Tag Archives: Thomas Edison

Nikola Tesla Exhibit Showcases Edison’s Great Rival At The New York Hall Of Science

By The Huffington Post News Editors

In the battle for enduring fame, sometimes the more interesting story belongs to the guy who came in second. Thomas Edison’s name is known to every American child. Nikola Tesla was his great rival.

Tesla’s Wonderful World of Electricity” opened earlier this month at the New York Hall of Science. The 14-week exhibit contains models from the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade and is sure to fascinate the same fans who recently helped raise more than $1.3 million to build the first U.S.-based Tesla museum.

One of the greatest technological minds of all time, Telsa invented the induction motor, the Tesla coil, radio, neon lighting and many other devices. He was born in modern-day Croatia in 1856, immigrated to the United States in his late 20s, and became a U.S. citizen at age 35. He obtained hundreds of patents worldwide — and also tried to unlock the secrets to teleportation and time travel.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Feedback Is Overrated

By Rajeev Peshawaria, Contributor What do Nelson Mandela, Steve Jobs, John Lennon and the Beatles, Mahatma Gandhi, Howard Schultz, Abraham Lincoln, Michelle Kwan, Thomas Edison, Beethoven, Steven Spielberg, Marilyn Monroe, Walt Disney, Soichiro Honda, Charles Darwin and Michael Jordan have in common? …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Arrow's Brand Campaign Highlights Innovation's Role as Key Economic Driver

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Arrow’s Brand Campaign Highlights Innovation’s Role as Key Economic Driver


Global technology company launches thought leadership and brand campaign

ENGLEWOOD, Colo.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Celebrating the impact that innovation has on improving daily life, Arrow Electronics Inc. (NYS: ARW) today announced a multifaceted, multichannel awareness effort designed to promote the company’s leading position in the electronics supply chain and distribution industry and its communities.

Launched with a series of television advertisements broadcast nationally on the CBS television network during the NCAA Division I men’s basketball semifinals on April 6 and continuing with placements during tonight’s championship game, the overall campaign will span national business media, industry vertical publications and social media. The campaign targets the full spectrum of company stakeholder audiences, including Arrow’s customers, partners, employees, investors and communities. The advertising highlights the role innovation plays in driving global economic markets and growth.

“For more than 75 years, Arrow has helped guide innovation for thousands of companies across multiple industries around the world, and it’s time to tell that story,” said Richard Kylberg, vice president of corporate communications and global marketing for Arrow. “This multifaceted campaign acknowledges the expertise, knowledge and innovative spirit of our employees, customers, suppliers and partners. The campaign aligns with Arrow’s focus on expanding into global markets, attracting the best talent and driving technology to inspire the next generation of courageous innovators to look five years out and create smart solutions that explore the boundaries of what’s possible and deliver what’s practical.”

The campaign builds on Arrow’s “Five Years Out” brand platform, the creative expression of Arrow’s unique vantage point across the entire technology landscape and ability to see trends long before they appear on the market. The campaign showcases innovators who make the world a better place by featuring renowned innovators such as Thomas Edison, Leonardo DaVinci, Benjamin Franklin and the Wright Brothers using present-day technological innovations such as mobile devices, solid-state lighting and cloud computing, and speculating about technology innovations yet to appear on the market.

Through approximately 25 acquisitions over the past three years, Arrow has expanded its portfolio to provide comprehensive support for the complete lifecycle of electronic components and enterprise computing solutions. The company’s product lifecycle services support the reverse logistics and end-of-life management arenas, among others.

The Innovators Club …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

GE's LED Refrigerated Display Lighting will Mean $600,000 Annual Savings for Specialty Grocer

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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GE’s LED Refrigerated Display Lighting will Mean $600,000 Annual Savings for Specialty Grocer

EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio–(BUSINESS WIRE)– When specialty frozen food retailer M&M Meat Shops began developing a new strategy to become more competitive, it explored various store improvement projects that would enhance shopper experience, build the bottom line, and could be replicated across its 430 franchise locations as part of a multi-year renovation mandate. The grocer found one cost-cutting answer in GE’s ImmersionTM RV40 LED refrigerated display lighting for reach-in cases. The energy-efficient LED retail lighting systems will save M&M Meat Shops about $600,000 in lighting costs annually once installations are complete.

M&M Meat Shops is replacing refrigerated display lighting in 430 locations across Canada with GE’s more energy-efficient LED systems. (Photo: General Electric)

“With its 5000-degree Kelvin temperature, GE’s new LED system creates beautiful, bright, white light. It brings out the crispness of our signature white boxes, making them really pop in the vertical cases and impact the visual appeal of the entire store,” said Dianne Chalmers, senior manager of construction at M&M Meat Shops.

Franchises are replacing T10 fluorescent lights with Immersion RV40 LED lighting systems. At a $.10 kWh rate and 12 hours of operation a day, the average M&M Meat Shops location will save about $870 a year in lighting energy costs alone.

GE’s LED refrigerated display lighting solution will also eliminate the maintenance cost of replacement ballasts and high-output fluorescent lamps—an approximate $525 savings per store.

This brings combined energy and maintenance reductions to nearly $1,400 for each franchisee to complete its lighting upgrade. To date, 150 M&M Meat Shops locations have made the switch to GE’s ecomagination℠ LED technology, a combined $210,000 annual lighting cost savings. These savings will grow to about $600,000 a year across all 430 stores when the renovation cycle is complete.

For more information about the GE Lighting products used in this project, visit www.gelighting.com. To learn more about GE’s commitment to innovative solutions to today’s environmental challenges while driving economic growth, visit www.ecomagination.com.

About GE Lighting

GE Lighting invents with the vigor of its founder Thomas Edison to develop energy-efficient solutions that change the way people light their world in commercial, industrial, municipal and residential settings. The business employs about 15,000 people in more than 100 countries, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

GE Lighting Earns Eighth Consecutive ENERGY STAR® Partner of the Year – Sustained Excellence Award

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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GE Lighting Earns Eighth Consecutive ENERGY STAR® Partner of the Year – Sustained Excellence Award

EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio–(BUSINESS WIRE)– (NYSE: GE) – For the eighth straight year – a longer run than any other lighting manufacturer – GE Lighting has been recognized with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s ENERGY STAR® Partner of the Year – Sustained Excellence Award . This award acknowledges outstanding contributions to protecting the environment through energy efficiency.

GE Lighting’s Steve Briggs, global product general manager, accepted the ENERGY STAR Partner of the Year – Sustained Excellence Award, an award GE Lighting has won for eight consecutive years. (Photo: General Electric)

GE Lighting’s Steve Briggs, global product general manager, accepted the award Tuesday at a ceremony in Washington, D.C.

“Energy efficiency is what drives our innovation and development at GE, and the ENERGY STAR program is one that we continue to embrace in the evolution of lighting,” says Briggs. “To have been recognized eight years in a row and achieve a run of wins other manufacturers haven’t been able to record speaks volumes to our commitment to advance energy-efficient light bulbs consumers will embrace.”

GE Lighting was recognized for its support of the ENERGY STAR program through a variety of initiatives, including an extensive ENERGY STAR-qualified product portfolio and continuous support of ENERGY STAR and the GE ecomaginationSM program, the company’s commitment to solving energy challenges.

GE Lighting offered ENERGY STAR-qualified bulbs in a total of 607 consumer packaged options in 2012, including 198 ENERGY STAR-qualified LED packages.

Visit www.gelighting.com to learn more about GE Lighting’s commitment to the ENERGY STAR program. To learn more about GE‘s commitment to innovative solutions to today’s environmental challenges while driving economic growth, visit www.ecomagination.com.

About GE Lighting

GE Lighting invents with the vigor of its founder Thomas Edison to develop energy-efficient solutions that change the way people light their world in commercial, industrial, municipal and residential settings. The business employs about 15,000 people in more than 100 countries, and sells products under the Reveal® and Energy Smart® consumer brands, and Evolve™, GTx™, Immersion™, Infusion™, Lumination™, Albeo™ and Tetra® commercial brands, all trademarks of GE. General Electric (NYS: GE) works on things that matter to build a world that works better. For more …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

'Dark Side of the Moon,' 'Saturday Night Fever' added to National Recording Registry

By hnn

Forty years after its release, Pink Floyd’s groundbreaking album “The Dark Side of the Moon” has found a permanent home in the United States Library of Congress. The prog rock opus is one of 25 recordings being added to the National Recording Registry, the Library announced today.

Since 2000, the Library has been tasked by Congress with building a registry of sound recordings that are “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant” to American society and at least a decade old. The 350 recordings already in the registry span the gamut of the aural experience, from an 1888 recording of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” made for a children’s doll by Thomas Edison to “Dear Mama,” a 1995 release by hip-hop star Tupac Shakur. This year’s new additions also include “The Twist” by Chubby Checker, the soundtrack to the film Saturday Night Fever and a broadcast near the shores of Normandy on D-Day by radio correspondent George Hicks. A similar registry was established for film in 1989….

Source:
Time Magazine

Source URL:
http://business.time.com/2013/03/21/dark-side-of-the-moon-saturday-night-fever-added-to-national-recording-registry/

Date:
3-21-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Pink Floy added to National Recording Registry

By hnn

Forty years after its release, Pink Floyd’s groundbreaking album “The Dark Side of the Moon” has found a permanent home in the United States Library of Congress. The prog rock opus is one of 25 recordings being added to the National Recording Registry, the Library announced today.

Since 2000, the Library has been tasked by Congress with building a registry of sound recordings that are “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant” to American society and at least a decade old. The 350 recordings already in the registry span the gamut of the aural experience, from an 1888 recording of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” made for a children’s doll by Thomas Edison to “Dear Mama,” a 1995 release by hip-hop star Tupac Shakur. This year’s new additions also include “The Twist” by Chubby Checker, the soundtrack to the film Saturday Night Fever and a broadcast near the shores of Normandy on D-Day by radio correspondent George Hicks. A similar registry was established for film in 1989….

Source:
Time Magazine

Source URL:
http://business.time.com/2013/03/21/dark-side-of-the-moon-saturday-night-fever-added-to-national-recording-registry/

Date:
3-21-13

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

The Greatest Business Rivalries of All Time

By CNNMoney

Burger King Vs McDonalds

Filed under: , ,

Cassandra Hubbart, DailyFinance

There was the time Thomas Edison electrocuted an elephant to demonstrate the danger of a competitor’s technology. The day that Nike (NKE), desperate for an advantage over a surging Reebok, signed a college hoops player named Michael Jordan. And the time the Central Pacific Railroad laid an astounding 10 miles of track in 24 hours to grab government payments that the hated Union Pacific would otherwise claim.

Rivalries make great stories, and the greatest rivalries make the greatest tales — reason enough to read the following portraits of brilliance, skullduggery, nobility, mendacity, victory, and failure. But if you’re the driven type who demands more practical benefits, you’ll find those here too. After all, monumental business battles have changed the world. We cannot imagine life without cellphones or the Internet, but if tiny MCI hadn’t challenged the titanic AT&T (T) (the No. 4 rivalry in our ranking), the communications revolution would have played out much differently. Steve Jobs and Bill Gates (No. 6) ended up selling few competing products yet contended for 35 years to impose radically different visions on the world of computing. And a global economy that couldn’t function without air travel is far faster and better because Airbus and Boeing (BA) (No. 9) have had to fight each other every day for 40 years.

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But powerful rivalries can be blinding, obscuring events beyond the combatants’ battlefield. Coke (KO) and Pepsi (PEP) (No. 1) were so busy pounding the daylights out of each other that they missed an entirely new notion, and today, inconceivably, the bestselling energy drink in U.S. convenience stores isn’t made by either company. (It’s Red Bull.) General Motors (GM) and Ford (F) obsessed over each other until one day Toyota (TM) had stolen the bulk of their profits.

What comes through most strongly in these stories is each conflict’s sheer human intensity. Only a brave novelist would have imagined the brother vs. brother saga of Adidas vs. Puma (No. 20). Venice vs. Genoa (No. 7) may look like a dusty tale of feuding city-states, but it set the tone for hundreds of years of European competition. The rivalry between the railroads was economic, ethnic, and spectacular, involving sabotage, deception, and death.

Who needs such lessons? Oh, right, you do. So think of these dramas as guilt-free pleasures. Then, well prepared for the task, go forth and pulverize your rivals.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

GE's Albeo™ LED High Bay Lighting Fixture Wins 2013 Product Innovation Award

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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GE’s Albeo™ LED High Bay Lighting Fixture Wins 2013 Product Innovation Award

EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio–(BUSINESS WIRE)– (NYSE: GE) – GE Lighting’s Albeo™ ABHX-Series LED High Bay Lighting fixture, a product of its recent acquisition of Albeo Technologies, has earned a 2013 Architectural SSL Magazine Product Innovation Award. The award recognizes cutting-edge LED and solid-state luminaires and fixtures.

GE Lighting’s Albeo(TM) ABHX-Series LED High Bay lighting fixture is an ideal solution for business owners looking for quality high bay luminaires that reduce maintenance and energy costs. (Photo: General Electric)

The ABHX-Series LED lighting fixture can replace a range of legacy lighting systems—400-watt to 1500-watt HID and four- to eight-lamp T5/T8 HIF high-bay lighting—in warehouses, storage areas and other commercial spaces with high ceilings. It can be equipped with wireless and motion controls, and it offers more lumens from fewer modules compared to the original award-winning H-Series, which was the first one-for-one LED replacement for up to 1500-watt metal-halide systems.

“Winning the Product Innovation Award from SSL validates our distinct way of approaching the high bay market,” said Jeff Bisberg, CEO of Albeo Technologies, a GE Lighting business. “LED high bay lighting has significant growth potential for industrial buildings and warehouses because of its tremendous light quality and cost savings. We are committed to offering the very best high bay products that will save business owners in maintenance and energy costs while fulfilling their unique lighting needs.”

Two dozen designers and lighting specialists comprised the judges panel, which recognized manufacturers for outstanding products with attributes, qualities, functionality and/or performance beyond industry standards.

For more information about GE‘s high bay fixtures, visit www.gelighting.com. To learn more about GE‘s commitment to innovative solutions to today’s environmental challenges while driving economic growth, visit www.ecomagination.com.

About GE Lighting

GE Lighting invents with the vigor of its founder Thomas Edison to develop energy-efficient solutions that change the way people light their world in commercial, industrial, municipal and residential settings. The business employs about 15,000 people in more than 100 countries, and sells products under the Reveal® and Energy Smart® consumer brands, and Evolve™, GTx™, Immersion™, Infusion™, Lumination™, Albeo™ and Tetra® commercial brands, all trademarks of GE. General Electric (NYS: GE) works on things that matter to build a world that works better. For more information, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

GE's Albeo™ LED High Bay Lighting Fixture Earns Recognition in Next Generation Luminaires™ Competiti

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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GE’s Albeo™ LED High Bay Lighting Fixture Earns Recognition in Next Generation Luminaires™ Competition

EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio–(BUSINESS WIRE)– GE Lighting’s Albeo™ ABHX-Series LED High Bay lighting fixture has been recognized in the category of “Industrial Luminaires – high bay” in the 2013 Next Generation Luminaires™ (NGL) Solid-State Lighting Design Indoor Competition. Sponsored by the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America, and the International Association of Lighting Designers, the NGL awards were created to recognize excellence in energy-efficient LED commercial lighting unit design.

GE Lighting’s Albeo(TM) ABHX-Series LED High Bay lighting fixture is an ideal solution for business owners looking for quality high bay luminaires that reduce maintenance and energy costs. (Photo: General Electric)

The ABHX-Series LED lighting fixture, a product of GE Lighting’s recent acquisition of Albeo Technologies, is designed for industrial buildings, warehouses, cold storage and other commercial spaces with high ceilings. It covers a wide range of light outputs that include 400W to 1500W HID and four- to eight-lamp T5/T8 HIF high bay lighting. It is the next generation of the award-winning H-Series, which was the first one-for-one LED replacement for up to 1500W metal-halide systems. Utilizing the same innovative heat sinking and LED technology, the Albeo™ ABHX-Series offers more lumens from fewer modules and can be equipped with wireless and motion controls.

“The Next Generation Luminaires Solid State Lighting Design Competition showcases excellence in LED lighting, so we’re thrilled GE‘s Albeo™ LED high bay lighting garnered attention and high marks from the judges,” said Jeff Bisberg, CEO of Albeo Technologies, a GE Lighting business. “We’re proud of our ABHX-Series and believe it is the ideal solution for business owners looking for quality high bay luminaires that reduce maintenance and energy costs.”

Indoor awards were presented in New York City on March 20 at LEDucation 7, an annual conference for lighting and design professionals.

For more information about GE‘s high bay fixtures, visit www.gelighting.com. To learn more about GE‘s commitment to innovative solutions to today’s environmental challenges while driving economic growth, visit www.ecomagination.com.

About GE Lighting

GE Lighting invents with the vigor of its founder Thomas Edison to develop energy-efficient solutions that change the way people light their world in commercial, industrial, municipal and residential settings. The business employs about 15,000 people in more than 100 countries, and sells products under …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Iconic Inventor, Author, and Futurist Ray Kurzweil to Keynote Kodak Global Directions 2013 Conferenc

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Iconic Inventor, Author, and Futurist Ray Kurzweil to Keynote Kodak Global Directions 2013 Conference


Google Director of Engineering will headline educational event focused on Intelligent Information Management

ROCHESTER, N.Y.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Kodak today announced that renowned author, inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil will keynote its Global Directions 2013 conference—an annual technology and educational event sponsored by the company’s document capture and enterprise software business unit. The conference, scheduled for September 22-25 at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in Washington, D.C., will explore “Intelligent Information Management” and how its deployment provides businesses with a competitive advantage. This year’s theme includes topics on the importance of collaboration platforms for enterprise-wide information management, managing social media as a vital information stream, and the next generation of software that not only manipulates and stores vast amounts of data but can also intelligently process the valuable information contained within it.

Kurzweil is uniquely qualified to discuss new approaches to information management. He was recently named Director of Engineering at Google and is widely regarded as one of the greatest inventors of our time. He was the principal developer of the first omni-front optical character recognition (OCR), the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, and the first CCD flat-bed scanner. PBS honored Kurzweil as one of “16 Revolutionaries Who Made America,” Forbes magazine has referred to him as “the ultimate thinking machine” and Inc. magazine described him as “the rightful heir to Thomas Edison.”

Ray Kurzweil is a pioneer of our industry,” said Dolores Kruchten, President, Document Imaging and Vice President, Eastman Kodak Company. “Without his contributions, we might not be having this conference. Ray is the perfect headliner for a blockbuster lineup of speakers and exhibitors.”

Business leaders attend Global Directions (http://www.globaldirections2013.com/) to examine solutions to critical issues affecting their organizations. The conference agenda features cutting-edge case studies, end user presentations and technology demonstrations. Notable attendees include some of the most renowned thought leaders, analysts and journalists in the information management industry. The event is designed to advance education, knowledge and actionable business strategies in the application of information management to meet the future needs of the global business community. Topics range from extracting business content from scanned paper documents, to document processing workflows for enterprise platforms such as Microsoft SharePoint, to high performance software that can understand, classify, extract and automate data flows from a variety …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

This Just In: Upgrades and Downgrades

By Rich Smith, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

At The Motley Fool, we poke plenty of fun at Wall Street analysts and their endless cycle of upgrades, downgrades, and “initiating coverage at neutral.” Today, we’ll show you whether those bigwigs actually know what they’re talking about. To help, we’ve enlisted Motley Fool CAPS to track the long-term performance of Wall Street‘s best and worst.

And speaking of the best …
 Corning got a big boost Thursday, when ace stockpicker Bernstein announced it was initiating coverage of the LCD glassmaker at an outperform rating. Slapping a $15.20 price target on the stock, Bernstein promised investors at today’s prices the chance to earn a 21.4% profit on the shares themselves, and the practical guarantee of collecting Corning’s 2.9% dividend yield, as they wait for the shares to go up.

So, in total, a better than 24% profit in just 12 months of investing. Not a bad return … if Bernstein turns out to be correct. But is the analyst right about this one?

Let’s go to the tape
At first glance, indications look good. According to our CAPS stats, Bernstein is one of the better analysts out there today, ranking in the top 10% of investors we track, getting most of its stock picks right — and beating the market by an average of seven percentage points-per-pick.

Bernstein’s also got good reason to be recommending Corning. The company that invented the glass for Thomas Edison‘s light bulb, that dominates the market for glass used in LCD TVs and monitors, and whose “Gorilla Glass” product forms the screens of most of the world’s higher-end smartphones, recently announced a new flexible LCD glass that it’s calling “Willow” (because, you see, it bends).

According to Corning, no one in the industry has yet invented a product to take advantage of Willow Glass‘s unique property. But that’s the kind of thing that can change in a hurry in the tech world.

For example, manufacturers such as Samsung have encountered difficulties  designing around Apple‘s “rounded rectangle” design patent for the iPad. Now, imagine if you will, a “tablet” computer that’s not a rectangular tablet at all — but, perhaps, a cylinder shaped more like a rolling pin. Instead of swiping to scroll the screen up or down, you simply rotate your cylinder clockwise or counterclockwise to move up or down the screen. That’s the kind of innovation that flexible Willow Glass might make possible. Similar innovations might come out of Google , now that it’s in the computer hardware-making biz. Its recent interest in wearable computers, for example, might lend itself to a portable device that slides over the wrist, like an armband — again, an innovation that Willow could make possible.

Faster than the speed of tech
How quickly might Willow catch on? Consider this: Back in 2009, when Corning was still “boasting” of having just seven manufacturers starting to experiment with its Gorilla Glass, management predicted that, within a few …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why attend car shows when photos are a swipe away?

Why go to a crowded auto show when you can glimpse dozens of new models on the internet?

Because you can’t catch a whiff of that new car smell through your iPhone.

Photos can’t re-create the smell of leather seats or the smooth feel of a hood. At this year’s North American International Auto Show in Detroit, which opens to the public Jan. 19, visitors can see 500 cars and trucks spread over 18 carpeted acres. At least 800,000 people are expected to take in all the shiny models, amid the bright lights and thumping mood music.

The biggest draw will be the first new Corvette in nine years. Technology lovers can see an experimental concept from electric carmaker Tesla and a diesel version of the Jeep Grand Cherokee. Young buyers can check out a small SUV concept from Honda. Big spenders — and big dreamers — can take a gander at the new Bentley convertible.

But for all the gleaming metal, most models won’t be new to fans. Corvette lovers have been salivating over drawings posted on the Web. Spy cameras snapped an Acura MDX last fall, months before its official debut in Detroit. Mercedes has already released photos of its E-Class coupe and convertible.

But even with all those spoilers, visitors keep flocking to Detroit and other auto shows. They want to touch the cars, check out the trunk space or just hop in.

“You can’t do enough on a screen. You can’t crawl inside and get a feel for it,” says Rod Alberts, a 23-year veteran of the Detroit show who is now its executive director.

Detroit is one of 65 shows that will be held in the U.S. this year, from a tiny one in Toledo to New York and Chicago gatherings that attract more than 1 million visitors each year. Detroit has been holding an auto show almost continuously since the early 1900s, when local dealers lined up a handful of cars alongside fishing and hunting gear.

More than half of visitors at the Detroit show are shopping for a new car, according to informal polls. And with car sales stronger than they’ve been in five years, attendance at NAIAS and other shows could be higher in 2013, after slipping during the recession. Car sales rose 13 percent to 14.5 million last year and could reach 15 million in 2013.

The auto show is the ideal venue for shoppers because they can browse without being pestered by salespeople, says Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst with car buying site Edmunds.com.

“It’s like the circus. It’s the only place you can see it under one roof,” she says.

It’s also a circus for car companies. Literally. Infiniti will use performers from Cirque du Soleil to introduce its new small car in Detroit.

“Auto shows are one of the rare moments that the brand can meet the customer, shake their hand, look them in the eye and say, ‘This is who we are,'” says Jim Farley, Ford’s global marketing director.

Car companies had to cut back on their displays during the downturn. Most are no longer doing the kinds of expensive stunts they did at the Detroit show before the sobering recession, which forced them to close plants and lay off thousands of workers. In 1992, then-Chrysler chief Bob Lutz drove the new Jeep Grand Cherokee through a plate glass window. This year, Lutz will be talking to a holographic image of Thomas Edison at the display of electric-truck maker Via Motors.

And the element of surprise is gone. Icons like the Ford Mustang and Dodge Viper were seen for the first time when sheets were pulled off of them in Detroit. As recently as 2000, there were audible gasps when General Motors revealed the ungainly Pontiac Aztek.

“There isn’t going to be that sort of shock and awe that you had at earlier shows,” says Justin Hyde, senior editor of the Yahoo Autos’ Motoramic blog.

Bloggers are already abuzz about whether a new Ferrari supercar will appear next year in Detroit.

Still, Hyde says, the show is the best place to get a lot of information about cars in a global market that’s become huge and fractured. More than 6,000 journalists from 70 countries will attend two days of media previews starting on Monday, giving the show a reach far beyond Detroit. That’s up from just 850 journalists 25 years ago.

Nissan is one of several brands that pulled out of the Detroit show in recent years, only to return when they realized its impact. This year, Nissan is going all out, even appealing to the sense of smell in its display. It plans to pump a green tea-like fragrance into its Detroit exhibit.

The idea? To put visitors at ease. And maybe get them to part with a little green of their own.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News