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What to expect at CES 2026

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The biggest tech show of the year kicks off next week, as some of the industry’s top players show up to Las Vegas for CES 2026. We’ll be there to see all the new product demos we can and to bring you the most exciting news from the show. Follow our coverage for a preview of all the new tech these companies are planning to launch in 2026.

Expect to see the usual suspects: laptops, smart home gadgets, and TVs, and a whole lot more wearables and health tech. We’re anticipating seeing more products with AI integration. Also, robots. Perhaps, humanoids even.

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CES 2026 officially starts on Tuesday, January 6th, but stay tuned for news and announcements starting Sunday ahead of the show floor opening, when there are also lots of press conferences. Here are the major beats we’re expecting to see at the show.

Intel’s upcoming Panther Lake chip was preannounced in October.
Image: Intel

Laptops are always big at CES, with most major companies — save for Apple — announcing new models. They range from iterative spec bumps to whole new designs. Plus, there’s always the occasional concept that may or may never come out.

CES 2026 should bring new laptops featuring three new chips: Intel’s Panther Lake, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2, and AMD’s rumored “Gorgon Point” processors. Intel and Qualcomm are hyping up the efficiency of their new chips while simultaneously emphasizing graphics power — which always sounds too good to be true and often is. But battery life ranges from good to excellent among current offerings, and AMD proved with Strix Halo that integrated graphics could be downright impressive. I’m intrigued to see how things progress from here, especially in a year that doesn’t have new Nvidia GPUs. (But then again, Nvidia may soon compete in a different way.)

Regardless of how the latest chip showdown shakes out, I hope we see more unique ideas in laptop form factors. Give me more rollables, dual-screens, foldables, or any other clever uses of screen real estate that can be dreamed up. But like my favorite laptop from the last CES, let’s hope the radical stuff makes it past the concept stage.

– Antonio G. Di Benedetto

Robots and smart locks and AI, oh my! CES 2026 will be overrun by robots. From ever-wilder vacuums, pool cleaners, and lawn mowers, to humanoid bots with hands, limbs, and deeper intelligence, this will be the year smart home robotics moves from science fiction to science fact.

Will we all have humanoids doing our laundry by the end of the year? Nope. But the idea of robotic helpers, in some form, will soon be mainstream, thanks to huge advances in computer vision. And it all kicks off next week in Vegas.

This will be the year smart home robotics moves from science fiction to science fact

Similarly, AI is powering advances in security cameras, moving them beyond pure surveillance and into a more integral role in home automation. Expect new capabilities that use deeper intelligence to provide much-needed context. Cameras becoming part of Matter is also a step forward here, and I hope to see companies announce support for the standard — even though the platforms are lagging behind.

The other big trend will be smart locks. Yes, I said this last year (and I was right), but delays around the Aliro standard slowed the onslaught. Still, smart locks remain the hottest thing in the smart home — being both an excellent entry point (ha) and a lynchpin for a fully integrated home. Expect to, once again, see a slew of palm, facial, and UWB-based unlocking locks, along with better form factors, as tech companies finally accept that not everyone wants Star Trek–style hardware on their front doors.

CES 2025 was a big year for PC gamers — new flagship Nvidia graphics cards, SteamOS handhelds, and 27-inch 240Hz 4K OLED displays — but don’t expect 2026 to offer the same! On the PC side of things, Nvidia’s RTX 50 Super has likely been postponed, we can’t trust Intel’s latest desktop GPU tease, and we’re not expecting gaming GPUs from AMD. The historically splashy Razer doesn’t have a booth on the floor for the second year in a row, and the “Gaming / XR” chunk of the Las Vegas Convention Center looks like it’s only tangentially about gaming this year: it looks like we’ll see more video glasses there than anything else!

It looks like we’ll see more video glasses there than anything else!

It seems like Lenovo will have a rollable gaming laptop and a SteamOS version of the existing Legion Go 2 handheld, and I’m really curious how integrated graphics in Intel’s and in Qualcomm’s latest laptop chips might perform and whether they’ll fit in handhelds too. Lastly, Lego is going to be at CES for the first time in years…

The LG Micro RGB TV in a white living room with black couches.

Every major TV manufacturer will compete with their own mini or micro RGB TVs in 2026.
Image: LG

What began with last year’s CES — when Hisense revealed its first RGB Mini LED TV, which it officially released this past summer — is primed to blow up at CES 2026 when every company will likely show their own RGB LED TVs. Samsung and LG have already announced plans to release smaller sizes, with Samsung offering its 2026 Micro RGB LED TVs with panels ranging from 55 to 100 inches, and LG debuting its first Micro RGB evo TVs in three sizes of 75, 86, and 100 inches.

Last September, TCL announced two new RGB LED TVs for the Chinese market and there are expectations of similar news for the US and Europe at CES. And I hope Hisense will extend its UX line into smaller screen sizes. (While Sony showed off its RGB LED in 2025 and filed a patent for something called True RGB, it hasn’t made major TV news at CES for a few years. I don’t expect that to change in 2026.)

The big question that has yet to be answered is how early into 2026 will we see any of them for sale and how much they’ll cost. Both the 115-inch Samsung Micro RGB LED TV and 116-inch Hisense RGB Mini LED in 2025 were in the $30,000 ballpark, with a 100-inch version of the Hisense announced for $19,999. The technological advancements made to RGB LED over the past year, and the promise of stiff competition, is sure to bring prices closer to a more manageable range. Once CES begins, I hope we’ll find out exactly how manageable.

CES is not for normie phones. The phones that make it to CES are weirdo phones, and the number-one weirdo phone I’m hoping to see one way or another is the Samsung Galaxy Z Trifold. Samsung isn’t usually one for showing off phones at the show; the S-series usually gets a refresh a couple of weeks later in January. But this year might be different: the Trifold just launched in Korea, and CES seems like a nice big stage for a global debut. I am ready, in my heart of hearts, for a phone with two hinges.

I think it’s a fair bet that we’ll see this double-folding beaut at CES

Will it be excessive? Undoubtedly. Will it cost a buttload of money? You know it. But think of all the things you can do with a phone that’s also a proper 10-inch tablet. Maybe this is the phone that will deliver on the promise of leaving my laptop at home. Are you there, DeX? It’s me, Allison. Either way, it’s gonna be so sick the first time I fold up this phone and then fold it again. I think it’s a fair bet that we’ll see this double-folding beaut at CES, and what better way to usher in the Year of the Folding Phone?

Wearables and health tech

Pair of XREAL smart glasses lit up in a futuristic way.

Smart glasses will likely have a big presence at this year’s show too.
Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

For so many years, wearables went hand-in-hand with health and fitness tracking. This year, I’m expecting to see fewer fitness trackers and more XR and AI devices. Specifically, smart glasses. They were a big fixture at CES 2025, and I see that trend continuing into 2026. But while the commercial market is dominated by so-called AI glasses — lightweight devices like the Ray-Ban Meta glasses — there’s much more variety at CES. I expect we’ll see some smart glasses that blur the line with headsets and maybe some interesting takes on how to embed displays.

On the health front, I wouldn’t be surprised if we see the word “longevity” tacked onto products. Think devices that are meant to help you live longer or prevent chronic diseases. Unfortunately, that means bodily fluids like blood and urine. (Why? To try and get a window into hormonal and metabolic health.) We’ve already seen this from Whoop, Oura, and Withings in 2025, so I expect we’ll see more experimental takes from smaller companies at the show.

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Ronnie Sheth, CEO, SENEN Group: Why now is the time for enterprise AI to ‘get practical'

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Before you set sail on your AI journey, always check the state of your data – because if there is one thing likely to sink your ship, it is data quality.

Gartner estimates that poor data quality costs organisations an average of $12.9 million each year in wasted resources and lost opportunities. That’s the bad news. The good news is that organisations are increasingly understanding the importance of their data quality – and less likely to fall into this trap.

That’s the view of Ronnie Sheth, CEO of AI strategy, execution and governance firm SENEN Group. The company focuses on data and AI advisory, operationalisation and literacy, and Sheth notes she has been in the data and AI space ‘ever since [she] was a corporate baby’, so there is plenty of real-world experience behind the viewpoint. There is also plenty of success; Sheth notes that her company has a 99.99% client repeat rate.

“If I were to be very practical, the one thing I’ve noticed is companies jump into adopting AI before they’re ready,” says Sheth. Companies, she notes, will have an executive direction insisting they adopt AI, but without a blueprint or roadmap to accompany it. The result may be impressive user numbers, but with no measurable outcome to back anything up.

Even as recently as 2024, Sheth saw many organisations struggling because their data was ‘nowhere where it needed to be.’ “Not even close,” she adds. Now, the conversation has turned more practical and strategic. Companies are realising this, and coming to SENEN Group initially to get help with their data, rather than wanting to adopt AI immediately.

“When companies like that come to us, the first course of order is really fixing their data,” says Sheth. “The next course of order is getting to their AI model. They are building a strong foundation for any AI initiative that comes after that.

“Once they fix their data, they can build as many AI models as they want, and they can have as many AI solutions as they want, and they will get accurate outputs because now they have a strong foundation,” Sheth adds.

With breadth and depth in expertise, SENEN Group allows organisations to right their course. Sheth notes the example of one customer who came to them wanting a data governance initiative. Ultimately, it was the data strategy which was needed – the why and how, the outcomes of what they were trying to do with their data – before adding in governance and providing a roadmap for an operating model. “They’ve moved from raw data to descriptive analytics, moving into predictive analytics, and now we’re actually setting up an AI strategy for them,” says Sheth.

It is this attitude and requirement for practical initiatives which will be the cornerstone of Sheth’s discussion at AI & Big Data Expo Global in London this week. “Now would be the time to get practical with AI, especially enterprise AI adoption, and not think about ‘look, we’re going to innovate, we’re going to do pilots, we’re going to experiment,’” says Sheth. “Now is not the time to do that. Now is the time to get practical, to get AI to value. This is the year to do that in the enterprise.”

Watch the full video conversation with Ronnie Sheth below:

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Apptio: Why scaling intelligent automation requires financial rigour

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Greg Holmes, Field CTO for EMEA at Apptio, an IBM company, argues that successfully scaling intelligent automation requires financial rigour.

The “build it and they will come” model of technology adoption often leaves a hole in the budget when applied to automation. Executives frequently find that successful pilot programmes do not translate into sustainable enterprise-wide deployments because initial financial modelling ignored the realities of production scaling.

“When we integrate FinOps capabilities with automation, we’re looking at a change from being very reactive on cost management to being very proactive around value engineering,” says Holmes.

This shifts the assessment criteria for technical leaders. Rather than waiting “months or years to assess whether things are getting value,” engineering teams can track resource consumption – such as cost per transaction or API call – “straight from the beginning.”

The unit economics of scaling intelligent automation

Innovation projects face a high mortality rate. Holmes notes that around 80 percent of new innovation projects fail, often because financial opacity during the pilot phase masks future liabilities.

“If a pilot demonstrates that automating a process saves, say, 100 hours a month, leadership thinks that’s really successful,” says Holmes. “But what it fails to track is that the pilot sometimes is running on over-provisioned infrastructure, so it looks like it performs really well. But you wouldn’t over-provision to that degree during a real production rollout.”

Moving that workload to production changes the calculus. The requirements for compute, storage, and data transfer increase. “API calls can multiply, exceptions and edge cases appear at volume that might have been out of scope for the pilot phase, and then support overheads just grow as well,” he adds.

To prevent this, organisations must track the marginal cost at scale. This involves monitoring unit economics, such as the cost per customer served or cost per transaction. If the cost per customer increases as the customer base grows, the business model is flawed.

Conversely, effective scaling should see these unit costs decrease. Holmes cites a case study from Liberty Mutual where the insurer was able to find around $2.5 million of savings by bringing in consumption metrics and “not just looking at labour hours that they were saving.”

However, financial accountability cannot sit solely with the finance department. Holmes advocates for putting governance “back in the hands of the developers into their development tools and workloads.”

Integration with infrastructure-as-code tools like HashiCorp Terraform and GitHub allows organisations to enforce policies during deployment. Teams can spin up resources programmatically with immediate cost estimates.

“Rather than deploying things and then fixing them up, which gets into the whole whack-a-mole kind of problem,” Holmes explains, companies can verify they are “deploying the right things at the right time.”

When scaling intelligent automation, tension often simmers between the CFO, who focuses on return on investment, and the Head of Automation, who tracks operational metrics like hours saved.

“This translation challenge is precisely what TBM (Technology Business Management) and Apptio are designed to solve,” says Holmes. “It’s having a common language between technology and finance and with the business.”

The TBM taxonomy provides a standardised framework to reconcile these views. It maps technical resources (such as compute, storage, and labour) into IT towers and further up to business capabilities. This structure translates technical inputs into business outputs.

“I don’t necessarily know what goes into all the IT layers underneath it,” Holmes says, describing the business user’s perspective. “But because we’ve got this taxonomy, I can get a detailed bill that tells me about my service consumption and precisely which costs are driving  it to be more expensive as I consume more.”

Addressing legacy debt and budgeting for the long-term

Organisations burdened by legacy ERP systems face a binary choice: automation as a patch, or as a bridge to modernisation. Holmes warns that if a company is “just trying to mask inefficient processes and not redesign them,” they are merely “building up more technical debt.”

A total cost of ownership (TCO) approach helps determine the correct strategy. The Commonwealth Bank of Australia utilised a TCO model across 2,000 different applications – of various maturity stages – to assess their full lifecycle costs. This analysis included hidden costs such as infrastructure, labour, and the engineering time required to keep automation running.

“Just because of something’s legacy doesn’t mean you have to retire it,” says Holmes. “Some of those legacy systems are worth maintaining just because the value is so good.”

In other cases, calculating the cost of the automation wrappers required to keep an old system functional reveals a different reality. “Sometimes when you add up the TCO approach, and you’re including all these automation layers around it, you suddenly realise, the real cost of keeping that old system alive is not just the old system, it’s those extra layers,” Holmes argues.

Avoiding sticker shock requires a budgeting strategy that balances variable costs with long-term commitments. While variable costs (OPEX) offer flexibility, they can fluctuate wildly based on demand and engineering efficiency.

Holmes advises that longer-term visibility enables better investment decisions. Committing to specific technologies or platforms over a multi-year horizon allows organisations to negotiate economies of scale and standardise architecture.

“Because you’ve made those longer term commitments and you’ve standardised on different platforms and things like that, it makes it easier to build the right thing out for the long term,” Holmes says.

Combining tight management of variable costs with strategic commitments supports enterprises in scaling intelligent automation without the volatility that often derails transformation.

IBM is a key sponsor of this year’s Intelligent Automation Conference Global in London on 4-5 February 2026. Greg Holmes and other experts will be sharing their insights during the event. Be sure to check out the day one panel session, Scaling Intelligent Automation Successfully: Frameworks, Risks, and Real-World Lessons, to hear more from Holmes and swing by IBM’s booth at stand #362.

See also: Klarna backs Google UCP to power AI agent payments

Banner for AI & Big Data Expo by TechEx events.

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and is co-located with other leading technology events including the Cyber Security & Cloud Expo. Click here for more information.

AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.

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FedEx tests how far AI can go in tracking and returns management

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FedEx is using AI to change how package tracking and returns work for large enterprise shippers. For companies moving high volumes of goods, tracking no longer ends when a package leaves the warehouse. Customers expect real-time updates, flexible delivery options, and returns that do not turn into support tickets or delays.

That pressure is pushing logistics firms to rethink how tracking and returns operate at scale, especially across complex supply chains.

This is where artificial intelligence is starting to move from pilot projects into daily operations.

FedEx plans to roll out AI-powered tracking and returns tools designed for enterprise shippers, according to a report by PYMNTS. The tools are aimed at automating routine customer service tasks, improving visibility into shipments, and reducing friction when packages need to be rerouted or sent back.

Rather than focusing on consumer-facing chatbots, the effort centres on operational workflows that sit behind the scenes. These are the systems enterprise customers rely on to manage exceptions, returns, and delivery changes without manual intervention.

How FedEx is applying AI to package tracking

Traditional tracking systems tell customers where a package is and when it might arrive. AI-powered tracking takes a step further by utilising historical delivery data, traffic patterns, weather conditions, and network constraints to flag potential delays before they happen.

According to the PYMNTS report, FedEx’s AI tools are designed to help enterprise shippers anticipate issues earlier in the delivery process. Instead of reacting to missed delivery windows, shippers may be able to reroute packages or notify customers ahead of time.

For businesses that ship thousands of parcels per day, that shift matters. Small improvements in prediction accuracy can reduce support calls, lower refund rates, and improve customer trust, particularly in retail, healthcare, and manufacturing supply chains.

This approach also reflects a broader trend in enterprise software, in which AI is being embedded into existing systems rather than introduced as standalone tools. The goal is not to replace logistics teams, but to minimise the number of manual decisions they need to make.

Returns as an operational problem, not a customer issue

Returns are one of the most expensive parts of logistics. For enterprise shippers, particularly those in e-commerce, returns affect warehouse capacity, inventory planning, and transportation costs.

According to PYMNTS, FedEx’s AI-enabled returns tools aim to automate parts of the returns process, including label generation, routing decisions, and status updates. Companies that use AI to determine the most efficient return path may be able to reduce delays and avoid returning things to the wrong facility.

This is less about convenience and more about operational discipline. Returns that sit idle or move through the wrong channel create cost and uncertainty across the supply chain. AI systems trained on past return patterns can help standardise decisions that were previously handled case by case.

For enterprise customers, this type of automation supports scale. As return volumes fluctuate, especially during peak seasons, systems that adjust automatically reduce the need for temporary staffing or manual overrides.

What FedEx’s AI tracking approach says about enterprise adoption

What stands out in FedEx’s approach is how narrowly focused the AI use case is. There are no broad claims about transformation or reinvention. The emphasis is on reducing friction in processes that already exist.

This mirrors how other large organisations are adopting AI internally. In a separate context, Microsoft described a similar pattern in its article. The company outlined how AI tools were rolled out gradually, with clear limits, governance rules, and feedback loops.

While Microsoft’s case focused on knowledge work and FedEx’s on logistics operations, the underlying lesson is the same. AI adoption tends to work best when applied to specific activities with measurable results rather than broad promises of efficiency.

For logistics firms, those advantages include fewer delivery exceptions, lower return handling costs, and better coordination between shipping partners and enterprise clients.

What this signals for enterprise customers

For end-user companies, FedEx’s move signals that logistics providers are investing in AI as a way to support more complex shipping demands. As supply chains become more distributed, visibility and predictability become harder to maintain without automation.

AI-driven tracking and returns could also change how businesses measure logistics performance. Companies may focus less on delivery speed and more on how quickly issues are recognised and resolved.

That shift could influence procurement decisions, contract structures, and service-level agreements. Enterprise customers may start asking not just where a shipment is, but how well a provider anticipates problems.

FedEx’s plans reflect a quieter phase of enterprise AI adoption. The focus is less on experimentation and more on integration. These systems are not designed to draw attention but to reduce noise in operations that customers only notice when something goes wrong.

(Photo by Liam Kevan)

See also: PepsiCo is using AI to rethink how factories are designed and updated

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and is co-located with other leading technology events, click here for more information.

AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.

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