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The Trade Show and Demo Hall of Shame

Bloopers, flubs, and screw-ups--they always seem to pop up at big trade shows and demos. Join us in reliving some of the more famous--and infamous--of these embarrassing moments.

Tim Moynihan, PC World

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Out-of-Control Mind Control

Can a failed mind-control demo be embarrassing? After all, we're talking about some seriously complicated technology here. During this year's Game Developers' Conference, Emotiv Systems demonstrated its Emotiv EPOC neuroheadset, which reads brain impulses and translates what the wearer is thinking about into on-screen game movements. That's what the press release said, anyway.

The demo started off smoothly enough, as the headset wearer made a giant animated head on the screen mimic his real-life facial expressions. But things went awry when the wearer was asked to make an on-screen object disappear, and again when the handlers from Emotiv tried to put EPOC through its paces in an actual game. The device didn't do much of anything.

What's more, Emotiv's wireless game controller, bundled with the headset, couldn't control the in-game action. Emotiv game developer Zachary Drake described the scene as "demo hell," and Emotiv CEO Nam Do later explained that the 2.4-GHz wireless A/V system at the show interfered with the headset. (According to GDC showgoers, including PC World's Darren Gladstone, the mind-control headset performed nicely at Emotiv's booth.)

Regrettably, no video footage of the doomed demo has appeared anywhere on the Web. Maybe that's just a stroke of luck for Emotiv Systems--or maybe the whole company donned EPOC headsets and willed all evidence of the disastrous demo to disappear.

Gizmodo's Big CES Prank

At this year's CES, organizers issued separate credentials for "Bloggers" and for "Press," infuriating bloggers in the process.

Armed with TV-B-Gone remotes, which do one thing and one thing only--turn off TVs--some Gizmodo staffers on the show floor turned off two displays during a demo by Motorola, a wall of TVs in Panasonic's booth, another wall of TVs in Dish Network's booth, and gaming demos across the show floor. Funny? Sure. Juvenile and unprofessional? Sure.

Traditional news outlets aren't likely to copy Gizmodo's stunt, especially since a remote-wielding Gizmodo writer was banned from CES for life. Gizmodo editor Brian Lam responded with this post about journalistic integrity, Big Brother, the ills of tech journalism, and how the prank somehow paid homage to independent reporting.

Don't Mess With a Hacker Conference

There's no better place for hackers to kick back, talk shop, and not have to worry about who's jotting down their fishing tales than Defcon. And one thing about hackers--they're pretty good at figuring out things that they're not supposed to, which made Dateline NBC's plan to send an undercover reporter to the annual hacker conference all the more risky.

Michelle Madigan, a Dateline producer, attempted to bypass the conference's press-registration process and take hidden cameras into the event, purportedly to record hackers admitting to their exploits. According to this Wired story, Defcon offered Madigan press credentials four times, but she refused each time, intending instead to work around the conference's strict rules against hidden cameras on the sly.

The result was public embarrassment for Madigan; she was called out as an undercover reporter during a Defcon event, and then followed by a throng of Defcon attendees armed with very visible cameras and camcorders as she fled the show. This video sums it up nicely.

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