Best of CES 2026 Venetian Upper: Startups, Tennis Robots copertina

Best of CES 2026 Venetian Upper: Startups, Tennis Robots

Best of CES 2026 Venetian Upper: Startups, Tennis Robots

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Make a Logo on Fiverr The Venetian at CES 2026 is where innovation feels closest to the show floor, and the upper level in particular delivers a concentrated dose of emerging ideas, practical AI, and a surprising number of robots that actually solve everyday problems. Walking this hall feels like a curated preview of what’s about to hit homes, cars, and offices—less concept, more “you could buy this soon.” From smarter wellness tech to genuinely useful home automation, the Venetian proves why it remains a must-see stop every year. Trevi: Espresso Meets Bathroom Tech Trevi’s booth is the kind of CES mashup that only works here: premium Korean-engineered bathroom wellness products alongside a fully automated espresso machine. The coffee system handles everything from beans to froth with a simple touchscreen, delivering café-style drinks at a fraction of the usual price for machines in this class. Pair that with Trevi’s lineup of smart bidet toilets—complete with heated seats, remote controls, and wellness features—and you get a surprisingly cohesive vision of everyday comfort tech that blends convenience with affordability. KO Corporation: AI-Assisted Body Alignment In the Japan tech area, KO Corporation showed off MySymmetry and The Core, a two-part approach to fixing posture and alignment. MySymmetry uses an app to visualize body misalignment and recommend exercises, while The Core uses smart heel inserts to correct how you stand and walk. It’s a great example of AI being used quietly and practically—less flash, more long-term health benefit—especially for anyone who spends long days on their feet or traveling show floors like CES. Innovation Awards Showcase: A Hall of Future Tech The Innovation Awards area is a highlight reel of CES in physical form. Here you’ll find everything from Nvidia’s latest GPUs to rehabilitation robots, advanced security cameras, smart firefighting robots, and next-gen wearables. It’s also where the robot vacuum and smart home categories continue to evolve, showing how AI is being embedded into devices that clean, monitor, and protect without demanding constant attention. Beatless: Smarter, Cleaner Pest Control From Ukraine comes Beatless, a chemical-free agricultural pest control system designed to protect crops while staying pollinator-safe. Using sensors and targeted deterrence, it supports safer food production and biodiversity at the same time. It’s a reminder that innovation at CES isn’t just about consumer gadgets—it’s also about applying technology to global problems in sustainable ways. ViewReal: MicroLED Everywhere The Ontario, Canada area featured ViewReal’s MicroLED reference design kits, including transparent displays that can be embedded into mirrors, windows, or dashboards. The tech opens the door to subtle, context-aware information displays—think side mirrors that warn about passing vehicles or doors that show “On Air” when you’re recording. It’s a glimpse at how AI and display tech will blend into everyday surfaces without screaming for attention. Voltae: A Friendlier EV Charger Hungary’s Voltae showed a smart EV charger designed to integrate with building management systems and smart homes. With app control, safety monitoring, and future-proofing features, it’s the kind of infrastructure tech that makes electric vehicles easier to live with, not just easier to sell. Wacaco Pixapresso: Espresso on the Go For travelers who refuse to compromise on coffee, Wacaco’s Pixapresso is a battery-powered espresso machine that fits in a bag and can brew on demand. Whether you’re camping or stuck in a convention center with questionable coffee, this is pure CES practicality—small, focused, and surprisingly refined. SwitchBot AceMate: The Tennis Robot That Actually Rallies One of the most fun robots in the hall is SwitchBot’s AceMate, billed as the world’s first tennis robot for real rally play. Unlike simple ball launchers, AceMate moves around the court and returns shots, creating something much closer to a real practice session. It’s a perfect example of robotics moving from novelty to genuinely useful training tools. SwitchBot Onro H1: A Home Robot With a Job Also from SwitchBot, the Onro H1 is a home robot designed to handle chores like picking up laundry, loading the washer, and even folding clothes. Watching it scan a room, adjust its posture, and carry out tasks makes it clear that domestic robotics is finally crossing from demo to deployment. Creality Spark X: AI-Powered 3D Printing Creality’s Spark X series combines multi-material 3D printing with AI monitoring and even photo-to-3D conversion. With less waste, smarter filament handling, and real-time print supervision, it shows how AI is quietly making maker tech more reliable and more accessible. Target Omni Scoring Dartboard: Turning Games Into Data The Target Omni system adds an AI-powered scoring ring to a standard dartboard, automatically...
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