4 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Smart Home

The smart home was once a far-flung pipe dream, but it is now a reality. Wherever you live, your home is ground zero for some of the most interesting tech available right now, and tech that’s yet to come. Best of all, it doesn’t have to cost a fortune to get your home up and running with smart hardware and services.

Home security and monitoring solutions can alert you to a burglary, smoke, fire, or just simple motion activity. There are plenty of options with a range of capabilities, from smart doorbells and smart locks to indoor and outdoor cameras that can see in the dark.

Smart speakers, like the Google Home, Amazon Echo, and Apple HomePod each play a big role in helping you out, too. In the kitchen, they can read out recipes, or if you’re cleaning, you can call out to them to change the song on the fly. If you buy smart light bulbs, for instance, you can turn them on and off by using your voice.

Roborock’s Rover walks, jumps, and vacuums your stairs

Who needs humanoid robots when your vacuum can sprout legs?

Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Ring is launching an app store.

You’ll soon be able to browse through third-party integrations that can add more features to your camera. Meld, for example, uses your Ring camera to analyze your dog’s behavior and alert you to anything concerning, while PoolScout can send real-time notifications before an unattended toddler or pet reaches your pool.

Ring says the new store will be available within its app in the “coming weeks.”

I tested Apple’s hands-free Home Key — and it’s a big upgrade

Aqara’s new U400 smart lock is the first to use Apple’s UWB-based hands-free unlocking, and it works every time, even with full hands.

Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Barbara Krasnoff
Barbara Krasnoff
TCL’s next-gen smart lock brings Matter-over-Thread support.

As a result, the D2 Pro Palm Vein Smart Lock will work with both Alexa and Google. It also offers improved palm vein recognition, which, according to TCL, “uses infrared technology to detect unique vein patterns beneath the skin,” using AI local processing to tweak recognition data each time it’s used. Along with the new D2L Fingerprint Lever Lock, it will be available in the second quarter of 2026; no price was announced.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Now there’s really no excuse for leaving the refrigerator door open.

As Jen Tuohy demonstrates, Samsung’s new Family Hub lineup can use voice control to close the refrigerator door, in addition to a slew of other AI-enabled features.

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Eve’s first smart thermostat for the US supports Matter-over-Thread.

In addition, the Eve Thermostat works without an internet connection and doesn’t require any sort of additional subscription — something that is depressingly rare these days. Otherwise, it offers all the usual stuff you’d expect, including app and voice control, automations, and scheduling, for $129.95.

Eve Thermostat mounted to a millennial gray wall.
Is that more of a millennial gray or a sad beige?
Image: Eve
Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
LG’s CLOiD robot rolls into CES.

The household robot made its debut at the company’s CES 2026 press conference, rolling onto the stage and giving a ponderous demo of putting a towel into a laundry machine.

The sizable wheeled robot used its articulating arms and huge hands to perform the action and talked to the audience about its technology and capabilities, using human-like hand gestures to emphasize its words.

Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
Anker teases whole home battery backup.

These are the boxes that’ll make up its new Solix E10, aka “the world’s first smart hybrid whole home backup solution.” What that means, exactly, won’t be known until the launch event on January 12th. I’m seeing stackable battery expansion and an inverter as you’d expect, an inlet box and smart panel to tap directly into your home’s circuitry, and what looks like a gas-powered generator like EcoFlow sells.

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<em>From left to right: the gas-powered generator, an inverter stacked onto an expansion battery, and the smart panel.</em>
<em>Here we see some kind of inlet box.</em>
1/2
From left to right: the gas-powered generator, an inverter stacked onto an expansion battery, and the smart panel.
image: Anker
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Dreame made a $700 hair dryer that looks like a floor lamp — which it also is.

Wish you could dry your hair hands-free while sitting on the couch? That’s apparently the concept behind Dreame’s giant blow dryer, which also has LEDs to use it as an actual lamp.

It’s due out by the end of the year, but it wasn’t even plugged in at CES Unveiled. We’ll have to find another chance to try it on some luscious locks during the show.

1/3Photo: Kevin McShane / The Verge
Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Lutron adds smart wood blinds to its Caséta line.

The DIY blinds cost a flat $429 for any size up to 48 inches wide and 80 inches tall and are available in white or walnut. They join the company’s lower-cost smart shades and feature Natural Light Optimization that automatically tilts blinds throughout the day based on the sun’s position.

Caséta blinds integrate with Apple Home, Alexa, Google Home, and other platforms and are available now on Caséta’s website.

The Caséta blinds work with the popular Caséta line of smart lighting through Lutron’s bridge.
The Caséta blinds work with the popular Caséta line of smart lighting through Lutron’s bridge.
Image: Caséta