Pre-EVent: CES 2026 Is Almost Here and This Year, It’s Not Just About Gadgets

CES2026CES officially kicks off January 6 in Las Vegas, but the real show starts earlier, as companies begin rolling out press previews, early demos, and carefully timed leaks ahead of the tech industry’s biggest week of the year.

As always, artificial intelligence will be everywhere, but CES 2026 looks less focused on flashy “AI for AI’s sake” demos and more on how that tech shows up in everyday devices. Expect AI baked into laptops, TVs, home gadgets, cars, and even robots that claim to understand you better than last year’s versions did.

The biggest names in chips are once again setting the tone. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and AMD CEO Lisa Su are both slated to keynote, likely framing the next year of AI hardware, gaming performance, and power-efficient computing. Intel is also expected to spotlight its Panther Lake processors, which could quietly shape the next wave of laptops even if they don’t steal headlines.

Beyond chips, CES remains a playground for ambitious concepts, some practical, many not. Robotics is already shaping up as a major theme, with companies like LG teasing home robots and Samsung continuing to hint at long-promised helpers that may or may not ever ship.

TVs are getting bigger, brighter, and more experimental too, with RGB lighting tech and massive display sizes dominating early buzz.

What makes CES different from other tech events isn’t just the product launches, it’s the chaos. For every polished announcement from a tech giant, there’s a startup demoing something strange, brilliant, or confusing just a few booths away. Some of it will define the year ahead. A lot of it won’t. But taken together, CES 2026 offers a snapshot of where the tech industry thinks it’s going, and what it hopes people will want next.

Over the next few days, the real story will emerge not just from the keynotes, but from the show floor, the side rooms, and the unexpected moments that always seem to happen between official announcements.

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CES 2026: Broadcast TV Is Still Here, and It Might Need Another Box

Between the massive TVs and AI demos at CES, Pearl TV is showing something much less exciting: a small black box meant to sit next to your TV.

The group announced plans for a NEXTGEN TV converter box that would let people with antennas and older TVs keep watching free local channels as broadcasters move toward ATSC 3.0, the next version of over-the-air TV. If this sounds familiar, it should. It’s basically the same idea as the converter boxes people needed when TV went digital years ago.

The reason it’s back is simple. Not everyone is replacing their TV, and not everyone streams everything. A lot of households still rely on antennas for local news, weather, sports, and emergency alerts. ATSC 3.0 doesn’t work with older TVs, which means those viewers could eventually lose access unless something fills the gap.

At CES, Pearl TV is showing early versions of the box made with companies like Skyworth, a manufacturer behind many mainstream TVs. The pitch isn’t flashy. Plug it in, keep watching, and don’t buy a new TV just yet.

It’s not the kind of thing people stop for selfies with on the show floor. But it’s a quiet reminder that while tech keeps moving fast, a lot of people are still watching TV the same way they always have. And someone still has to make sure it works.

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