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Consumer Electronics Show 2026 is in full swing in Las Vegas, with the showroom opening to the public after two busy days of press conferences from the likes of Nvidia, Sony and AMD and previews from Sunday’s Unveiled event.
As has been the case over the past two years at CES, artificial intelligence is at the forefront of many companies’ messaging, though the hardware upgrades and oddities that have long defined the annual event still have their place on the show floor and in adjacent advertising. We’ll collect the biggest revelations and surprises here, although you can still catch real-time reactions and insights from our team on the ground. Via our live blog here.
Let’s dive right in, starting with some of Monday’s biggest players.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang gave a long-anticipated presentation at CES, where he rambled on about the company’s AI-driven successes, paving the way for 2026 and, yes, Hanging out with some robots.
The Rubin compute architecture, developed to meet the increasing computing demands created by the adoption of artificial intelligence, is scheduled to begin replacing the Blackwell architecture in the second half of this year. It comes with speed and storage upgrades, but Russell Brandom, our senior AI editor, weighs in. The exact details of what makes Robin special.
NVIDIA continued its efforts to bring the artificial intelligence revolution to the physical world. Showcasing the Alpamayo family of open source AI models And the tools that self-driving vehicles will use this year. This approach, as senior correspondent Rebecca Bellan notes, reflects the company’s broader efforts to achieve its goal Android infrastructure for general robotics.
AMD President and CEO Lisa Su delivered the first keynote at CES, with a presentation that included partners including OpenAI President Greg Brockman, AI legend Fei-Fei Lei, Luma AI CEO Amit Jain, and more.
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Beyond Shows partner, senior correspondent Rebecca Szkotak AMD’s detailed approach to expanding AI through PCs Using Ryzen AI 400 series processors.
Hyundai’s press conference focused on its robotics partnerships with Boston Dynamics, but the companies revealed that it is working with Google’s AI research lab rather than competitors to train and operate existing Atlas robots, as well as a new version of Atlas that was demonstrated on stage. Transportation editor Kirsten Korosek has the full rundown.
Amazon’s AI-centric update with Alexa+ is getting the kind of push you’d expect at CES The company launched Alexa.com for early access customers It is looking to use the chatbot across its browsers, along with a similar, revamped bot-focused app. Consumer Editor Sarah Perez has the details plus the news Amazon renews Fire TV and new Artline TVswhich has its own Alexa + Push feature.
On the circular front, consumer reporter Evan Mehta Goes through many adsfrom fire alerts to an app store for third-party camera integration, and more.
In the past, Razer has been all about silly hardware at CES, Of the three-screen laptops to Tactile gaming pads and The mask netted the company a federal fine. This year, two interesting announcements were related to Project Motoko, which aims to work similarly to smart glasses, but without the glasses.
Then there’s Project AVA, which puts an avatar of an AI companion on your desk. We’ll let you watch the concept video for yourself.
Lego joined CES for the first time to hold a behind-closed-doors demonstration of its smart play system, which includes bricks, tiles and minifigures that can all interact with each other and play sounds, with the first two sets having a Star Wars theme. Senior writer Amanda Silberling He has all the details here.