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Dope Tech of CES 2020: Sony Made a Car?!

Marques Brownlee@mkbhd2.2M viewsJan 9, 20209:48
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Sony made a car. OnePlus made a piano. Razer made a mini PC. CES still got it! My CES photo thread: twitter.com OnePlus Concept One: youtu.be MKBHD Merch: shop.mkbhd.com Video Gear I use: kit.co Tech I'm using right now: amazon.com Intro Track: Jordyn Edmonds smarturl.it Playlist of MKBHD Intro music: goo.gl ~ twitter.com @MKBHD @MKBHD

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Dope Tech of CES 2020: Sony Made a Car?! breaks down Marques Brownlee’s hands-on impressions from CES 2020, starting with Sony's surprising one-off concept car. The video emphasizes that this is a prototype built to showcase Sony's capabilities across fields like imaging, sensors, and computing, rather than a mass-market vehicle. Brownlee highlights the car’s design language, satin silver finish, and integrated tech such as rear-facing cameras replacing traditional mirrors, radar and lidar sensors for potential autonomous driving, and a large interior display with a responsive UI. He notes Magna’s collaboration for the build, giving the car functional mechanics including quad motors and a claimed 0-60 time of 4.6 seconds, with a top speed of 149 mph. While the car looks polished and futuristic, Brownlee stresses that this is not a product people can buy today, serving instead as a demonstration of Sony’s automotive-ready tech stack and potential. The segment also touches on how Sony’s breadth,from cameras to smartphones,fits into the automotive display and sensor ecosystem, reinforcing the idea that the feature is about capability rather than a commercial launch. Concluding reflections compare the car’s aesthetics to a blend of Tesla and Porsche influences, while noting the CES environment where true consumer availability remains uncertain. Brownlee wraps with a broader CES takeaway: 4K displays are still expanding, 8K is the new buzzword, electric cars are accelerating, and CES remains a hub for wild and forward-looking gadgets. As the video moves through CES highlights, Brownlee covers additional tech themes including new Samsung flagships labeled as light versions, OnePlus Concept One with electrochromic tinting, and an array of rotating TVs from TCL and Samsung aimed at syncing with smartphone portrait or landscape modes. The recap also features practical automotive tech like Bosch’s LED sun visor with face-tracking to shade the driver, and two notable electric vehicles that look close to market readiness: Ford Mustang Mach II and Rivian R1T. The segment ends with broader observations about consumer tech trends at CES, noting that 4K remains ubiquitous while 8K begins to push its edge, and that smart home assistants and voice platforms are increasingly integrated into car and device ecosystems. Overall, the video blends genuine admiration for design and engineering with clear caveats about product availability, delivering a comprehensive, though opinionated, snapshot of CES 2020’s most talked-about innovations.

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