Table of Contents
Introduction
CES, formerly the Consumer Electronics Show, is one of the largest tech trade conferences globally, held annually in Las Vegas. The event featured more than 4,500 exhibitors, including 1,400 innovative startups, and was attended by over 6,000 members of the media.
CES showcased the latest advancements and technology trends that address global challenges and shape the future. “CES is the birthplace of innovation,” stated Gary Shapiro, CEO and Vice Chair of the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), the organization that owns and produces CES.

The event brings together everything from the largest corporations to pioneering startups, encompassing the entire technology ecosystem. CES serves as the platform for launching revolutionary products, forming transformative partnerships, and experiencing unexpected business opportunities that will shape the future of technology.
About CES
CES is recognized as the leading global technology event, acting as the premier platform for revolutionary technologies and top innovators from around the world.
It serves as the hub where major international brands engage in business, establish new partnerships, and where the most creative minds unveil their latest innovations. Hosted and organized by the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), CES covers every segment of the technology industry.
CES 2025 by the Numbers

- 4,500+ Exhibitors featuring over 1,400 innovative startups alongside established companies
- 141,000+ Attendees including 40% international visitors from more than 150 countries, regions, and territories
- 6,000+ Media Professionals comprising global media outlets, content creators, and industry analysts
- Over 60% of Fortune 500 Companies participating and showcasing their latest technologies
- 300+ Conference Sessions delivered by more than 1,200 expert speakers across various tech disciplines
- 27,000+ News Stories and Content generated from extensive media coverage and event documentation
Major Technology Highlights

AI Drones

The drones showcased at CES 2025 emphasize cutting-edge AI capabilities, modular designs, and advanced safety features, setting a new benchmark for aerial technology across industries.
PABLO AIR: Drone Art Meets Innovation
- Launched the PabloX F40, a drone combining aerial fireworks with LED lighting, approved by the U.S. FAA for safety and innovation.
- Unveiled the PabloX Smart CLS, a system enabling efficient management of LED drones for synchronized art displays.
DIC Corporation: Pioneering Omnidirectional Drones
- Introduced the HAGAMOSphere™, a multicopter with eight diagonally mounted propellers for omnidirectional movement without tilting.
- Features a unique spherical drone guard for improved stability and safety during flights.
D-MAKERS Co., Ltd.: Modular and Intelligent Drones
- Showcased Nova, a modular drone with a dual-diamond aerodynamic design for reduced air resistance, ideal for industrial and environmental missions.
- Revealed the GIGA-STATION ground control system, enabling multi-drone operations, AI-powered autonomous surveillance, and manual mission distribution.
Artificial Intelligence

At CES 2025, the magic of technology powered by AI, AI tech enabled devices, and AI was everywhere. The synergy between humans and artificial intelligence was prominently showcased through dynamic exhibits and comprehensive programming.
AI in Consumer Products
- One of the most discussed AI innovations came from NVIDIA, whose new GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs showcased enhanced machine-learning capabilities, enabling real-time rendering for creators and gamers.
- Additionally, Samsung introduced its “Home AI,” a centralized platform that connects and controls smart home appliances using predictive AI for seamless user experiences.
- Taking the initiative, LG launched the Signature Smart Instaview microwave, which includes entertainment features and automatic sensors for ideal cooking.
- This microwave goes beyond just cooking food; it also streams cooking tutorials and connects with other smart kitchen appliances, creating a smooth meal preparation process.

Generative AI
- Generative AI also stole the spotlight. Startups like DeepSynth AI revealed tools capable of creating hyper-realistic audio, voiceovers, and even digital personas.
- Businesses discussed how AI could improve content creation, automate workflows, and even design entire marketing campaigns, saving time and effort across industries.
Digital Health

- Withings: Withings, a global leader in connected health since 2009, offers award-winning and clinically validated products like smart scales, hybrid smartwatches, blood pressure monitors, and sleep trackers used by millions worldwide.
- Health Monitoring Gadgets: Companies like Omnia Health introduced groundbreaking devices such as smart mirrors capable of monitoring vital signs. The prototype conducts 360-degree scans of the human body and provides a data-based breakdown of key health metrics, such as heart health and vitamin analysis.
- Chronic Disease Management: Startups like Eli Health gained attention for devices like the Hormometer, allowing users to measure hormone levels from home. With features like AI-based diagnostics, these devices promise to transform how people manage conditions such as diabetes, thyroid disorders, and even mental health.
- Mental Health Technology: Mental health was a major focus, with companies like CalmTech showcasing wearable stress-management devices. These gadgets provide real-time biofeedback, helping users navigate anxiety and maintain balance throughout the day.
AgeTech: Addressing the needs of an aging population, CES 2025 featured technologies aimed at improving the quality of life for seniors. Robots like Mirokai were designed for elderly care, offering companionship and assistance with daily tasks.
Energy transition

Smart Home Energy Systems
Smart energy systems that optimize energy usage in homes took center stage. Companies like EcoGrid debuted systems capable of monitoring power consumption in real-time and automatically shifting to renewable sources when available. These systems also provide detailed reports to help users understand and reduce their carbon footprints.
Portable Solar Solutions
For outdoor enthusiasts, portable solar gadgets like SunGo’s foldable solar chargers showcased a leap in efficiency. Compact, lightweight, and capable of charging multiple devices simultaneously, these innovations are set to revolutionize off-grid living.
Energy Storage Innovations
Advances in battery technology were another highlight. Products like Tesla’s PowerWall 3.0 were designed to store surplus energy more efficiently, while emerging startups introduced solid-state batteries promising safer, faster-charging, and longer-lasting power.
Global Pavilion

Global Pavilion at CES® were designated exhibition spaces where companies from a specific country came together to showcase their products and services.
These pavilions were typically organized and sponsored by the government of the participating nation or a trade association that promoted the country’s economic interests, cultural heritage, and business opportunities.
Exhibitors maintained their individual brand identity while benefiting from being part of a prominent and unified national presence.
Mobility

- Autonomous Vehicles: Self-driving cars made significant strides, with companies like Waymo and Tesla showcasing fully autonomous models. These vehicles integrate enhanced AI to improve navigation in urban environments, making them safer and more efficient for everyday use.

- Electric Vehicles (EVs): EV technology continues to evolve, with companies like Lucid Motors revealing cars with a range of over 500 miles on a single charge. These vehicles come equipped with fast-charging capabilities, allowing users to recharge up to 80% of the battery in less than 15 minutes.
- Personal Mobility Devices: Startups like GlideTech debuted innovative solutions like compact electric scooters that fold to the size of a backpack. Ideal for urban commuters, these devices combine convenience with eco-friendliness.
- Afeela: Sony Honda Mobility unveiled the Afeela 1, an electric sedan with a 91 kWh battery offering a 483 km range. Equipped with dual 241 hp motors and all-wheel drive, it features Tesla Supercharging compatibility and advanced driver assistance via Afeela Intelligent Drive.
Quantum Technology

Quantum computing and technology are no longer futuristic concepts, as demonstrated by the progress unveiled at CES 2025.
- Quantum Computers for Businesses: Major players like IBM showcased commercial quantum computing platforms that promise to revolutionize industries like pharmaceuticals, finance, and logistics. These computers perform complex calculations in seconds that would take traditional computers years.
- Quantum Encryption: Cybersecurity firms highlighted the growing importance of quantum encryption to safeguard sensitive data. This unhackable technology is seen as a critical defense against the next generation of cyber threats.
- Quantum Sensors: Quantum sensors also emerged as a key innovation, offering unprecedented accuracy for applications like medical imaging, environmental monitoring, and autonomous vehicles.
Robotics

Robotics at CES 2025 ranged from industrial applications to home-focused solutions.
- Open Droids: Open Droids showed off both of its mobile manipulators in Eureka Park, including the single-arm R1D1 and the dual-armed R2D3. Enchanted Tools also had a popular booth on the CES 2025 show floor, with its Mirokai robot charming visitors.
- Industrial Robotics: One notable innovation was the FlexoMax by CyberTech Robotics, which can adapt to complex manufacturing tasks using machine-learning algorithms. With precision handling, this robot promises to revolutionize industries like automotive and electronics assembly.
- Home Robotics: On the domestic side, Roborock Saros Z70 wowed attendees with its capability to clean homes autonomously while managing tasks like picking up objects or organizing clutter.
Sustainability

Sustainability was a recurring theme across all CES 2025 exhibits, emphasizing eco-conscious solutions for a better future.
- Eco-Friendly Products: Several exhibitors launched products made from recycled materials. For instance, GreenGadget’s smartphone cases are entirely biodegradable, while EarthTech showcased laptops with modular, recyclable components.
- Carbon-Neutral Initiatives: Big tech companies announced ambitious carbon-neutral goals. Google unveiled plans for a fully carbon-free supply chain by 2030, while smaller companies introduced innovative ways to offset emissions, such as solar-powered manufacturing facilities.
- Smart Agriculture: In the realm of agriculture, CES featured AI-driven farming robots and drones that reduce water and pesticide usage while maximizing yields, underscoring the potential for sustainable food production.
Wearables

Wearable technology is becoming smarter, sleeker, and more essential, and CES 2025 didn’t disappoint.
- Smart Glasses: The Halliday AI Smart Glasses emerged as one of the most exciting products, offering real-time language translation, audio enhancement, and even augmented reality (AR) overlays.
- Health-Focused Wearables: The Circular Ring 2, for instance, now includes advanced sleep analysis and heart rate monitoring. It not only tracks your vitals but provides recommendations to improve sleep cycles, helping wearers wake up feeling more refreshed.
- Enhanced Fitness Trackers: Fitness enthusiasts were drawn to Garmin’s Instinct 3 smartwatch. Its rugged design, solar-powered battery, and robust GPS capabilities make it the perfect companion for hiking, biking, or even extreme sports.

- Garmin Instinct 3 smartwatch: At CES 2025, Garmin unveiled the Instinct 3 smartwatch, a rugged device designed for outdoor enthusiasts. Available in AMOLED and solar-powered models, it offers enhanced battery life, with the AMOLED version lasting up to 24 days on a single charge and the solar model achieving unlimited battery life under certain conditions.
CES 2025 Startups at Eureka Park

Eureka Park is primarily made up of startups, entrepreneurs, and universities. It is where, in many cases, innovation begins. Eureka Park was packed, hosting 1,400 startups from 39 countries, including pavilions representing Africa, the European Union (EU), France, Italy, Israel, Japan, Korea, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Ukraine.
It served as a hub where innovators, investors, and the media gathered to explore technologies shaping the future in key areas like accessibility, AI, digital health, and sustainability.
Withings

A French health-tech firm, Withings unveiled ‘Omnia,’ a connected mirror that monitors health metrics daily using advanced sensors and AI, integrating technology into personal health management. As of 2025, the Withings app boasts more than 6 million global users and offers comprehensive health metrics, including weight tracking, heart rate monitoring, and sleep analysis.
WeWALK Limited (UK)

WeWALK, founded in 2017 by Kursat Ceylan, Gokhan Mericliler, and Sadik Unlu, aims to enhance mobility for the visually impaired. The WeWALK Smart Cane combines ultrasonic sensors to detect obstacles, a mobile app for GPS navigation, and real-time public transport updates. The latest model, WeWALK Smart Cane 2, integrates TDK’s advanced sensors, improved microphones, and a voice assistant for hands-free navigation and interaction.
Tewke

Founded in 2020 by Piers Daniell in London, Tewke is a climate tech startup focused on energy optimization and home automation. Tewke’s flagship product, Tap, is a smart light switch that installs easily without neutral wires or smart bulbs.
It monitors energy use with advanced sensors and provides personalized efficiency insights, addressing the 60% energy waste in homes. Debuting at CES 2025, Tap has earned recognition, including the Red Dot Award for Design Concept, for its innovative approach to reducing energy waste.
Vay

Vay, a Berlin-based deep tech company founded in 2018, focuses on “teledriving,” enabling vehicles to be operated remotely. Created by Thomas von der Ohe, Fabrizio Scelsi, and Bogdan Djukic—former autonomous driving experts from Silicon Valley—Vay aims to bridge the gap until fully autonomous vehicles become viable.
The technology enhances safety by addressing major causes of urban accidents, including speeding, intoxication, distraction, and fatigue. Teledrivers benefit from 360-degree vision, eliminating blind spots.
Skyted

Founded in 2021 by former Airbus VP Stéphane Hersen, Skyted is a French company specializing in silent communication. Inspired by the need for quiet in-flight calls, Hersen partnered with Frank Simon, an acoustics expert from ONERA, to develop their “No Noise In, No Voice Out” technology. This system absorbs 80% of voice frequencies, enabling private conversations in noisy environments.
Their key products include the Privacy Mask for travelers and professionals and the Silent Mask for gamers and travelers. Skyted secured €1.2M in funding in February 2024 and is showcasing its innovative masks at CES 2025.
FlowBeams

FlowBeams, a Dutch spin-off from the University of Twente, addresses needle phobia, waste from disposable needles, and safer injection methods with its BoldJet technology. BoldJet uses laser-induced cavitation to deliver needle-free injections in under a millisecond, reaching speeds of 100 km/h.
In March 2024, FlowBeams secured a €2.5 million European Innovation Council grant to commercialize its technology, starting with cosmetics and expanding to drug delivery. Recognized as a CES Innovation Awards® 2025 Honoree, FlowBeams will showcase BoldJet to industry leaders and investors at CES 2025.
CES 2025 Keynotes
NVIDIA

Jensen Huang, the founder and CEO of NVIDIA, captivated an audience of 6,300 attendees on Monday by launching the GeForce RTX 50, which outperforms the previous RTX 4090.
- At CES, NVIDIA unveiled Project DIGITS, a personal AI supercomputer built on the NVIDIA Grace Blackwell platform.
- The introduction of Project DIGITS, a personal AI supercomputer, signifies a monumental step toward making high-performance AI computing accessible to a broader audience.
- Designed for AI researchers, data scientists, students, and developers working with large models, DIGITS enables users to prototype, fine-tune, and run AI models locally, in the cloud, or within data centers.
- He also introduced Agentic AI, a real-time assistant designed to enhance consumer workflows. Agentic AI is a system of AI models or agents that can act autonomously, make decisions, and learn independently.
- Additionally, Huang presented the Cosmos World Foundation Model and generative AI tools aimed at improving robotics navigation.
- Emphasizing the role of AI in driving innovation, Huang announced a collaboration with Toyota to develop next-generation autonomous vehicles utilizing the safety-certified NVIDIA DriveOS.
SiriusXM

Jennifer Witz, CEO of SiriusXM, teamed up with Ashley Flowers, the top female podcaster in the United States and host of the popular podcast Crime Junkie, to present a keynote at the C Space stage.
- Their discussion delved into the convergence of technology, creativity, and storytelling within the audio industry.
- They explored the significance of authenticity, the transformative impact of AI on creative processes, and the ways to adapt to evolving consumer preferences.
X Corp.

Linda Yaccarino, CEO of X Corp., formerly known as Twitter, engaged in a conversation with renowned journalist Catherine Herridge about the future of digital communication.
- The dialogue highlighted X’s efforts to establish a “global newsroom in your pocket.”
- Yaccarino also emphasized the importance of Meta’s recent decision to adopt a community notes approach to content moderation, aligning with X’s innovative strategies.
Delta Air Lines at Sphere

In a historic first for CES, Delta Air Lines delivered a keynote at Sphere that impressed over 8,000 attendees.
- The immersive presentation highlighted Delta’s advancements in seamless travel, enhanced onboard experiences, and the future of aviation.
- Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, introduced the Delta Concierge service and announced new partnerships with Airbus, DraftKings, Joby, Uber, and YouTube.
- The keynote featured special appearances by actress Viola Davis, football legend Tom Brady, and GRAMMY-winning artist Lenny Kravitz, showcasing Delta’s latest innovations in travel technology.
Volvo Group

Martin Lundstedt, President and CEO of Volvo Group, reiterated the company’s dedication to creating a safer, more sustainable, and highly productive future.
- He urged policymakers and industry leaders to expedite the shift towards zero-emission vehicles and discussed Volvo’s partnership with Aurora.
- This collaboration aims to advance the development of safer, self-driving vehicles, reinforcing Volvo’s commitment to innovation in the automotive sector.
Accenture

Julie Sweet, Chair and CEO of Accenture, addressed how data, AI, and modern work methodologies are revolutionizing industries and tackling global challenges during a discussion with Julia Boorstin, CNBC’s senior media & tech correspondent.
- Sweet stressed the importance of building trust in AI technologies, particularly as AI systems become more autonomous in a society where trust is increasingly scarce.
- She also highlighted Accenture’s 25th annual Tech Vision, which outlines strategic pathways for leaders navigating an AI-dominated landscape.
Waymo

Tekedra Mawakana, co-CEO of Waymo, conversed with Bloomberg Technology’s Ed Ludlow about the company’s advancements in self-driving technology, specifically the Waymo Driver.
- Mawakana emphasized the importance of safety and the expansion of Waymo’s autonomous ride-hailing services to additional cities.
- She showcased recent technological improvements and shared Waymo’s vision for a safer and more accessible future in autonomous transportation.
Conclusion
CES 2025 successfully highlighted key innovations and trends that are set to define the future of technology. From artificial intelligence and digital health to energy transition and quantum computing, the event catalyzed technological advancement and global collaboration. CES continues to be the proving ground for breakthrough technologies and global innovators, fostering an environment where the future of technology comes to life.
As CES looks forward to its next edition in January 2026, readers are encouraged to attend and stay connected via CES platforms. Whether you’re a tech enthusiast, industry professional, or global innovator, CES remains the essential event for witnessing the future of technology.
Deepak Wadhwani has over 20 years experience in software/wireless technologies. He has worked with Fortune 500 companies including Intuit, ESRI, Qualcomm, Sprint, Verizon, Vodafone, Nortel, Microsoft and Oracle in over 60 countries. Deepak has worked on Internet marketing projects in San Diego, Los Angeles, Orange Country, Denver, Nashville, Kansas City, New York, San Francisco and Huntsville. Deepak has been a founder of technology Startups for one of the first Cityguides, yellow pages online and web based enterprise solutions. He is an internet marketing and technology expert & co-founder for a San Diego Internet marketing company.