Media Gets First Look at CES 2026 Ahead of Show’s Jan. 6 Opening

LAS VEGAS — CES 2026 officially opens Jan. 6 with the spotlight firmly focused on AI, but the world’s largest technology show actually got underway over the weekend with a variety of pre-show events and presentations, mostly aimed at the media.

The Consumer Technology Association (CTA), which produces the annual CES, on Sunday gave journalists a preview of Tech Trends to Watch, followed by CES Unveiled, with previews of innovative products ranging from robotic dogs, a “smart” pet dryer and vacuum cleaners equipped with germ-eliminating UV-C light technology to AI interpreter earbuds, a ring that takes notes, and something called the Body Scan 2, “the first science-backed longevity station.” A Korean company promoting an AI-powered pill prescription app was even handing out samples of natural sleeping pills.

A number of major brands also scheduled press conferences over the weekend and Monday to introduce new products and technologies, including Bosch, Doosan Bobcat, Geely Auto, Hisense, Hyundai Motor Co., LG Electronics, Sony Honda Mobility Inc. and The Lego Group.

In the Tech Trends presentation, CTA futurist Brian Comiskey shared findings from the trade group’s new U.S. Consumer Technology Industry Forecast, which projects the industry will reach $565 billion in revenue in 2026, 3.7% more than last year.

Hardware revenues are expected to grow 3.4%, while consumer spending on software and services is projected to rise 4.2%, reaching nearly $194 billion.

CTA marketing and communications chief Melissa Harrison acknowledged that streaming is giving the industry a boost, noting that “software and services are getting record revenue, even as subscriber growth slows, especially with the rise of ad-supported streaming.”

Later in the Tech Trends presentation, she elaborated: “As we look at the future of video, streaming is no longer just disrupting traditional television. It’s evolving into a more complex ecosystem.  I mean, for example, the Oscars just announced that they are moving to YouTube in 2029.”

“One of the biggest things we’re seeing is that ad-supported streaming has become the industry’s main growth engine,” Comiskey added. “At CES, that shows up in a lot of innovation around better targeting, improved measurement, and more sophisticated connected TV advertising.

“Second, short-form video content continues to define how audiences discover and engage with the content they enjoy. Short form isn’t just a complement to long-form streaming. It’s a funnel, a testing ground, and, increasingly, a standalone entertainment category.”

“And we’ll even see that in our living rooms,” Harrison noted. “Instagram Reels are coming to Amazon Fire through a new dedicated app called Instagram for TV.”

“Exactly,” Comiskey said. “That’s a huge change in the ecosystem.”

He continued: “And, finally, AI is transforming how video is produced. From automated editing and localization to virtual production and generative content creation, AI is expanding creative possibilities.”

The two Tech Trends to Watch presenters also identified three major forces shaping the next phase of the consumer technology industry:

Intelligent Transformation — Artificial intelligence is becoming foundational across devices, platforms, and services, enabling smarter systems and more personalized consumer experiences;

Longevity Technologies — Advances in digital health, remote care, and wellness tools are accelerating as consumers seek technologies that support longer, healthier lives; and

Engineering Tomorrow — Continued investment in electrification, mobility, energy management, and infrastructure modernization is laying the groundwork for future innovation.

Regarding the first trend, intelligent transformation, Comiskey said, ” Over the past 20 years, digital transformation, defined by the pivot of enterprises to the cloud, shaped technology and innovation. The digital lives of consumers also greatly increased through the rise of global connectivity, e-commerce, and more.

“In the 2020s, we find ourselves in a new era, intelligent transformation. This is a wave of innovation brought about by the rise of artificial intelligence, and it’s increasing capabilities, which is changing the operations of enterprises, the functions of workers, and the lives of the consumers. So that makes it feel like we’re in the middle of a truly foundational leap.”

The Tech Trends to Watch presentation also affirmed the pervasiveness of AI.

“AI has become a collaboration tool for many workers across multiple markets,” Comiskey said. “We surveyed several European, Korean and U.S. markets, and awareness of AI exceeded 90% across all of them. It’s incredible.

“But more notably, people ate rapidly adopting the use of AI at their work places. In each of the markets, more than 40% of people in every country have used AI at work. The U.S. led the way, with nearly 63% of U.S. workers saying that they’ve used AI at work, which saved them 8.7 hours of work per week.

“Our data is showing that AI is evolving from something experimental into something essential for the enterprise and workers.”

More importantly, he added, “AI isn’t static. It’s dynamic, with multiple avenues for innovation.”

Pre-show activities continue Monday with more than a dozen presentations and keynotes.

The day begins with a repeat of the CES 2026 Trends to Watch presentation, this time for all badge holders.

The CTA presentation will be followed by “Transforming Industries with Physical AI,” presented by McKinsey, which explores how AI is reshaping industries, work, and the future of automation.

In the afternoon come “The Electric Vehicle to Grid Ecosystem: Unlocking EVs’ Full Potential,” presented by EY; “Lights, Camera, Algorithm: Creators Go Cinematic”; “Beyond the Algorithm: Gen Z’s New Digital Habits”; “Blueprint of Innovation: The Tech Shaping Tomorrow,” presented by Invesco QQQ and Nasdaq; “Driving Trust and Innovation in Connected Health with Standards,” presented by ULSE; “Why Creators Are Every Brand’s Most Valuable Media Channel”; “Building the Enterprise AI Blueprint: From Startup Speed to Scale,” presented by Cox Automotive; “AI Unleashed: Creativity That Inspires and Stays Human,” presented by Monks; and CES 2026’s first keynote, by AMD chair and CEO Dr. Lisa Su, who will present her vision for delivering future AI solutions — from cloud to enterprise, edge and devices.”

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Netflix Plans CES 2026 Presence Ahead of Warner Bros. Discovery Assets Acquisition

Armed with an accepted $82.7 billion deal for Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming assets, Netflix is headed to CES 2026 Jan. 6-9 in Las Vegas as an exhibitor with a focus on hospitality and potential announcements in emerging tech such as gaming and metaverses, according to trade show organizers.

While the company isn’t highlighting a traditional booth on the main show floor, its activities reportedly center around private meetings and networking at the nearby renovated Aria Resort & Casino.

Last month, Netflix announced the acquisition of Ready Player Me, an avatar AI technology company specializing in cross-platform digital personas. The integration aims to build a “Netflix metaverse,” allowing users to create personal avatars that move across games and streaming content on the platform.

Ready Player Me image

The acquisition melds with CES’s recent emphasis on AI, VR and immersive tech across home entertainment.

“Our vision has always been to enable avatars and identities to travel across many games and virtual worlds,” Ready Player Me CEO Timmu Tõke said in a Dec. 19 statement. “We’ve been on an independent path to make that vision a reality for a long time. I’m now very excited for the Ready Player Me team to join Netflix to scale our tech and expertise to a global audience and contribute to the exciting vision Netflix has for gaming.”

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Global Innovation Forum 2026 Brings Cross-Border Startup Pitching to CES

LAS VEGAS — As CES 2026 brings the global technology industry back to Las Vegas, one of the week’s most internationally focused startup gatherings will take place just off the show floor.

The Global Innovation Forum 2026 (GIF 2026) will be held Jan. 7 at Caesars Palace Las Vegas, convening startups, venture capital firms, media, and government-backed innovation agencies from seven countries for an evening of pitching, discussion and deal-making.

Hosted by the Seoul Business Agency (SBA) in collaboration with CES national pavilions, GIF 2026 is positioned as a cross-national collaboration platform designed to help emerging companies expand beyond their home markets.

Participating national pavilions at GIF 2026 include South Korea, Canada, Switzerland, Israel, Japan, Taiwan and France, reflecting a broad mix of hardware, software, AI, mobility, health tech and enterprise innovation ecosystems.

Each participating country will be represented by one selected startup during the event’s IR Pitching Competition, offering concise investment-focused presentations aimed at global venture firms, strategic partners, and media. Following the pitches, a panel discussion will bring together startup ecosystem stakeholders to share perspectives on international expansion, investment trends, and collaboration opportunities across markets. The discussion is designed to move beyond surface-level demos and focus on how startups can scale globally amid shifting regulatory, funding, and supply-chain realities.

The pitch competition is designed to highlight not only individual startups, but also the policy frameworks, funding environments, and commercialization strategies shaping innovation across different regions.

Kiseok Cha

Kiseok Cha, head of the SBA’s Future Strategy division, said his organization is a small business support organization, run by the Seoul Metropolitan Government, that is dedicated to discovering and nurturing promising startups.

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“We provide various programs for startups and SAMEs, especially in fields such as IT, AI, biotech, design and cultural content,” he said. “Our main work includes total support, global business development, technology, commercialization, talent development and support for creative industries.”

The Global Innovation Forum is an outgrowth of the Seoul Innovation Forum, which launched last year at CES 2025 with participation from five countries: Japan, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Taiwan, and the Republic of Korea. The SBA had been attending CES for years, Cha said, observing the various national pavilions and wondering whether there was room for collaboration to give startups an even bigger boost.

“So we reached out to different countries, and it kind of started to snowball from there,” Cha said. “It started last year as the Seoul Innovation Forum, where SBA helped bring countries into that ecosystem. But then, once more countries became interested, we started to contact people with the potential of growing it, and that’s when we changed it over to the Global Innovation Forum.”

The rebranded forum has been expanded to include more national pavilions, and the support program is being strengthened to offer more stable and long-term global partnership opportunities, Cha said. The highlight of the forum, the IR Pitching Competition, has been strengthened through an enhanced judging panel that includes executives with global venture capital firms. Through this approach, participating companies are expected to gain opportunities for accelerated growth, expand brand awareness, and attract practical investment and market validation in a single venue.

“We have a forward-thinking, big goal here,” he said. “It’s not just about this platform or this event. We want to go further, with the potential for collaboration with other countries, investing opportunities, education and meetup programs. So we have this long-term vision, both for CES and for follow-up so we can bring all this to a truly international scale.”

Broadcast Trade Group to Showcase ATSC 3.0 Broadcast Standard Advances at CES 2026

The latest technologies in advanced over-the-air broadcasting powered by the ATSC 3.0 broadcast standard will be showcased next week during CES 2026, which opens Jan. 6 in Las Vegas.

“ATSC 3.0 is free, local, and connected, delivering better picture, better sound, better access, and better choice over-the-air to viewers throughout the U.S., South Korea, the Caribbean, and Brazil,” said Madeleine Noland, president of ATSC, the Broadcast Standards Association.

A variety of home receivers for ATSC 3.0 will be on display in the ATSC booth in the Central Hall Grand Lobby, including solutions from ADTH, SiliconDust, ZapperBox and a range of affordable prototype converter boxes newly announced from Pearl TV and planned for introduction in 2026. The new products join dozens of NextGen TV models now available from a variety of TV manufacturers.

ATSC’s exhibit space in the newly renovated Grand Lobby of the Las Vegas Convention Center is CES attendees’ information hub for NextGen TV powered by ATSC 3.0. In addition, kiosks sponsored by three ATSC members will showcase technology innovations.

Televes USA will showcase solutions for the reception, distribution, and verification of free over-the-air television supporting the rollout of NextGen TV in residential and commercial environments. At its kiosk, Televes will demonstrate how modern antenna systems, programmable signal distribution, and professional test and measurement tools, including internationally award-winning solutions, enable reliable reception, flexible channel management, and scalable delivery of free, local broadcast television across homes, multiple dwelling units, hospitality, and enterprise installations without reliance on pay-TV subscription services.

Mirakulo will demonstrate AstroTV NEXT, the platform for Brazil’s DTV+ (TV 3.0), a standard based on ATSC 3.0. The demo highlights how innovations defined for DTV+, such as Dynamic Ad Insertion (DAI), immersive MPEG-H Audio, and advanced video compression with VVC enhanced by LCEVC, can be seamlessly applied to the next-generation TV ecosystem.

And SiliconDust, best known for its ATSC 3.0-compatible HDHomeRun TV tuners, will showcase its new HDGrandSlam for multiple dwelling buildings, offering live channels and two-week DVR playback with no monthly fees. For broadcasters, the AVSend CDN + Encoder is the solution for ATSC 3.0 BEST (Broadcast-Enabled Streaming Television) with real time viewership analytics and station monitoring and SiliconDust is now an ATSC 3.0 Certificate Authority for NextGen TV to ensure that broadcast television stations meet all signing security requirements.

ATSC, The Broadcast Standards Association, is an international, non-profit organization developing voluntary standards for multimedia broadcasting. ATSC member organizations represent the broadcast, broadcast equipment, motion picture, consumer electronics, computer, cable, satellite and semiconductor industries.

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