April 22, 2026
Every January, the tech world turns its eyes to Las Vegas for the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), a major event that sets the tone for technological advancements in the coming year. My interest in CES is not merely about exploring innovations, but about deepening my understanding of emerging technologies and the stories that unfold around them. I aim to identify the trends and innovations in AI shaping the future of technology today.
Analyzing the CES 2026 media coverage, I realized the event was not about “look at how clever this is” but “look at how this actually works.” That’s subtle, but it’s a shift. This year, artificial intelligence wasn’t trying to prove itself; it was showing up in places that matter to humans.
Physical AI isn’t a buzzword anymore
Those who watched the robotics track at CES in-person will likely relate. AI-powered machines are starting to understand space, motion, and context, not just run scripts.
In the following analysis, I capture some of the noteworthy innovations that drew countless eyeballs and sparked nonstop conversation among those who had real hands-on time with the products at the event.
Let’s dive in.
Robots at home: helping you
One of the big stories this year was how robots are moving beyond being gimmicks. They’re starting to do things that people actually need.
Take LG’s CLOiD Home Robot. It didn’t roll on stage with a light show. Instead, it moved around spaces like a real helper with arms, hands, and sensors that can deal with messy, unstructured environments in a home setting. It wasn’t a toy. It was a practical assistant. This is the kind of robotics that makes sense when you think about daily life.
Then there was SwitchBot’s Onero H1 robot that performs daily chores: washing dishes, basic cleaning, simple meal preparation, window glass cleaning, and more. Simply mind-blowing. Wondering how it works? See it in action.
And if you want to imagine a robot that truly navigates a real house, look at Roborock’s Saros Rover. This robot vacuum climbs stairs and maps the home in three dimensions. That’s not a showpiece. That’s solving a real problem homeowner have complained about for years. Want to see how? Here’s the video.
Robots in factories and warehouses – doing jobs people dislike
Home use is one thing. But robotics at work was a clear highlight.
Hyundai Motor Group affiliate Boston Dynamics’ Atlas humanoid robot was a showstopper. Not because it looked like a sci‑fi figure, but because it walked and handled real industrial tasks with balance and intelligence. The judges at CES gave it a Best Robot award. This is a robot built to work in industries, not just perform the ordinary. Interested in seeing how? Here you go.
“Of the many humanoid robots to have made their debut at CES 2026, it’s Boston Dynamics’ Atlas that stands out as the best of the bunch,” said CNET.
Some of the most interesting physical AI systems were connected to learning‑based control. This means the robot doesn’t just repeat steps, it adapts. It refines its movements through experience. For me, that’s a big deal because it’s already nearing industrial readiness. Deployment at Hyundai’s manufacturing plants is planned to begin this year.
Industrial projects, such as Doosan Robotics’ Scan & Go system, combine robotic arms and autonomous machines to inspect and process large structures, including turbine blades and aircraft surfaces. This is automation, but far smarter than traditional robotics. It is designed to revolutionize manufacturing with instant mobile automation, reducing reliance on complex CAD or manual programming.
For people who do heavy lifting themselves, there have also been breakthroughs in exoskeleton technology. The VIATRIX™ exoskeleton won an Innovation Award for intelligent power assist that adapts to how a person walks and moves. It’s not just for extreme sports. It has real implications in logistics, construction, and emergency rescue.
German Bionic showed Exia, another exoskeleton with adaptive AI support for lifting and moving. Instead of traditional rigs that just hold weight, Exia learns how someone moves and supports them accordingly. It represents a physical AI leap in human augmentation. Its value to industry is clear: helping address labor shortages where heavy lifting is required while reducing stress, preventing injuries, and improving overall workflows.
Learning about these innovations at CES 2026 felt like watching a major shift. Robots are no longer just curiosities. They’re becoming practical tools in situations where work is tough, repetitive, or even dangerous.
Safety, sustainability, and intelligence behind the scenes
CES 2026 wasn’t just about robots in homes or factories. There were lights on the horizon in the safety and sustainability domains.
Some companies showcased lidar and perception systems that help machines see better, important not only for robots but also for cars and drones. High-fidelity 3D lidar solutions demonstrated how sensing technologies themselves are becoming smarter and more reliable.
Autonomous mobile robots like Oshkosh’s HARR‑E designed to handle waste pickup and other utility tasks in campuses and corporate parks. With route efficiency and object avoidance built in, they add intelligence into workflows that matter to everyday environments.
And sustainability? There were smart robotic lawn mowers like HOOKII’s Neomow X2 and L Series operating in real conditions, demonstrating AI-driven path planning for yards of various sizes. Robots like these reduce manual effort and optimize energy use over time.
Even small devices, from clutter‑clearing bots to modular cleaning robots, hint that AI isn’t just about flashy features – it is increasingly being shaped around real needs and real homes.
Real infrastructure that affects everyday life
And then there’s the layer most people don’t notice until it matters.
Hitachi introduced HMAX, a suite of next-generation solutions that brings the power of artificial intelligence to social infrastructure. Think energy grids, manufacturing lines, transportation networks, and mission-critical systems that keep cities, economies, and essential services running.
AI in these spaces doesn’t chase headlines. HMAX is built to bridge the gap between digital intelligence and physical reality, using advanced AI to tackle complex societal challenges.
Advanced AI technologies, including perception AI, generative AI, agentic AI, and physical AI are being applied to deliver new powerful solutions to organizations worldwide. In sectors where safety, uptime, and regulatory compliance are non-negotiable, HMAX’s distinction matters. It has already been delivering tangible results for Mobility, Energy, and Industry.
HMAX was introduced by Hitachi Rail and is currently deployed on 2,000+ trains as a comprehensive digital asset management solution, seamlessly integrating a vast array of live data from trains, signaling systems, and surrounding rail infrastructure into a single platform.
Under HMAX for Factories, Hitachi and Daikin Industries, Ltd. began trial operations in April 2025 to implement an AI agent that supports equipment failure diagnostics in factories. This AI agent is confirmed to identify causes and countermeasures within 10 seconds with more than 90% accuracy.
The intent is clear: “Hitachi is advancing its vision of Lumada 3.0, which aims to lead social innovation to the next stage by integrating domain knowledge with AI. HMAX is the realization of this vision, and as a true One Hitachi initiative that transcends sector boundaries, we will bring together the collective wisdom and technology of the entire group to create unprecedented synergies,” said Jun Abe, Executive Vice President of Hitachi, Ltd. and General Manager of the Digital Systems and Services Division.
The next era of Physical AI
Industry giants have started to call “Physical AI” the next era—one in which machines perceive, understand, and act in the real world with safety and reliability at their core. This shift was reflected in CES sessions on robotics, vehicles, and automated systems that operate in tangible environments.
CES 2026 made one thing clear: AI and robotics are no longer science fiction. They are becoming practical, purposeful tools that will increasingly shape our everyday lives.