Foldable phones, powerful chips and giant TVs: CES 2023 highlights
CES officially kicks off Thursday in Las Vegas, but the world’s biggest electronics companies aren’t waiting until then to preview their big products for 2023. On Tuesday, we got a look at what the likes of Samsung, LG, Nvidia, and Dell will be bringing to CES 2023. : beautiful TVs, wild gaming rigs and even a concept device or two.
This page features the biggest and best news from CES 2023. It will be updated during the week. Wednesday is a particularly big day: CES is “media day,” when companies like Sony, LG, and Samsung hold keynotes showcasing their biggest announcements. Intel and Nvidia have already played their hand at CES – details below – and AMD will be going next Wednesday.
This is the first real, From 2020, CES in person – the pandemic indicated that 2021 was completely far away and that 2022 saw a 70% decrease compared to 2020. After media day, CNET will be at the show, finding the weirdest, craziest and best. preview. Here’s all the CES 2023 tech you need to know so far.
Samsung’s Flex Hybrid concept features a rollable and bendable screen.
Samsung screen
CES looks to the future
It’s easy to get caught up in the glitz and glamor of CES, but this show is all about marketing. Big companies are taking the opportunity to launch their 2023 products with lavish fanfare. But what makes CES special, and dare I say it, even fun, is your products can’t get Concept products are less likely to be “later this year” than “maybe 2033”.
CES is only a day old, but we’ve already seen a few of these tantalizing potential products.
Samsung has already introduced a number of technologies oven powered by artificial intelligence Who can tell if his food is burnt. He also gave us a look at an enticing concept phone, hybrid flex. As shown in the model above, it can tilt like the left side of the Flex Hybrid Galaxy Foldand the right side can be slid to extend.
The concept comes courtesy of Samsung Display, not the mobile arm of the South Korean megacorp responsible for making and selling phones. But a press release showing the concept promises that it will bring “innovative OLED products of all sizes, small, medium and large, to glimpse the future of displays” to CES. Samsung isn’t the only company toying with the future of phones – check out TCL’s 2020 Sliding Display – watch this space for more flip, fold and slide devices.
Dell Nyx concept controller.
Josh Goldman/CNET
Another company showing its vision for the future is Dell through its Nyx concept range. Perhaps the most notable product is its Nyx game controller. At first glance, it looks a lot like another third-party Xbox controller, but with some fancy lights. Unfortunately, it is more than that. The Nyx controller has a bunch of hidden inputs that enhance the functionality of the controller.
The idea seems to be to bridge the gap between gamepad and keyboard. PC gamers can use hotkeys to have dozens more inputs than a typical gamepad, which is often limited to the options provided by the d-pad. This means they can use a wider range of attacks in an MMO, or cycle between six or seven weapons in a first-person shooter, rather than the two or three that console players have.
The Nyx controller has a central fingerprint reader, touch sensors below the shoulder buttons that let you swipe your finger for different effects, dual scroll wheels below the central area, and thumb toggles. face This last feature alone doubles the gamepad inputs.
It’s not the most dazzling concept device ever, but the humble gamepad has changed little over the past two decades. Stages like these are a stepping stone for those who enjoy playing on both console and PC.
The chip war between Intel and Nvidia
Bright screens and dazzling displays are nice, but it’s often the technology you don’t see the most.
Start with Intel’s keynote Tuesday before CES. It introduced many of the new 13th generation processors that will power a wide range of products. The main processor is its high-powered Core H-Series processor, which will be the first 24-core processor designed for use in laptops. The chip can run as fast as 5.6GHz, with eight cores dedicated to heavy tasks like gaming and rendering. At the other end of the spectrum is the Core i3 N series, which boosts performance for entry-level notebooks – arguably a more important focus. In the coming days, we will see new laptops with Intel’s new processors announced at CES.
The improvements they can bring are less abstract than chip performance. The new generation of Intel processors brings Unison, which lets iPhone and Android devices send and receive texts from your computer, as well as Thunderbolt 4, which will let you run two 4K external displays as standard, among other improvements. . Again, expect to see these features in product announcements over the next few days.
Nvidia brings GeForce Now to your car.
Nvidia
Then there’s Nvidia. Chief among its announcements are improvements to GeForce Now, a cloud gaming service that lets you stream games to laptops, phones and more. In short, the power of Nvidia’s GeForce 4080 GPU comes to the cloud. If you subscribe to the premium level of GeForce Now, now known as GeForce Now Ultimate, you can now stream games at 240Hz, use ray tracing (significantly improves in-game light rendering) and DLSS 3 (uses an algorithm for upscaling). frame rate while maintaining image quality).
Plus, GeForce Now is coming to cars. If your car has a screen on the dashboard, you can play while parking. If there are screens behind the driver or passenger seats, those sitting behind can play on the road. For starters, Nvidia has partnered with Hyundai, BYB and Polestar.
Finally, Nvidia introduced its RTX 40 series notebooks – notebooks that will run on mobile graphics cards. He pointed out that non-gaming 14-inch laptops such as the Lenovo Yoga Pro 14 and ZenBook Pro 14 with RTX 4070, 4060 or 4050 mobile chips will be available in late February starting at $999.
The Alienware x14 is the thinnest 14-inch gaming laptop ever.
Josh Goldman/CNET
Thinner and lighter at CES 2023
Speaking of laptops, there will be plenty of them at CES 2023. Alienware surprised us Four new laptops ahead of CES, including the Alienware x14, which the company claims is the world’s thinnest 14-inch gaming laptop. Featuring a 2560 x 1600 display with a 165Hz refresh rate, it will be available for $1799 when it ships this winter. The larger version, the Alienware x16, starts at $3,099.
These laptops are for people who are willing to sacrifice power for sleeker designs. If you only care about brute power, the Alienware M18 might be more your bag. It’s Alienware’s most powerful laptop to date: 18 inches and up to 9TB of storage, loaded with Intel or AMD processors and Nvidia or Radeon graphics.
Here are two laptops that won’t be the sexiest at CES, but may be the best for many buyers Dell’s new G15 and G16 gaming laptops. Dell’s G-series is always a hit among budget gaming laptops, and the G15 and G16 bring some of Alienware’s plush design touches to make it even better. New models are expected in the spring, with the Dell G15 starting at around $849 and the G16 starting at $1,499.
The Dell G15 and G16, budget gaming laptops, will start at $849 and $1,499.
Josh Goldman/CNET
Meanwhile, LG is touting “thin and light” with its notebooks and premium OLEDs. It showcased its new Gram Style laptop, which features a hidden touchpad that only appears when you touch the palm rest and an 11-millimeter Gram Ultraslim device. Somehow, up to 32 GB of RAM and 1 TB of storage are packed into this tiny frame, along with a 13th generation Intel chip.
At CES, the South Korean electronics giant will battle South Korean electronics giant Samsung for TV supremacy, not laptops. LG said it’s bringing several new models to the show, including the OLED C3, the follow-up to last year’s C2, which CNET TV guru David Katzmaiar called “the best high-end TV for the price.” Samsung hopes to compete with its own QLED displays, including the QLED displays it will show at CES Extends up to 98 inches.