![]() The OLED screen matters because the technology promises a visibly crisper 3D rendering. ![]() Its OLED screen produces a 3D experience sans glasses, much like competitor Acer's similar IPS version. Images leap off the screen of this Asus laptop - not literally, but close. Read more: Why We're Excited about Foldable Phones Again A laptop in (glasses-free) 3DĪsus joins Acer for laptops with glasses-free 3D, but hitches its wagon to OLED instead of IPS. But the press release touting the concept promised it'll bring to CES "innovative OLED products of all sizes, small, medium and large, to provide a glimpse into the future of displays." Samsung isn't the only company tinkering with the future of phones - see TCL's 2020 scrolling display - so watch this space for more flipping, folding and scrolling devices. The concept comes courtesy of Samsung Display, not the Mobile arm of the South Korean megacorporation responsible for making and selling phones. As the demo above shows, the left side of the Flex Hybrid can fold, like the Galaxy Fold, while the right side can slide out to extend itself. Samsung gave us a look at a tantalizing mobile device concept, the Flex Hybrid. Samsung showcased its display concepts at CES 2023. It's more tiny Android tablet than Steam Deck copycat, but the specs are impressive, and the $400 price tag ain't bad either. 26, the long-teased Razer Edge could give the Nintendo Switch and the Steam Deck a run for their money. There's a new handheld gaming device in town. Read more: Best Gaming Laptops From CES 2023 So Far Move over, Switch and Steam Deck Featuring two screens and multiple configuration options (stacked vertically or side-by-side with the Bluetooth keyboard, turning one screen into its own haptic keyboard or touchpad, etc.), the shapeshifting laptop also comes with its own origami-style stand and active pen for taking full advantage of the dual displays. Lenovo's Yoga Book 9i is a triumph of screen real estate. The Lenovo Yoga Book 9i in its horizontal position. This gizmo is either an ingenious feat of multitasking or the unironic fruition of a Black Mirror episode. Acer takes it a step further with its new desk-bike combo that also powers your devices as you go, making it the first bike desk of its kind to experiment with powering a whole workstation using kinetic energy. Treadmill desks are great, but the stationary bike desk is where the future of work-from-home calorie burning lies. The eKinekt BD 3 bike desk is powered through energy created by your pedaling. Read more: This $789,000 Flying Car Could Get Off the Ground Faster Than You Think Charge your laptop while you pedal At CES 2023, Aska cofounder Guy Kaplinsky said Federal Aviation Administration approval for the A5 could happen "within a month." Aska hopes to use the A5 to start a ride-sharing service in 2026. It's more than a concept: Aska has opened preorders for the $789,000 vehicle. And by "we" I mean a company called Aska, which revealed its A5 flying car at CES 2023. We've been waiting on flying cars since at least the Jetsons, and we now appear on the precipice of realizing that dream. (If you read two, check out our list of the biggest tech trends for 2023.) A flying car is really happening If you read only one CES recap, make it this one. There's plenty of hype, but no shortage of truly promising tech to go along with it.Ĭonsider this list your TL DR. There are electronics that'll hit store shelves this year, gadgets that are a few years off and wild concepts that may never become a reality. But the real stars may be the smaller, wackier products that push the envelope on what technology can really do.ĬES returning to its prepandemic levels of intensity means there's an enormous amount of tech to gawk at. Since the world's biggest consumer electronics event was back on the convention center floor in Las Vegas for the first time since 2020, though, that's just the beginning of all the weird and futuristic gadgets we laid eyes on.ĭuring the show, CNET was on the ground, sifting through the big reveals from companies like Samsung, LG, Intel, Nvidia, Razer and Dell. A stunning shape-shifting screen from Samsung and a flying car that may soon actually travel the streets (or skies) were among the standouts at this year's showcase. The curtain has closed on CES 2023, but it didn't leave without giving us a peek at the bright, flying and folding future of tech.
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