CES 2024 Updates: The Most Interesting News and Gadgets from Tech's Big Show

READ TIME: 10 MIN.

CES 2024 kicks off in Las Vegas this week. The multi-day trade event put on by the Consumer Technology Association is set to feature swaths of the latest advances and gadgets across personal tech, transportation, health care, sustainability and more – with burgeoning uses of artificial intelligence almost everywhere you look.

The Associated Press will be keeping a running report of everything we find interesting from the floor of CES, from the most interesting developments in vehicle tech, to wearables designed to improve accessibility to the newest smart home gadgets.

Your Own Personal Bartender

Ryan Close loves a good cocktail, but he's the first to admit that he is a terrible bartender.

That's why, he said, he created Bartesian, a cocktail-making machine small enough to sit on your kitchen counter. Its newest iteration, the Premier, can hold up to four different types of spirits. It retails for $369 and will be available later this year.

On a small screen, you pick from 60 recipes – like a cosmopolitan or a white sangria – drop the cocktail capsule into the machine, and in seconds you have a cocktail over ice.

Lemon drop is Bartesian's most popular recipe, according to Close.

Letting the Right Ones In

It can be tricky to keep track of your furry friends in and out of the house – but a new pet door might make it a little easier.

Tech startup Pawport has unveiled a motorized pet door that will let your pet come and go as they please – while keeping other critters out. An accompanying collar tag will open the door when your pet is near. But there's also customizable guardrails.

The product, which can slide directly onto existing pet door frames, can be temporarily locked for specific pets or set to "curfews" using the Pawport app or with remote-control through compatible virtual assistants like Amazon's Alexa and Google Assistant.

Pawport's pet door and app are currently available for preorder and are set to make their ways into homes during the second quarter of 2024.

Smart Locks Go Biometric

It's 2024, of course your face can unlock your phone. And your front door is next.

Lockly, a tech company that specializes in smart locks, is showcasing a new lock with facial recognition technology that allows consumers to open doors without any keys. The new smart lock, dubbed "Visage," is set to hit the market this summer. In addition to facial recognition, this lock will feature a biometric fingerprint sensor and secure digital keypad for alternative ways of entry -- similar to past Lockly products. Visage is also compatible with Apple HomeKey and Apple Home.

AI Twinsies

Have you ever wondered what it's like to be a twin? Rex Wong, CEO of Hollo AI, says his company has created "AI personalization technology" that can create your digital twin in mere minutes after uploading a selfie and voice memos in a phone app expected to launch later this month.

Wong said he wanted to create a technology that could help digital creators and celebrities connect with their fans in a new way.

Standing next to a television screen projecting her AI clone, Los Angeles-based content creator McKenzi Brooke told AP that her digital twin will allow her to interact 24 hours a day with her followers across various social media platforms – and make money off of it.

"It's not a 9-to-5 job. It's a 24-hour job. There's no break," she said, noting that she posts more than 100 times a day just on Snapchat, a photo-sharing social media platform. "Now I have my AI twin who is able to talk to my audience, but it talks the way I would talk."

Playstation Controller Makes a Cameo Appearance at Sony Announcement

Sony Honda Mobility returned to the CES this year with some updates to its Afeela EV. While the car itself may not be any closer to moving out from being a concept, Sony had some fun with it: They drove it onto the stage with a PlayStation controller.

President of Sony Honda Mobility Izumi Kawanishi was quick to point out that Afeela owners likely won't be driving cars using controllers in the future.


Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Read These Next