2026年国际消费电子展全揭秘:从英伟达新品首秀、AMD全新芯片,到雷蛇人工智能奇趣新品。

内容总结:
2026年国际消费电子展(CES)近日在拉斯维加斯落下帷幕。本届展会延续了人工智能作为核心焦点的趋势,但“具身智能”取代去年的“智能体”成为最受关注的话题,并与机器人技术深度融合,成为贯穿展会的主线。
芯片巨头英伟达发布了面向自动驾驶汽车的开源AI模型工具集Alpamayo,并宣布其新一代Rubin计算架构将于今年下半年开始取代Blackwell架构。此外,英伟达还与卡特彼勒合作推出“Cat AI助手”试点项目,推动AI在工程机械领域的应用。
AMD首席执行官苏姿丰在开幕主题演讲中,携手OpenAI总裁格雷格·布罗克曼等合作伙伴,重点展示了其Ryzen AI 400系列处理器,旨在通过个人电脑扩展AI的应用范围。
汽车领域,福特宣布其AI助手将于2027年前装上车,目前已在手机应用程序中先行推出。现代汽车则展示了其与波士顿动力和谷歌AI实验室的合作,共同研发新一代Atlas人形机器人。
众多新奇产品同样吸引眼球。Clicks Technology推出的Communicator手机以实体键盘设计唤起黑莓记忆;eufyMake推出的E1 UV打印机降低了个人进行物件批量印刷的门槛;LG的家用机器人CLOiD则进行了概念演示。
其他值得关注的动态包括:亚马逊为其Alexa+推出网页版及更新应用程序;Razer公布了类似智能眼镜功能的Project Motoko和桌面AI伴侣Project AVA;乐高首次参展,闭门展示了其具有声光互动功能的智能积木系统。
总体而言,CES 2026清晰地展现了人工智能从数字世界迈向物理世界的产业化趋势,消费电子与机器人、汽车、智能家居等领域的结合日益紧密。
中文翻译:
2026年国际消费电子展(CES)在拉斯维加斯渐近尾声,消费科技行业及其周边从业者已陆续踏上归途。过去几天,英伟达、索尼、AMD等行业巨头相继发布多项公告,众多中小企业和初创公司也通过"新品揭幕"活动及展台竞相吸引关注。
与过去两年情况相似,人工智能仍是众多企业宣传的核心焦点,但长久以来定义这一年度盛会的硬件升级与新奇产品依然在展台及周边发布会中占据一席之地。今年,实体人工智能(physical AI)取代去年大热的智能体人工智能(agentic AI),成为展会最热门的话题。伴随这一趋势,机器人技术也成为焦点——从展馆各处到多场新闻发布会,机器人演示随处可见。
若想重温我们现场团队的实时反应与观点,可通过此处直播博客回溯时间线。接下来,让我们深入盘点本届CES最具影响力的重要发布。
Equity播客全景解读2026 CES得失
若您更偏爱音频或视频内容,欢迎收听最新一期Equity播客节目(详细解析我们对展会的观察),或通过下方YouTube观看完整视频。
英伟达发布自动驾驶AI模型,展示Rubin架构
英伟达首席执行官黄仁勋在CES发表预期中的长篇主题演讲,在庆祝公司AI领域成就的同时,为2026年发展奠定基调,并现场与多款机器人互动。
为满足AI应用激增的计算需求而开发的Rubin计算架构,将于今年下半年开始逐步取代Blackwell架构。新架构在速度与存储方面均有升级,我们的资深AI编辑Russell Brandom将深入解析Rubin架构的独特之处。
英伟达持续推动AI革命向实体世界拓展,展示了将于今年应用于自动驾驶汽车的Alpamayo系列开源AI模型与工具。正如资深记者Rebecca Bellan所指出的,这一策略与公司更广泛的布局一脉相承:致力于将其基础设施打造为通用机器人领域的"安卓系统"。
加入Disrupt 2026候补名单
立即加入Disrupt 2026科技大会候补名单,即可在早鸟票开售时优先获得购票资格。往届大会曾邀请谷歌云、Netflix、微软、Box、Phia、a16z、ElevenLabs、Wayve、Hugging Face、Elad Gil、Vinod Khosla等250多位行业领袖登台,呈现200多场助力企业成长与提升竞争力的专题会议。您还将邂逅数百家跨领域创新的初创企业。
AMD主题演讲聚焦新处理器与合作伙伴
AMD董事长兼首席执行官苏姿丰带来CES首场主题演讲,OpenAI总裁Greg Brockman、AI领域先驱李飞飞、Luma AI首席执行官Amit Jain等多位合作伙伴共同亮相。
除合作伙伴展示外,资深记者Rebecca Szkutak详细解读了AMD如何通过锐龙AI 400系列处理器,在个人电脑端拓展AI应用版图。
CES新奇产品精选
坦率而言,展会至此重大发布已尘埃落定,产品展示也接近尾声,现在正是聚焦CES那些令人瞠目的新奇产品的时刻。我们已整理出部分引人注目的独特产品清单,并期待您提供更多建议!
CES专题会议亮点集锦
CES不仅是硬件展示的舞台,众多行业论坛与演讲同样吸引目光。我们追踪记录了若干精彩片段:从Palmer Luckey推崇复古美学,到"一次学习,终身受用"时代可能终结的探讨,再到硅谷题材新剧《The Audacity》的预告,以及Roku 3美元流媒体服务的扩张计划,乃至All-In节目主持人Jason Calacanis悬赏2.5万美元征集正版Theranos检测设备。
福特AI助手首发
福特将在其应用程序中率先推出AI助手,目标于2027年搭载于车载系统。该服务由谷歌云提供托管支持,助手本身基于现有大型语言模型构建。但正如我们在报道中指出,关于驾驶者实际使用体验的具体细节目前披露甚少。
卡特彼勒与英伟达合作开发自动化工程机械
在AI赋能实体世界的浪潮中,卡特彼勒与英伟达宣布启动"Cat AI助手"试点项目,并于周三在CES进行演示。该系统将应用于卡特彼勒的挖掘机设备,同时双方还推进另一项合作:利用英伟达Omniverse仿真资源辅助建筑项目规划与实施。
Clicks Communicator真机体验
本届展会最受瞩目的新品之一,是Clicks Technology推出的首款手机——售价499美元的Communicator。其物理键盘设计令人重温黑莓时代,另有售价79美元的滑出式物理键盘配件可适配其他设备。
我们在展台的完整体验报告显示,Communicator给人良好的第一印象。消费电子编辑Sarah Perez评价道:
"真机握持感舒适——重量适中且易于抓握。Gadway(公司代表)透露,团队经过数十次3D打印模型迭代才确定最终形态。手机的曲面背板设计令拾取和握持更为便捷。
"设备屏幕略微凸出机身,底部边框向上弯曲形成凹陷区域,确保手机正面朝下放置时键盘得到保护。"
LG家用机器人CLOiD初显笨拙
LG在CES的展示重点聚焦机器人领域,家用机器人CLOiD是其核心展品。那么当它离开发布会舞台进入真实场景后表现如何?且看资深撰稿人Lucas Ropek的直观感受:
"遗憾的是,在我观看的演示中,CLOiD并未展现太多功能。只见它极其缓慢地从篮中取出一件衬衫放入烘干机,又拾起牛角包(同样动作迟缓地)放进烤箱。除机器人现场演示外,发布会还穿插播放了精制宣传视频,展示机器人在多种假设场景中为潜在用户提供服务的画面。"
eufyMake UV打印机:Etsy创作者的理想工具
长期应用于工业领域的UV直喷打印机,以往因价格高昂令个人用户却步。但eufyMake E1计划于今年晚些时候以2299美元的价格上市,使得个人批量印制马克杯、水瓶、手机壳等产品成为可能。Lucas Ropek在此带来更多初体验报告。
办公空间选址新方案
MyCommuters提出创新办公空间解决方案,通过分析通勤时间、成本等多维度数据集,帮助企业找到既符合市场条件又利于员工福祉的理想办公地点,而非简单选择市场上最显眼的选项。Sean O’Kane在此详细解读创始人Guillaume Acier创立公司的理念。
Skylight Calendar 2智能日历亮相
这款家庭规划工具在展台上引人注目,不仅因其日历与规划功能,更凭借其AI能力:能同步多来源日历、根据信息或照片创建待办事项、设置预约提醒等。点击此处查看完整体验报告。
波士顿动力与谷歌合作开发Atlas机器人
现代汽车的新闻发布会重点介绍其与波士顿动力的机器人合作,但两家公司透露正与谷歌AI研究实验室(而非竞争对手)合作,训练和操作现有Atlas机器人及台上展示的新一代人形机器人。交通编辑Kirsten Korosec带来全面解读。
亚马逊拓展Alexa与Ring生态版图
亚马逊以AI为核心的Alexa+升级在CES获得强力推广:公司为早期体验用户推出可通过浏览器使用的Alexa.com聊天机器人,并发布焕然一新的机器人专属应用。消费电子编辑Sarah Perez详解相关进展,同时带来亚马逊Fire TV升级版及内置Alexa+功能的全新Artline电视信息。
在Ring产品线方面,消费电子记者Ivan Mehta梳理了从火灾警报到第三方摄像头集成的应用商店等多重发布。
雷蛇携Project AVA与Motoko加入AI浪潮
过去雷蛇在CES总以夸张硬件吸睛:从三屏笔记本到触觉游戏坐垫,乃至让公司收到联邦罚单的口罩。今年两大瞩目发布分别是:功能类似智能眼镜却无需佩戴眼镜的Project Motoko,以及将AI伴侣虚拟形象置于桌面的Project AVA。您可通过概念视频自行感受。
乐高智能积木首秀CES
乐高首次参展CES,以闭门展示形式呈现智能游戏系统。包含积木、底板和人仔在内的组件均可互动发声,首发套装均采用《星球大战》主题。资深撰稿人Amanda Silberling在此呈现完整报道。
英文来源:
CES 2026 is winding down in Las Vegas, as the consumer tech industry and everyone swarming around it begin their return flights home. Over the past few days, we saw a slew of announcements from mainstays like Nvidia, Sony, and AMD, along with smaller companies and startups vying for attention through the Unveiled event (CES’s showcase for new products) and across the show floor.
As has been the case for the past two years, AI was at the forefront of many companies’ messaging, though the hardware upgrades and oddities that have long defined the annual event still have their place on the show floor and in adjacent announcements. This year, physical AI was particularly prominent, taking the place that agentic AI held last year as the show’s buzzy topic. That focus on physical AI came alongside a big focus on robotics, with robots demonstrated all over the show and showcased in numerous press events.
To relive the reactions and thoughts from our team on the ground, you can go back in time via our live blog right here. Otherwise, let’s dive into some of the biggest and most notable announcements from CES.
Equity sums up the highs, and lows, of CES 2026
If audio or video are more your thing, then head right to the latest episode of our Equity podcast, which goes into detail about what we thought about the show, or watch the full episode below on YouTube.
Nvidia reveals AI model for autonomous vehicles, showcases Rubin architecture
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivered an expectedly lengthy presentation at CES, taking a victory lap for the company’s AI-driven successes, setting the stage for 2026, and yes, hanging out with some robots.
The Rubin computing architecture, which has been developed to meet the increasing computation demands that AI adoption creates, is set to begin replacing Blackwell architecture in the second half of this year. It comes with speed and storage upgrades, but our senior AI editor Russell Brandom goes into the nitty-gritty of what distinguishes Rubin.
And Nvidia continued its push to bring the AI revolution into the physical world, showcasing its Alpamayo family of open source AI models and tools that will be used by autonomous vehicles this year. That approach, as senior reporter Rebecca Bellan notes, mirrors the company’s broader efforts to make its infrastructure the Android for generalist robots.
Join the Disrupt 2026 Waitlist
Add yourself to the Disrupt 2026 waitlist to be first in line when Early Bird tickets drop. Past Disrupts have brought Google Cloud, Netflix, Microsoft, Box, Phia, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Hugging Face, Elad Gil, and Vinod Khosla to the stages — part of 250+ industry leaders driving 200+ sessions built to fuel your growth and sharpen your edge. Plus, meet the hundreds of startups innovating across every sector.
Join the Disrupt 2026 Waitlist
Add yourself to the Disrupt 2026 waitlist to be first in line when Early Bird tickets drop. Past Disrupts have brought Google Cloud, Netflix, Microsoft, Box, Phia, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Hugging Face, Elad Gil, and Vinod Khosla to the stages — part of 250+ industry leaders driving 200+ sessions built to fuel your growth and sharpen your edge. Plus, meet the hundreds of startups innovating across every sector.
AMD’s keynote highlights new processors and partnerships
AMD chair and CEO Lisa Su delivered the first keynote of CES, with a presentation that featured partners, including OpenAI president Greg Brockman, AI legend Fei-Fei Li, Luma AI CEO Amit Jain, and more.
Beyond the partner showcases, senior reporter Rebecca Szkutak detailed AMD’s approach toward expanding the reach of AI through personal computers using its Ryzen AI 400 Series processors.
The standout oddities of CES
Let’s face it, by this point in the show the major announcements have been made, products have been showcased, and it’s time to eye some of the most brow-raising reveals from CES. We started our list of what stood out to us as odd and noteworthy, but we’re open to more suggestions!
Highlights from CES breakout sessions
CES isn’t all hardware showcases and show floor attractions — there are plenty of additional industry panels and speakers drawing eyeballs. We kept tabs on a few notable highlights, ranging from Palmer Luckey pushing retro aesthetics, to why the “learn once, work forever” era may be over, to previews of the new Silicon Valley-based series “The Audacity,” to the expansion of Roku’s $3 streaming service, to All-In host Jason Calacanis putting a $25,000 bounty on an authentic Theranos device.
Ford’s AI assistant debuts
Ford is launching its assistant in the company’s app before a targeted 2027 release in its vehicles, with hosting managed by Google Cloud and the assistant itself built using off-the-shelf LLMs. As we noted in our coverage of the news, however, few details were offered around what drivers should expect from their experience with the assistant.
Caterpillar, Nvidia partner on automated construction equipment
As part of the ever-present push for AI’s impact on the physical world, Caterpillar and Nvidia announced a pilot program, “Cat AI Assistant,” which was demonstrated at CES Wednesday. This system, coming to one of Caterpillar’s excavator vehicles, is happening alongside another project to use Nvidia’s Omniverse simulation resources to help with construction project planning and execution.
Hands-on with Clicks Communicator
One of the buzziest reveals of the show is the debut phone from Clicks Technology, the $499 Communicator, which brings back BlackBerry vibes with its physical keyboard, plus a separate $79 slide-out physical keyboard that can be used with other devices.
Check out our full rundown from the show floor here, but the Communicator makes a good first impression, per Consumer Editor Sarah Perez:
“In our hands-on test, the phone felt good to hold — not too heavy or light, and was easy to grip. Gadway told me the company settled on the device’s final form after dozens of 3D-printed shapes. The winning design for the phone features a contoured back that makes it easy to pick up and hold.
“The device’s screen is also somewhat elevated off the body, and its chin is curved up to create a recess that protects the keys when you place it face down.”
LG’s home robot CLOiD makes a sluggish first impression
A big part of LG’s CES presentation was dedicated to its robotics efforts, with home robot CLOiD as a prominent figurehead. And how did the robot fare once it was off the press conference stage and out in the wild? We’ll let Senior Writer Lucas Ropek’s impressions speak for themselves:
“Unfortunately, at the presentation I saw, CLOiD didn’t do a whole lot. I saw the bot very gingerly take a shirt out of a basket and place it into a dryer. I also saw it pick up a croissant and (again, very gingerly) place it into an oven. In addition to the live performance from the bot, the presentation was intercut with highly produced videos of the bot in a number of hypothetical scenarios where it might prove useful to potential users.”
eufyMake UV printer is an Etsy maker’s dream
Long used in industrial settings, UV printers that can print ink directly onto objects have been prohibitively expensive for individuals to own. But the eufyMake E1 is set to launch for $2,299 later this year, which makes bulk printing on things like mugs, water bottles, and phone cases a bit more attainable for individuals. Lucas Ropek has more first impressions here.
A new way to find and purchase office space
MyCommuters has a novel take on creating office space by helping companies find locations that are beneficial to them and their employees. The platform pulls together different datasets to examine commute time, expenses, and other factors to identify an ideal spot for an office, not just the easiest thing to spot that’s on the market. Sean O’Kane has more reporting on the idea that drove founder Guillaume Acier to start the company here.
Check out the Skylight Calendar 2
This family planning tool caught our eye on the show floor, not just for its calendar and planning capabilities, but for its AI capabilities that are able to sync calendars from different sources; create new to-dos based off of messages or photos, appointment reminders; and more. Check out our full impressions here.
Boston Dynamics and Google partner on Atlas robots
Hyundai’s press conference focused on its robotics partnerships with Boston Dynamics, but the companies revealed that they’re working with Google’s AI research lab rather than competitors to train and operate existing Atlas robots, as well as a new iteration of the humanoid robot that was shown onstage. Transportation editor Kirsten Korosec has the full rundown.
Amazon expands Alexa, Ring’s footprints even further
Amazon’s AI-centric update with Alexa+ is getting the kind of push you’d expect at CES, with the company launching Alexa.com for Early Access customers looking to use the chatbot via their browsers, along with a similar, revamped bot-focused app. Consumer editor Sarah Perez has the details, along with news on Amazon’s revamp to Fire TV and new Artline TVs, which have their own Alexa+ push.
On the Ring front, consumer reporter Ivan Mehta runs through the many announcements, from fire alerts to an app store for third-party camera integration, and more.
Razer joins the AI deluge with Project AVA and Motoko
In the past, Razer has been all about ridiculous hardware at CES, from three-screen laptops to haptic gaming cushions to a mask that landed the company a federal fine. This year, its two attention-grabbing announcements were for Project Motoko, which aims to function similarly to smart glasses, but without the glasses.
Then there’s Project AVA, which puts the avatar of an AI companion on your desk. We’ll let you watch the concept video for yourself.
Lego Smart Bricks mark the company’s first CES appearance
Lego joined CES for the first time to hold a behind-closed-doors showcase of its Smart Play System, which includes bricks, tiles, and Minifigures that can all interact with each other and play sounds, with both the debut sets having a Star Wars theme. Senior writer Amanda Silberling has all the details here.
文章标题:2026年国际消费电子展全揭秘:从英伟达新品首秀、AMD全新芯片,到雷蛇人工智能奇趣新品。
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