Tech

CES brings back groundbreaking vintage tech for its 50th anniversary

Recapturing the glory days.

Article Lead Image

As I stood on the CES floor looking down at the vintage devices in front of me, surrounded by the flashing lights and loud sounds of a new world, I couldn’t help but think, “these are the good guys.” The hardware-driven inventions devoid of whatever unknown security vulnerability lay hidden behind the must-have features people can’t seem to take their eyes off of. 

Featured Video

These were the devices created for more than just a profit, but a purpose: to move things forward, and change the tech scene forever.

For its 50th anniversary event, CES brought a number of previously featured devices back to the show floor, for one last encore.

Let the images below take you back to a simpler, worry-free era of innovation.

Advertisement

1975 Sears Tele-Games Atari Pong

Phillip Tracy

1977 RCA VBT-200: First VHS VCR in the United States

Advertisement

Phillip Tracy

1979 Sony Walkman TPS-L2: First portable music player

Advertisement

Phillip Tracy

1983 Technics SLP-10 CD player

Advertisement

Phillip Tracy

1984 Motorola “The brick” DynaTAC 8000 cell phone: Modern-day price of around $10,000

Advertisement

Phillip Tracy

1994 Timex Datalink 150: First smartwatch to sync with PC

Phillip Tracy

Advertisement


1998 Diamond Rio PMP300: First MP3 player 

Phillip Tracy

2001 Apple iPod

Advertisement

Phillip Tracy

2007 Apple iPhone

Phillip Tracy


2013 Pebble Smart Watch 

Advertisement

Phillip Tracy

 
The Daily Dot