The best actually real stuff at CES 2025

  News, Rassegna Stampa
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Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 66, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, happy 2025, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

This week, I’ve been reading about loneliness and Web3 scams and the future of procedural TV, watching Deadpool & Wolverine on an airplane like the director intended, rewatching Severance and Squid Game to get ready for the second seasons, eagerly awaiting the return of Kids Baking Championship, wondering if that’s real Sara Dietschy or AI Sara Dietschy, and giving an Apple News Plus subscription a whirl as my go-to news source. 

I also have for you a big report from CES in Las Vegas. This edition of Installer is a little different than most, just because we saw so many new things, and so many new things launched, and in many cases, it’s hard to know whether any of it will ever hit shelves. So think of this as part Installer, part CES recap, part “David hopes desperately these things actually ship” list. But I tried hard to pick out the stuff I’m confident will actually end up on sale at some point soon and might be worth your money. I’m sure I’ll be wrong about a few of them… but here’s hoping. And if you want all the best stuff from CES, check out our annual awards — there’s lots of great stuff in there.

Also, and most importantly, my heart goes out to everyone in LA and elsewhere dealing with the fires this week. I’m so sorry for everything you’re dealing with, and I hope you’re safe and doing okay.

(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you into right now? What should everyone else be playing / reading / watching / downloading / building out of Legos right now? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, forward it to them and tell them to subscribe here.)

(A note on the links in here: I linked to product pages when they existed, as I always try to do. But since this is CES, sometimes there isn’t one yet. In those cases, I link to Verge stories or other coverage.) 

  • The LG StanbyME 2. I cannot explain to you why I am so into this thing. It’s just a big, portable screen (LG calls it a “lifestyle screen,” which is hysterical), with a strap and a stand, so you can hang it up or prop it on a table. Is that anything? I don’t know! But I love this idea.
  • The Circular Ring 2. The first model was kind of a dud, but the Ring 2 appears to get almost everything right: better battery, easier charging, nicer design, more features. My 2025 project is to ditch my smartwatch for a smart ring, and this has some potential.
  • Nvidia Project Digits. This one kind of violates the spirit of the “things a real person might actually buy” rubric here, but I am increasingly convinced that the only good AI future is one where your AI systems are more local, more personal, and more yours. Nvidia’s Mac Mini-looking AI machine is a cool step in that direction.
  • The Roam SodaTop. I had a SodaStream for years and loved everything about it except it was huge and only in my kitchen. The SodaTop screws right onto a water bottle and carbonates water in five seconds. $50! Spectacular, give me 14 of them.
  • The Lenovo Thinkbook Plus Gen 6. I didn’t get to see this one on the CES floor, but Lenovo’s rollable screen concept thing is real now — and apparently works pretty well. $3,500 for a laptop is preposterous, but this is a technology that belongs in a lot of laptops. Soon.
  • The Samsung Frame Pro. As far as I can tell, the actual display improvements here are not super impressive. But I like that the Frame setup is simpler and involves fewer wires now — and I’m hoping this’ll make the last-gen Frame cheap enough that I can justify buying one.
  • The Wonder Petal. All my gardening- and birding-obsessed friends are super into this thing, a flower-styled and solar-powered camera that uses AI to identify plants and creatures roaming around your yard. I keep hearing great things about the Bird Buddy feeder, too.
  • The Flic Duo. A button! For doing button things! You stick this tiny thing on a wall and program what happens when you click, double-click, press and hold, swipe, and lots more. It’s Matter-compatible and $49 and the sort of thing every smart home needs.
  • The SwitchBot Multitasking Household Robot K20 Plus Pro. Yikes, that name. But the product is so smart: a modular robot vacuum that turns into a roving air purifier, pet monitor, and more. I love the trend we’re seeing here, as these turn into the first true home robots.
  • The Amazfit Active 2. I noticed my colleague Victoria Song wearing this watch and told her how much I liked the red, kind of Tron-y face. She looked at me and goes, “IT’S ONLY A HUNDRED DOLLARS!” That’s basically the deal — a pretty, pretty good, pretty cheap smartwatch and fitness tracker. With my favorite watchface yet. 
  • The Razer Handheld Dock Chroma. One dock for all your handheld game consoles. It has fast power, seems to connect easily, and supports phones, Steam Decks, Switches, and more. I remain totally convinced that these consoles are the future of games, and this is a terrific accessory idea.

It’s a strange time in the blogging / social media universe. Threads, Bluesky, X, Mastodon, and a million other platforms are growing and changing, and it’s hard to figure out where to spend your time and energy. I’ve been talking to folks for years now about how all this is supposed to work and have consistently been convinced that Manton Reece is on the right track. He’s the creator of Micro.blog, which is simple like Twitter but personal like a blog and has a lot of big ideas about interoperability and the fediverse.