of them at once. [$US99]
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Michael Hession

Canon 5D Mark III


This camera is my ol’ reliable. I depended on it at CES to shred low-light situations. It is important to have a streamlined gear setup during these kinds of events, and with the Mark III, I could go without a bulky flash. I really only needed one single lens for the entire week — the 24-105 f/4 L. Not the widest of apertures, but it has image stabilisation and and a nice long focal range to make up for it. [$3799.95]
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Adobe Lightroom 4


Speed is key at CES. Lightroom makes importing and editing batches of photos an absolute breeze. So many shortcuts and so many great export options that save precious minutes. [$187 (because Adobe hates Australians)]
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Brent Rose

Motorola Droid RAZR MAXX HD


CES is murder on a phone’s battery. While my colleagues were charging every chance they got, I didn’t even worry about it. Despite using my phone non-stop starting early in the morning and making it act as a Wi-Fi hotspot for hours, the RAZR MAXX HD lasted well past 1am every day. All phones should be able to do this. [$449]
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Apple Thunderbolt to Gigabit Ethernet Adapter


You know what sucks at CES? The Wi-Fi. I mean, it sucks everywhere. It even sucks in the press room. Ethernet, on the other hand, was fast and reliable everywhere I could plug in. Apple’s new MacBook Pro (which I just upgraded to) doesn’t have an ethernet port. I ended up using this Thunderbolt to Ethernet adaptor more than just about any other item in my backpack. Absolutely clutch. [$39]
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Andrew Liszewski

Sony NEX-5R


After spending four CES’s destroying my back with a heavy DSLR, this year it was time to lighten the load with something smaller. While it lacks a dedicated viewfinder, the articulated screen on the Sony NEX-5R has made it easy to snap shots over the heads of the annoying CES masses. Its autofocus speed is easily on par with my old Nikon DSLR, and the ability to upload shots in the field to my iPhone via Wi-Fi has been an unexpected blessing. [$799]
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Sony MDRNC100D Digital Noise cancelling Earbuds


From the moment you land until the moment you board your plane home, CES and Las Vegas is a non-stop bombardment of noise and distractions. Writing posts is all but impossible without a good set of sound blocking earbuds, and I’m partial to my Sonys with their big drivers that do a fantastic job at drowning everything out with a good amount of bass. And instead of music, I’m partial to writing with a steady stream of white noise in the background, particularly the sound of the inside of a 737 at cruising altitude. [$US25]
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Peter Ha

Mophie Juice Pack Powerstation Pro


Look, the battery life on the iPhone 5 is pretty terrible to begin with but when you’re in Vegas at CES, it sort of amplifies its suckiness by a factor of 10. We’re using GroupMe to communicate on the fly and even when I’m just getting texts, the battery depletes 10 per cent in a matter of minutes. So Mophie’s ginormously rugged battery pack has been a godsend. [$US100]
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Nike Kobe 8 System


They’re not gadgets but trekking from one end of the LVCC to the other and through the endless halls of every hotel in Vegas, you need an amazingly comfortable and lightweight pair of shoes and the Kobe 8s have been great. I didn’t really even break them in before CES but my feet haven’t felt better. And the crazy holiday colorway has definitely caught everyone’s attention. [ $US140]
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Andrew Tarantola

Eton Boost Turbine Charger


My Eton turbine charger has saved me from a dead phone no less than four times in as many days. And if it runs out of batteries? I just crank the handle to create power from a press-room sandwich. [$US60]
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Skullcandy Fix Buds Headphones


My Skull Candy headphones may be garbage quality, but they’re cheap (you lose gear at CES. Fact.), and they can bump Dethklock loud enough to drown out the ambient noise in this press room. [$27]
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Leslie Horn

Hyperjuice Plug


We need beaucoup gadgets to report from CES — hotspots, phones, cameras, etc. But if they die, you’re screwed. That’s why I never went anywhere without my HyperJuice Plug, a 15,600 mAh power pack with two USB ports. It’s got enough juice that I can use it to charge all my gear, and not worry about having to charge my charger. [$160]
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Seagate Backup Plus Portable Drive


On the first day of CES, my harddrive decided to die. Great timing, right? Luckily I was all backed up on Seagate’s Backup Plus portable drive, so I didn’t lose anything except for my mind. [$74]
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Sam Biddle

AT&T MiFi Liberate


One of the big CES ironies is that a conference for tech and Internet addicts is a horrible place to get a reliable Internet connection. Everything is oversaturated, so we’re left sitting on floors, leaning up against windows, waving our phones around like we’re trying to make a cell phone call in 1994. Bringing a mobile broadband hotspot (or 10) is essential, and the Liberate is still my trusty favourite. Connection speeds were still tough because of how many billions of bloggers were trying to do the exact same thing, but the Liberate’s battery life was a comforting constant. [Not available in Australia]
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Duracell USB Charger


Your shit is going to run out of batteries, particularly if it’s an iPhone 5, which lasts about 30 minutes on a full charge. Add in the litany of other electronics you’re hauling around at CES, a paucity of wall outlets, and constant usage, and you’re looking at a POWER CRISIS. Luckily these little Duracell chargers are a POWER SOLUTION, and they’re both cheap and light. I brought four of them to CES. They don’t give a hell of a lot of charge, but it can make the difference between your phone switching off or not when you actually need it. [$US21]
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Kyle Wagner

Timbuk2 Medium Messenger Bag


You carry your life around in your bag at CES. Last year, I made the bonehead move of showing up with some flimsy cotton number that crumpled up like an old t-shirt when set down, and that had one unsortable pouch. Big mistake. Literally any good, organizable bag would have been a massive upgrade, but the the Timbuk2 has enough pouches and real estate to make me feel like a one man army, instead of a dumbass with a messy bag full of expensive gadgets. [$US99]
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Camelbak Water Bottle


Staying hydrated in CES is a pain, and you end up collecting variously sized water bottles like a big thirsty katamari. This year I brought my Camelbak bottle — again, any good bottle would do, I just happen to own this one — to dump all of my water into, and streamlining it made a huge difference, plus kept my drinks colder than they would be otherwise. [$US15]
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See you next year, CES.


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