Tech companies big and small are offering bold visions of AI-backed products that could be headed into our everyday lives soon. Unless tariffs trip them up.
The Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas is showcasing how artificial intelligence is developing humanoid robots and computer chips, but President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs could affect a large portion of products marketed to consumers.
CES 2024 saw more than 138,000 attendees, according to the CTA, and organizers expect to see at least that amount again for this year's show. Over 4,500 exhibitors, including 1,400 startups, are also anticipated across 2.
This year’s CES was all about AI—or at least, that was the headline. While AI is poised to change everything, its presence at the show was more theoretical than tangible.
Home appliances that do chores, cars that know your favorite cafe, and robot pets aiming to please are among artificial intelligence-infused offerings at the Consumer ... elect Donald Trump. AI is once again a major theme of the show, along with autonomous ...
Chinese companies have turned out in force again at this year's Consumer Electronics Show, with their prospects overshadowed by the threat of steeper tariffs from incoming US president Donald Trump. XPeng's "flying car" and TCL's AI-enhanced television ...
Gary Shapiro, head of CES organiser the Consumer Technology Association, said the UK had become ‘less engaged’ in the annual tech trade show.
As CES winds down in Las Vegas, one cloud hanging over the desert not often mentioned in all the coverage of newly unveiled gadgets was a prediction by the show’s host of how much prices for consumer electronics could jump due to the possibility of new tariffs.
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s threats to impose steep tariffs on goods from canada, China and two dozen other has left uncertainty as he prepares to take office. But at CES, the consumer electronics show in Las Vegas,
The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas will emphasize artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, and robots. Tech companies will also discuss potential impacts of tariffs hinted by US President-elect Donald Trump.
Kicking off CES on Tuesday morning in front of a packed crowd at the Venetian, the show’s organizers weren’t afraid of addressing the elephant in the room: President-elect Donald Trump will reenter the White House in two weeks.
The annual Consumer Electronics Show opens formally in Las Vegas tomorrow, but preceding days are packed with product announcements. AI would be a major theme of the show, along with autonomous vehicles ranging from tractors and boats to lawn mowers and golf club trollies.