Every CES is a window into the technological future. For us tech reporters and reviewers, it’s also a lot of wandering around, bending over hordes of people to look at a laptop, and furiously snapping images of devices. But with tonnes of material that truly seem like the future, this year’s CES made all our combined efforts here at Gizoasis valuable. Yes, that covers robotic arm-equipped vacuums.
What follows is neither exhaustive nor a “best of” list. It is a list of the items unveiled at CES 2025 that inspired WANT. And, reader, this year, there were rather a lot of those.
Roborock Saros Z70 (CES)

We knew about this one ahead of time, and it would be popular, but we were unaware that two of them would exist.
Roborock Saros Z70 is a robotic Hoover cleaner with a projecting robotic arm capable of picking objects like socks from the floor. Though I’m not sure how practical this will be in daily usage, it’s cooler than any other robotic Hoover cleaner I have seen thus far.
Wait, however, there’s more. Dreame, a firm that also produces robotic vacuums, presented at CES 2025 a robot vacuum with a projecting robotic appendage of its own. Currently, in prototype form, it will most likely enter the market somewhat later than the Roborock Saros Z70, which should become accessible in April 2025.
Nvidia Digits (CES)

I do not quite need a desk-sized supercomputer from Nvidia. I create and test artificial intelligence apps. But every computer geek’s fantasy: think about a really strong computer (maybe Nvidia GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, 128GB of memory, and up to 4TB of storage) you could afford, set on your desk, and conceal behind a book (you won’t do that, but you could).
With a starting price of $3,000, the Nvidia Digits might completely transform the development of AI apps when it reaches the market in May, running huge language models with up to 200 billion parameters—roughly the size of ChatGPT 3.5.
Anker Solix Solar Beach Umbrella

Didn’t you realize you required a solar beach umbrella? Now, however, you know, and indeed you absolutely do need it.
Indeed, there are other less stylish methods you might use to chill your beverages. Anker’s electric cooler has a battery strong enough to last 52 hours; hence, you could even buy it without the solar canopy. But the umbrella will make you, by far, the hippest nerd on the shore.
(We’re kidding; there isn’t such a title as “coolest geek on the beach”).
Should you choose the Anker Solix Solar Beach Umbrella, your electric beverage cooler and other devices will run up to 100W of electricity, and you will have sun and rain protection. Nothing greater than this exists.
Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 (CES)

Nvidia releasing new RTX 50-series graphics cards was the worst-kept secret ahead of CES 2025; sure enough, the firm complied.
The show’s highlight is the GeForce RTX 5090, a card said to have double the performance of its predecessor, the powerful RTX 490. The specifics are a little more hazy than we would like, as a portion of this performance increase comes from Nvidia’s DLSS 4 innovation, which increases fps with AI—a capability not supported by most games available.
Still, a new king comes into town, and for the amazing sum of $1,399, it will enable you to play even the toughest games available.
Should that sound like a lot (it is), you may choose the more reasonably priced $999 RTX 5080, the $799 5070 Ti, or the RTX 5070, which retails for $549. Although you won’t get the flagship performance, these should all surpass the 40-series cards, which is significant if you enjoy gaming.
Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 6

Imagine yourself seated at a café buying an espresso. You grab a laptop, open it, and then the screen towers. Also taller. Then taller till it unrolls to be 16.7 inches and with a 2,000 x 2,350 resolution. You rule this diner right now. Even the usually apathetic barista is noticing your powerful laptop.
Apart from geeky wet fantasies, the Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 is one useful tool. Though it’s essentially a regular laptop, its rollable OLED display provides you with a good bit of more screen real estate. I can’t think of a reason you would reject it.
Alright, one explanation is that when it comes time for market release in June, this gadget will cost $3,499. Alright, it explains such a large portion. Damn you, money, and the absence of rain.
Segway Xyber (CES)

Segway presented a lot of new personal electric vehicles at CES 2025 after formerly being renowned for the two-wheeled carriers that lost their way to e-scooters and e-bikes in the late 2010s.
But the Segway Xyber caught my attention first. Though it can accelerate from 0 to 20 mph in only 2.7 seconds, it’s a type of mix between a race bike and a tough e-bicycle and still has pedals if you choose to keep using your power. With 112 miles of range from the huge, 2,880 Wh battery, you could almost take this one almost anyplace.
LG UltraFine 6K

Indeed, this is the first 32-inch, 6K display with Thunderbolt 5 capability; hence, it should go nicely with M4 Pro MacBook Pros and Mac Minis.
Indeed, not all of the specs—including refresh rate—are known to us. Or cost. Alternatively, the availability date. (That is about it; we do know it features a Nano IPS Black panel with a broad color spectrum spanning 99.5% of Adobe RGB and 98% of DCI-P3).
But simply glance at the item. Its bezels are almost non-existent. Just a lovely 6K display on a stand with a similarly understated architectural style. Perfect for my MacBook Pro would be this. LG keeps me away from knowing the price. Just kindly. Just let me savor this.
Honda 0 SUV and Honda 0 Saloon (CES)

Though Honda initially revealed them last January, during CES 2024, their new 0 Series electric car concepts are not quite new. The Honda 0 SUV and the newest edition of the Honda 0 Saloon have now arrived, and they look much better than before. These prototypes are, if there ever were, vehicles screaming “the future, but as it was imagined in the 1980s.”.
When the real mass market models go on sale in 2026, first in the United States, then in Japan and Europe, let’s just hope they remain very close to this design.
Wait, do you require specs? Sorry about that: Honda hardly shared at all. Honda’s ASIMO OS will run them, so they should arrive with Level 3 autonomous driving. About the batteries or the engine, we know nothing. Still, they look fantastic; for now, that will be enough.
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