Technophiles in Germany
step into
the future at CeBIT trade fairBy Dan O'Brien
Stars and Stripes
HANOVER,
Germany At CeBIT 2001 every pixel tells a story.
Walking
through the exhibition halls of the worlds largest "information technology and
telecom trade fair," visitors are confronted by most every gadget imaginable. People
seem to move in slow motion, their eyes glazed by sensory overload, unable to escape the
sounds or sights, or the machines they emanate from.
Colors
explode from flat-panel plasma screens the size of big-rig trucks. Speakers blare the
preachings of sales people programmed to repeat the same information over and over and
over.
CeBIT is
the future a wild walk on the silicon side. It opened Thursday and will continue
through Wednesday.
"This
is crazy," said Jeff Burton of San Diego, Calif. "I just got here. Its
incredible. I know I have my work cut out, but I have three days. Hopefully Ill see
most of it."
Burton is
surrounded by four women wearing bright red wigs and gray Spandex body suits. They smile
and nod, thrusting their companys product literature at him in a robotic manner.
They accomplish this in a matter of seconds, before moving on to their next target.
Burton, who
says he is a "gadget geek first and a civil engineer second," is not here to
sell anything. He is a technophile who took a vacation from his job to attend CeBIT.
He says he
is not put off by the strong-arm marketing practiced by some of the more aggressive
companies. For him, this is fun.
CeBIT is
big: 4.6 million square feet of exhibition space (roughly equivalent to 86 football
fields); more than 750,000 visitors expected over its seven-day run; 12,000 internal
telecommunications extensions for telephone, fax, Internet access, etc.; and more than
11,000 journalists from 70 countries.
This is no
fair, its a mid-sized city built on a foundation of bits and bytes.
All the big
players are here: Microsoft, Lucent, Unisys, IBM, Nokia, NTT DoCoMo 8,106 companies
in all. Walking into any one of these firms "booths" (the term seems so
woefully inadequate) is akin to taking a hallucinatory plunge into a sea of technology.
CeBIT is
also a high-tech version of Brigadoon: It rises once a year to become a temporary capital
of the information age.
And its
staging has a Broadway feel. At Nortel Networks, for example, a tribe of African drummers
bang out a hynotic beat as strobe lights fire.
At NTT
DoCoMo, Japans high-speed wireless carrier, a 6-foot tall robot talks to visitors.
Most of the
big exhibitors have a stage and seating area to better showcase their products. Four times
an hour, a sales presenter takes to the stage with wireless microphone in place. He or she
will give the spiel, all the while directing the audiences attention to the monitor
that dwarfs the stage from behind. Many in the audience look like they took a seat only to
rest their feet.
Although
now a powerful force in the world of marketing high-tech products and services,
CeBITs history is brief. It began only 15 years ago as an outgrowth of the
"office equipment industry" area of the annual Hanover Fair. Its name is a
German acronym which translates approximately into "Center for Office and Information
Technology."
Each year
CeBIT hosts approximately 500 U.S. exhibitors. Most of these can be found at one of the
U.S. pavilions. Yes, there is more than one U.S. pavilion. There is one dedicated to
memory and storage, another to document management and office automation, and others to
networking, communications, multimedia, operating systems and more.
What are
some of the coolest of the cool at this years CeBIT?
First of
all, the trade fair is not limited to just computer technology. With that in mind, an
Irish company is displaying its "silicon nose" that analyzes gases in human
breath. More than a breathalyzer, it can detect such diseases as cirrhosis, lung cancer
and diabetes.
Wireless
home theaters also seem to be popular, with most companies offering a comfortable chair
and snack to "fully appreciate" their products state-of-the-art
advancements.
But
computers, networks and their assorted spawn rule at CeBIT. In this category, portable
digital assistants seem very popular.
At the
Hewlett-Packard area, employees proudly touted the "new low price" and color
screen of its Jornada PDA. Not to be outdone, Palm Inc., maker of the most popular PDA on
the market, debuted two new devices, the Palm m505 and an upgraded version of its Palm
VII.
But CeBIT
is not about one or two products. Its the sum of them all. Its a beeping,
flashing, fleeting, humming mecca for people who love technology.
CeBIT is
... a trip.
The
CeBIT trade show is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily through March 28. Admission is 65
marks (about $32.50) at the door. Traffic is very bad to and from the fairgrounds. Public
transportation is recommended, and there will be plenty of trains available. During this
years show, all long-distance trains running north to south and vice versa will make
an unscheduled stop at the Hanover Exhibition Grounds train station, the Hanover
Messe/Laatzen. An average of 81 trains a day will be stopping at the station.
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