LAS VEGAS—Intel swaggered into their CES press briefing like an aging gunfighter ready to take on the cocky young gun. You know, John Wayne versus Clint Eastwood style. Pundits and analysts have wondered whether Intel can handle the newThe Consumer Electronics Show officially begins on Tuesday, but a tension that has run through the show for the last several years was already on display Monday, as many companies held press conferences showing offSoftware giant Microsoft Corp. raised eyebrows by its decision to skip CES. But its longtime hardware ally, chipmaker Intel Corp., is still a major presence. Intel has long dominated the market for laptop and desktop processor chips, but the company'sThe South Korean firm LG displayed a 55-inch OLED HD TV, based on organic light-emitting diode technology, at the start of CES, a week-long annual jamboree for consumer electronics. The set will go on sale in the US in March for $12,000. Samsung isOver at the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas, Chinese computer-maker Lenovo is about to introduce something ridiculous. It's called the Horizon. It's a 27-inch, 17 pound, $1,700 "table PC." It looks like a monster:
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