sharp and hitachi had some 1.5" thick or should i say thin televisions.
speakercraft was a joke. didn't really have any product, just support was their theme this time with some kind of halloween haystack setup. corny.
sony was trying to audio/video shifting with hdna and homeshare system. their oled t.v. was crystal clear.
lutron was packed but didn't see anything really new here. they were showing off the regular stuff for lighting and shade control +
http://www.trendir.com/archives/lutron-vierti-dimmer.jpg
control4 was packed. they are doing the door locks like zwave albeit via zigbee. they both use batteries. they also have a sonos type of wireless audio streaming to local amp boxes. they have an iphone client which will be free on the store and up to integrators to charge for setup. they are using a new model for sony's discontinued dvd changer which does not have rs232 anymore. they are working around getting the data off it for visuals/metadata but i don't think it was ready at this time. they partnered with sony to develop some premade racks in some standard configs. they ranged somewhere between $5,000-17,500 depending on hardware. they have 2 new handheld remotes which are actually pretty nice and much needed. the more expensive one handles feedback and metadata. it is oled on that one with yellow writing. the remote is solid in your hand. their designer software was really easy to use and updates on the fly, no need to hit save or refresh. it is windows based only (which is weird since they are linux based). version 2.0 is coming out soon and will include a flash sdk. they are coming out with a 4 zone audio system for smaller setups. i have to admit the product line looked pretty solid and the signup dealer price (used towards 1st purchase like most of them do) was affordable.
russound did not have much new except the sphere.
zwave was showing off locks from schlage and black & decker. both regular door locks and deadbolts. they support encryption and currently only their zwave/ip bridge/gateways could control the locks. difference between the 2 from what i saw was that on schlage even after you unlocked the deadbolt via zwave, you still had to manually open the handle on the lock to open it. on black and decker once the lock was unlocked, the deadbolt was open. i also saw O2 sensor which ran on batteries and acted as a binary switch (on for water sensed, off is nothing sensed and would report back like a door sensor/PIR, etc.). also, there was a remote temperature sensor which was independent of any hvac unit. it would just report temperature wherever it was located. also ran on batteries.
did't get to amx but they had a s*load of panels - wall panels, touchpanels, etc.
dean rodney was there from cqc supporting vidabox. nice guy, extremely intelligent. some of their higher end software is cqc with their own templates. they had a small box about 4"x3" running embedded xp for local computing on a hdtv. they were velcroing it to the back of an hdtv. it had ethernet and vga i believe. don't know the specs offhand. they'll do custom images if there is something you want embedded on it along with xp.
didn't get too far into elk but i think they had some new software and/or touchscreen. looked somewhat similar to HAI's software if i remember correctly.
HAI had some new panel to show off. i believe the rest was the usual from them.
pronto came out with the godfather of touchpanel remotes. next gen for the 9600 and much bigger although not much heavier. they also showed off v. 2.0 of prontedit prof. which streamlines all products into 1 software (one to rule them all so to speak). downside is you have to convert your existing files to the xcf format (i believe it is the same as the existing newer xcf format) and cannot go back. just copy your old files and store them seperately if you want to revert back though. they were controlling led lighting also via the remotes. i think it was via a relay though for just on/off.
pmc had draw dropping bass. i couldn't breathe half the time it was so strong. kept dropping, dropping, lower and lower for about 15 minutes. good demo.
leviton showing off viziarf+ zwave dimmers/switches. utterly horrible IMO. turns out they didn't pay lutron for the patent like everyone else and were stuck having to redesign the switches. led is across the top along with the dim toggle now buttons right below with +-. they should have paid the patent and worked on some decent designs.
a couple of car racing simulators one of which you could setup to function via home theater chairs. not only for sound effects but everything the car model would do the chairs would do also. up/down/left/right/angles, etc. with no lag between any of them. used via a 3 dlp screen setup and a dell xps laptop running the game.
ge had the usual along with smartcom.