Ahead of CES 2024, Inverse deputy editor Raymond Wong shares the biggest tech trends to expect the year’s largest consumer electronics show. AI will dominate everything ā TVs, laptops, phones, headsets, even EVs.
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Ahead of CES 2024, Inverse deputy editor Raymond Wong shares the biggest tech trends to expect the year’s largest consumer electronics show. AI will dominate everything ā TVs, laptops, phones, headsets, even EVs.
From Astro to Asimo, not even Amazon, Tesla, and Ford could make mass-market personal robots anything more than a sci-fi pipe dream.
GE introduced an indoor smoker that sits on your kitchen countertop and makes barbecued meats while only releasing warm air.
LG’s latest smart home innovation is a wheeled robot butler that can read your mood and watch over your pets.
The First Person Tennis app and a Quest 3 VR headset can make any tennis court into so much more.
In an interview with Apple product marketing managers Leland Martin, Doug Brooks, and Gordon Keppel, we go deep on how Apple is transforming the Mac into a respectable AAA video games platform that can compete with PCs and consoles.
A presidential decision to not overturn the ban on selling the Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 means quite a bit for consumers looking to buy one of Apple’s newest smartwatches.
With regulatory approval, Mercedes-Benz is able to add a turquoise light to its cars using its Drive Pilot self-driving feature.
Even though consumer tech companies played things pretty safe, there were still lots of innovative gadgets released this year. These are the 25 top devices that moved the needle the most.