ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Friday, April 25, 1997                 TAG: 9704250030
SECTION: BUSINESS                 PAGE: A-10 EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: SAN FRANCISCO 
SOURCE: ELIZABETH WEISE ASSOCIATED PRESS


CYBERHOME SHOWCASES INNOVATIONS TO TAKE THE THINKING OUT OF LIFE SAY HELLO TO ROSIE THE ROBYTE, 2000

But many of the highest-tech innovations don't seem much superior to the usual, low-tech solutions.

IBM, Intel, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard have put a lot of thought into making you think less.

Their cyberhome for the year 2000 is a tour of gizmos ranging from electronic butlers to computerized grocery lists. But their high-tech solutions don't necessarily beat the low-tech basics out there now.

No offense. There is definitely some cool technology on view in the mocked up rooms at the blasthaus gallery in San Francisco's trendy Multimedia Gulch.

Take the 42-inch flat panel screen in the living room showing the science fiction masterwork ``Bladerunner.'' No cathode-ray tube, no enormous box. Just one huge picture on one thin screen. It costs $20,000. That's enough to buy 10 of today's Mitsubishi 50-inch home theater systems.

Then there's the Car-PC presented by Intel. It's a computer loaded with voice-recognition software that turns on the radio when you say ``radio,'' and dials a number when you say ``phone.''

Given the statistics about the dangers of motoring while cell-phoning, this is useful. But the cordless headset that links you to the system would be illegal to wear while driving in most states.

In the back seat, the kids get their own screens connected to the Car-PC computer, loaded with games. They use wireless ``air mouses'' to play and, it's hoped, keep themselves amused.

This is good, because while they're doing that, you're receiving e-mail, which the Car-PC reads to you, as well as answering video phone calls and checking an on-board map tied to a global positioning satellite to ensure you're not lost.

While you're away from the house, IBM's prototype video doorbell is your butler. Ring the bell and a voice booms out from a speaker that no one's home right now, but leave a video message, won't you please?

This is a novel idea, except that in much of the United States nowadays few people drop in without calling first.

IBM suggests you might use the system to screen visitors at the front door. Of course, instead of spending hundreds of dollars on a built-in video camera, you can buy a peephole at the hardware store for about $5.

Finally at home, your first stop is the kitchen and finding something for dinner. Here the technology has taken another questionable turn.

A bar code scanner is mounted under the cabinet where most people would keep a can opener. Run the Universal Price Code on your can of Campbell's tomato soup by it and up pops information on the nearby screen - it says you're holding a can of Campbell's tomato soup.

It then tells you how long it will take to heat said soup in the microwave, and conveniently sets the microwave for that amount of time.

Don't know what else to do with it? You can have the scanner connect you automatically to the Campbell's Web site, to pick up recipes for dishes you might prepare using tomato soup. And if this is the last can of tomato soup in the house, the system will make a note to add it to your shopping list.

Worth it? Hard to say. The label that's on the can already explains how to cook it, and probably throws in a few recipes to boot. Rip it off, turn it over and stick it under a magnet on the refrigerator and you have got a nice blank grocery list as well.

The real question is whether the time, money and bother they represent is justified. If you like tinkering and gadgets, it might be. But if you just want to get through the day with a minimum of hassle and a maximum of time and money saved, sometimes the old-fashioned ways work fine.

Heat up some soup, will you? I'll go see who's at the door.


LENGTH: Medium:   76 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  ASSOCIATED PRESS. John Finan, senior product manager of 

the consumer division of IBM, shows off the futuristic kitchen at

the Cyberhome 2000 exhibit in San Francisco on Wednesday. The

bar-code scanner can connect the user to recipe Web sites.

by CNB