If Day 1 of CES 2026 was about setting the vision, Day 2 was about showing the machinery behind it. The show floor opened fully, laptops replaced keynote slides, robots rolled into aisles, and health tech quietly stole attention from flashy TVs.
Day 2 felt practical, ambitious, and experimental all at once. This was the day when CES stopped talking about what might be possible and started showing how it will actually work.
Here’s everything important that was announced and showcased on Day 2 of CES 2026, and why it matters.
Industrial AI Takes the Spotlight
Siemens and Nvidia push AI into the physical world
One of the most important conversations on Day 2 came from Siemens and Nvidia, who doubled down on their partnership around industrial AI.
The focus was not consumer gadgets, but factories, infrastructure, and supply chains. Siemens highlighted how AI-driven simulations and digital twins are already reshaping manufacturing efficiency, while Nvidia positioned its AI platforms as the backbone enabling these transformations.
Why this matters
- AI is moving beyond screens and into physical systems.
- Digital twins allow companies to test changes virtually before touching real machines.
- This is where AI delivers measurable economic impact, not just convenience.
AI meets fusion energy
In a surprising but telling reveal, Siemens and Nvidia also highlighted collaboration with Commonwealth Fusion Systems.
The goal: use AI and simulation to accelerate fusion energy research by creating highly accurate digital models of experimental reactors.
This announcement hinted at something bigger than CES gadgets. AI is becoming a tool for solving civilization-scale problems, not just optimizing apps.
Robots Everywhere, and They’re Getting Practical
Arm reorganizes around “Physical AI”
Arm announced a major internal shift by creating a new Physical AI division, combining robotics and automotive efforts under one umbrella.
The message was clear: robots and autonomous machines are no longer fringe experiments. They are a core business.
What this signals
- Robotics and automotive AI share similar safety and reliability needs.
- Chips designed for phones are now foundational for machines that move in the real world.
- Physical AI is becoming a long-term growth pillar.
Airport robots that actually solve problems
Among the more grounded robotics demos came from Oshkosh, which showcased autonomous airport robots designed to speed up aircraft turnaround.
These robots focus on tasks like cleaning, cargo handling, and ground operations, aiming to reduce delays and improve efficiency at busy airports.
It wasn’t flashy, but it was one of the most realistic robotics use cases shown so far.
The stair-climbing robot vacuum
CES charm returned with Roborock, which unveiled a prototype robot vacuum capable of climbing stairs using leg-like mechanisms.
Still experimental, but it showed how even mature categories like robot vacuums are being reimagined with mechanical innovation and AI navigation.
AI Companions Enter the Desk
Razer experiments with AI personalities
Razer leaned hard into AI with two concepts:
- An AI-powered headset assistant
- A desktop AI companion designed to assist with gaming, productivity, and daily tasks
These weren’t finished products, but they revealed an emerging idea: AI as a persistent presence, not just a tool you open and close.
This category may feel strange now, but it mirrors how voice assistants once felt before becoming normal.
Health and Longevity Tech Quietly Shines
Withings Body Scan 2
Health tech drew serious attention on Day 2, led by Withings and its Body Scan 2 smart scale.
The device promises a rapid full-body scan capturing multiple health metrics, paired with software insights and long-term tracking.
Why this matters
- Health tech is shifting from fitness to preventive care.
- Consumers want actionable insights, not just numbers.
- CES is becoming a launchpad for serious medical-adjacent devices.
Day 2 Becomes Laptop Day
Once the show floor opened, laptops dominated the conversation.
Dell brings back the XPS spotlight
Dell officially unveiled the new XPS 14 and XPS 16.
Highlights included:
- Refined aluminum designs
- Updated displays, including advanced OLED options
- Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors
- A renewed focus on premium Windows laptops
Dell’s message was confidence. The XPS line is not chasing trends. It’s refining what already works.
Lenovo experiments with form factors again
Lenovo showcased a wide range of devices, but the standout was the ThinkPad Rollable concept.
A laptop screen that physically expands upward feels futuristic, but Lenovo framed it as a productivity tool, not a novelty.
Alongside this, Lenovo refreshed:
- Yoga Pro Aura Edition laptops
- Gaming-focused Legion and LOQ lines
- Thin-and-light productivity machines powered by next-gen chips
Lenovo continues to treat CES as a playground for ideas.
Asus ROG doubles down on performance spectacle
Asus and its ROG brand leaned into bold design with:
- Dual-screen laptop concepts
- High-performance gaming laptops
- A desktop featuring a visually striking holographic cooling fan
Not everything shown will ship, but Asus understands CES well. Sometimes attention is the product.
Phones and Connectivity Get Their Moment
Motorola enters the book-style foldable race
Motorola unveiled the Razr Fold, its first book-style foldable phone.
The focus was on:
- On-device AI features
- Stylus support
- Premium materials
This move signals Motorola’s intent to compete beyond nostalgia-driven flip phones.
Infinix explores satellite communication
Infinix showcased upcoming devices with satellite connectivity, alongside experimental cooling technology using piezoelectric materials.
This highlighted how advanced connectivity features are slowly moving into more affordable smartphone segments.
Displays Continue to Evolve
Crease-free foldable displays
Samsung Display showcased foldable display technology designed to minimize or eliminate visible creases.
While still a concept, it hints at more durable and visually seamless foldable devices in the near future.
TVs become canvases
LG continued to show how ultra-thin TVs can double as art displays, using AI-assisted workflows to generate or display artwork when not in use.
The message was subtle but powerful: screens should enhance a room, not dominate it.
CES Being CES: The Fun Stuff
No CES Day 2 would be complete without playful experiments.
- LEGO teased smart, interactive brick concepts blending physical play with digital intelligence.
- Exoskeleton demos appeared on the show floor, helping attendees walk miles of exhibition halls.
These moments may not define the industry, but they define CES.
What CES 2026 Day 2 Really Tells Us
Day 2 revealed:
- AI is becoming operational, not just impressive
- Laptops are the frontline of AI adoption
- Robotics is shifting from spectacle to utility
- Health tech is quietly becoming one of CES’s most serious categories


