CES 2026is in full swing in Las Vegas, with the show floor open to the public after a packed couple of daysoccupied bypress conferences from the likes of Nvidia, Sony, and AMDand previews from Sunday’s Unveiled event.
As has been the case for the past two years at CES, AI is at the forefront of many companies’ messaging, though the hardwareupgrades and oddities that have long defined the annual event still have their place on the show floor and in adjacent announcements. We’llbe collecting the biggest reveals and surprises here, though you can still catchthe spur-of-the-moment reactions and thoughts from our team on the groundvia our live blog right here.
Let’sdive right in, starting with some of Monday’s biggest players.
Nvidia reveals AI model for autonomous vehicles, showcases Rubin architecture
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivered an expectedly lengthy presentation at CES, taking a victory lap for the company’s AI-driven successes,setting the stage for 2026, and yes,hanging out with some robots.
The Rubin computingarchitecture, which has been developed to meet the increasing computation demands that AI adoption creates, isset to begin replacing Blackwell architecture in the second half of this year. It comes with speed and storage upgrades, but oursenior AIeditorRussell Brandom goes into the nitty-gritty of what distinguishes Rubin.
And Nvidia continued its push to bring the AI revolution into the physical world,showcasing its Alpamayo family of open source AI modelsand tools that will be used by autonomous vehicles this year.That approach, as senior reporter Rebecca Bellan notes, mirrors the company’s broader efforts to make its infrastructure the Android for generalist robots.
AMD’s keynote highlights new processors and partnerships
AMD chair and CEO Lisa Su delivered the first keynote of CES, with a presentation that featured partners, including OpenAI president Greg Brockman, AI legend Fei-Fei Li,Luma AI CEO Amit Jain, and more.
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Beyond thepartnershowcases, senior reporter Rebecca Szkutakdetailed AMD’s approach toward expanding the reach of AI through personal computersusing its Ryzen AI 400 Series processors.
Boston Dynamics and Google partner on Atlas robots
Hyundai’s press conference focused on its robotics partnerships with Boston Dynamics, but the companies revealed thatthey’reworking with Google’s AI research lab rather than competitorsto train and operate existing Atlas robots, as well as a new iteration of Atlas that was shown onstage.Transportation editor Kirsten Korosec has the full rundown.
Amazon’s AI-centric update with Alexa+ is getting the kind of pushyou’dexpect at CES, withthe company launching Alexa.com for Early Access customerslooking to use the chatbot via its browsers, along with a similar, revamped bot-focused app. Consumer editor Sarah Perez has the details, along with news onAmazon’s revamp to Fire TV and newArtline TVswhich have their own Alexa+ push.
On the Ring front, consumer reporter Ivan Mehtaruns through the many announcementsfrom fire alerts to an app store for third-party camera integration, andmore.
Razer joins the AI delugewith Project AVA and Motoko
In the past, Razer has been all about ridiculous hardware at CES,from three-screen laptopstohaptic gaming cushionstoa mask that landed the company a federal fine. This year, its two attention-grabbing announcements were for ProjectMotoko, which aims to function similarly to smart glasses, butwithoutthe glasses.
Then there’s Project AVA, which puts the avatar of an AI companion on your desk.We’lllet you watch the concept video for yourself.
Lego Smart Bricks mark the company’s first CES appearance
Lego joined CES for the first time to hold a behind-closed-doors showcase of its Smart Play System, whichincludesbricks, tiles, and Minifigures that can all interact with each otherandplay sounds, with both the debut sets having a Star Wars theme. Senior writer AmandaSilberlinghas all the details here.