- This thing moves, opens, and closes.
(bright electronic music)
Well, the FBI made it to CES this year.
Whoa, look out.
It's something you may not have expected.
(machine farts)
(bright hip-hop music)
♪ Why don't you get it right now ♪
- Welcome back to CES 2020.
I am here at one of my favorite places.
I'm gonna go through the entire area
for the next couple of days,
and then give you my top
five things from CES 2020.
It's all gonna be right
here on "What's Inside."
Let's go find some fun stuff.
(upbeat techno music)
- [AI] Tools to analyze your
data and ensure its trust.
AI driven insights, maximizing impact
that AI can have on your
entire organization.
- Elon Musk is a little scared
of artificial intelligence.
I've seen the movie "I Robot."
Well, the FBI made it to CES this year.
the FBI has a pop-up booth.
The Federal Bureau of Investigations,
and not even in the convention hall.
It's just this random hallway
before you even go in to
the actual convention area.
They are informing people
about intellectual property
and about like cyber crime and stuff.
Actually kind of interesting,
I went and talked to them.
I didn't ask if I could vlog with them
because I mean they're FBI agents.
They're at a public place
in a way, but still.
Hey, FBI, put in some work.
(upbeat techno music)
Last year, I started with this
toilet that you can talk to.
We're actually going to
be getting that toilet
inside of our house in a couple of weeks.
So I'll make a full video about that soon,
but I think I've found my
favorite thing on day one.
Welcome to the fart lab.
(magic sprinkles chime)
(machine farts)
That's right, this is
Procter & Gamble's booth,
and one of their brands is Charmin.
You guys know Charmin from
the ultra soft toilet paper
that my wife will only
use inside of our house.
The idea is you don't ever wanna walk
into a stinky bathroom,
that's like the worst.
They've identified the
gasses that are inside
the average human farts.
Let's pretend like somebody
was in the bathroom
(machines farts)
You can see the smelly gases
are coming out of here.
If you had this in your house,
you could walk up to the door,
and it would tell you wait
it out, don't go in the door.
It's like big old biohazard, don't go in.
I would love to have this
in more public places.
This is what we're doing in 2020.
- [Narrator] They lived only
to face a new nightmare.
- Hey, Alexa, bring me my toilet paper.
The second area in the Charmin booth
is one of the most talked
about things here at CES 2020.
The people at Charmin
have fixed the problem
of having to make that awkward
walk to find toilet paper
in the drawer around the
corner, and save the day.
(holy epic music)
Save the day.
Like that's amazing.
That is what technology should be for.
- It's precision technology.
- I'm gonna test it out so here we go.
I sit on the toilet,
(epic orchestral music)
and there it goes, the door is opening,
and two robots have come
out in this demonstration.
One of them is Charmin ultra strong,
and one of them is Charmin ultra soft.
I like blue so I'm gonna go with blue,
and there you go, it saves the day.
You didn't have to get up and walk around.
Thanks, good bye, robot.
Thank you for the toilet paper.
I love you, robot.
You're my favorite in the
world, you're the best.
And again, it is a concept.
It's not something that's out there.
(techno-lounge music)
All right, the next thing at
CES that I think is super cool
(scanner buzzes)
is with Mercedes Benz,
and I have exclusive media access
before the actual show starts.
We're going to see their concept car.
It's called Mercedes Vision AVTR,
and it's a concept about what
the future can look like.
AVTR may sound familiar.
It's based off of the concept
of "Avatar" the movie,
and in fact, James Cameron the director
is supposed to be here tonight
to kind of unveil this car,
but before that thing
happens, we're going to go get
some shots and check it out
before anybody else sees it.
I have ten minutes with the car.
I brought one of the
highliest touted videographers
I know, Mr. Zach JerryRigEverything.
Get ready for avatar car.
(chill music)
This is the Mercedes Vision AVTR
that is inspired by "Avatar."
I'm kind of speechless, I'm blown away.
It looks kind of like a
reptile or like a fish
that has the breathing gills on the side,
kind of like an avatar.
This thing moves, opens, and closes,
and then look at the bottom.
It looks like the road
is moving down here.
And then check out the wheels right here.
If you ever in the movie "Avatar"
when they jump on their horse,
they had picked their duel tail,
and they connect it to
the tail of the horse,
and it like sinks their brain together.
A car is not a car like
we're used to it in the past,
and technology is a
huge component of that.
To allow your car to do the
things that you want to do
without you even having to tell us.
It has a little Mercedes
logo in the middle,
and you can put your hand on it,
and it moves and it controls based off
of the way you move your hand,
but then also you can put your hand up
and you can use hand
gestures to control your car.
I remember when Casey Neistat
came through our small town,
and I was asking about his
settings on his electric car.
He had one that was Casey auto pilot,
and it actually takes
his seat and puts it down
and lays it down a bit
more he's on autopilot,
but in the future if it
truly is fully autonomous,
then, yes, why do you
need to sit straight up?
(chill music)
So the Mercedes Vision AVTR,
yes, it is one of my
favorite things at CES 2020,
and I hope we see a lot of
this in the future in 2030,
and I know I said that
this was my dream car
that I went to Tokyo and saw.
I think I have a new dream car.
Will it ever come out on the market?
Not in this form or fashion.
(upbeat music)
When 200,000 people come
to CES, traffic is insane.
You get so many Ubers and taxis and buses.
The problem is you've got
the Sands Convention Center
which is here near the Venetian,
and then you have the Las
Vegas Convention Center
which is down the road,
and sometimes your meetings don't line up,
and you have to go back
and forth between them.
The other problem is
because there's a lot of
international people here,
there's tons of smoking.
You can't smoke inside the buildings here.
In America it's not very common
to smoke inside buildings.
So every time you walk
outside where there's cars,
it's like this cloud
of smoke just hits you.
I love ping pong, I love robots,
and this combines both of them.
This has been around for a
couple of years here at CES,
but it looks like it's been
upgraded every single year.
This is a really good ping pong player
that's playing against him,
and this robot's movements
are incredibly quick,
doing the backhand, the forehand.
This is an assembly line.
The company that makes the ping-pong table
is like a robotics and AI company.
But I love seeing all of the
different numbers on the screen
of the axis and like how it's turning
and how it's calculating.
It's amazing what people
can do with coding
with computers these days.
Sometimes you ask for things
and you don't think it's gonna happen,
and then it happens.
I just asked if I can play on
the ping pong robot machine,
and we're here.
So I'm gonna test it out
and see what it's like.
Hunter, here you go.
Hold the camera.
The sweatier I get and the angrier I get,
it's measuring me all the time,
and it will like be easier on me.
Okay, we're going.
Oh, that was a bad hit.
One point for robot.
Gotta get a point.
Hey, robot's being nice.
It decided I was getting angry.
It says that I'm happy.
It says that I'm super happy, I am.
It's not lying, I'm happy.
I had fun.
This is a robot that I
played ping pong against,
and I think if I could
get better at ping pong,
I could challenge this robot.
Hey, Alexa, bring me my toilet paper.
Even though this is my
fourth year coming to CES,
I learned something new every year
about different locations, and right now
I'm in the Sands Convention
Center on the first floor.
It turns out in this area they
have a bunch of businesses
that are based off of a geographical area.
So we've got Israel over here.
We've got companies from France over here,
but right now I'm in the Seoul Korea zone.
Supposedly the mayor of
Korea is gonna be here,
and they said maybe I can meet him.
There's 20 companies that
are here from Seoul Korea.
Seoul, if you don't know,
is a city inside of Korea.
It actually has over 10 million people.
So what the government did
is they took some money,
and they helped fund
certain small businesses,
and then they sent these businesses here
with their really unique cool ideas
to find some money from
venture capitalists
so that they get some more funding
and make their business grow
and be a big company hopefully someday.
This one's called Nuvi Lab,
and it's really creative
because if you ever tried
to track your calories
and the nutrition that
you have in the food
that you're eating, this machine goes down
and somehow reads the
food that's on there.
It's able to calculate how many calories
and how many and what type of nutrients
that you're about to eat.
I think that's very useful
when you're trying to be on a diet
especially in the New Year.
Here's a really interesting product
by a company called Dot Incooperation
that is also in Seoul Korea
that's part of the
government incubator program.
People that are blind,
they should be able to
have a smart watch too,
and this is it.
It has braille built into the watch.
If you get a message like a
text message from somebody,
it'll vibrate on your
wrist, you can feel it.
These little dots will
move into the braille
so that you can understand
what the message is
that people are sending to you.
They also have a tablet if
you wanna read the newspaper.
This is definitely one
of my favorite things
that I've seen here at CES.
- My name is Won-Soon
Park, mayor of Seoul.
(group cheers)
His entire presentation was all about
how they have 5G wi-fi through
the majority of the city.
They have cameras on every single corner
that are analyzing the
data of the traffic,
and so if there's an accident somewhere
or they need to move the
flow, in real time the AI,
or the people that are running it,
can change the street
lights and divert traffic
different directions without
having bodies out there
putting out cones and
doing all that stuff.
(speaks in foreign language)
Hello, I'm Dan Markham.
Thank you for letting me
come and talk to you today.
- Okay, it's my honor.
- So how do you feel about
electric cars in Korea?
Are people using electric
cars like they do in America?
Oh, of course, yes.
Every bus and taxis and
vehicles are being changed
into the electric or the dioxide car.
- Okay.
- 5G is the first to be
implemented in Seoul.
I can safely say that the
speed of communication in Seoul
is really the speed of light.
- (laughs) Okay.
Nothing frustrates me
more than slow wi-fi speed
on my cell phone or my computer.
It sounds like I just need
to get to Seoul Korea,
and I'll have lightning-fast speeds.
Okay, thank you Mr. Mayor.
- Okay.
(chill music)
- The last thing I want to show you today
is something that I stumbled upon
that is one of my absolute
favorite things at CES.
(playful orchestral music)
You know that we love golfing.
When you carry the bag
especially with as many golf
balls as I lose in a round,
wouldn't it be nice to have a golf cart
that you don't have to pull
that can just follow you around?
You can just clip this onto your belt.
And I'm walking.
Oh, look at that, it stopped.
I didn't touch it.
Does it have a very good
turning radius, let's see.
Oh, yeah, it's coming. (laughs)
Oh, yeah, it's coming. (laughs)
Okay, on a golf course it's not--
- Oh, shoot.
- Oh, my gosh.
- Maybe not the greatest thing
to do at a convention space
with people everywhere.
The golf cart that is the
robot caddy for yourself.
I actually seriously need
one of these in my life.
(chill music)
So there's my five favorite things at CES.
I hope you guys enjoyed this video.
Let me know which one is your favorite
and what did you think
about all these things,
and should I be back next year?
Thanks for watching.
Can I do it again?
- Yep.
- [Dan] Okay, here we go.
(machine farts)
You're my favorite robot in the world.
You're the best.
(epic orchestral music)
- What?
