The Dawn Of The Agentic Era: What CES 2025 Got Right, And What You Need To Question
Discover CES 2025 trends with Toby Daniels: AI, emotional tech, Gen Z, and spatial computing redefine innovation and human-machine interaction
Discover CES 2025 trends with Toby Daniels: AI, emotional tech, Gen Z, and spatial computing redefine innovation and human-machine interaction
More than an annual tech showcase, CES 2025, was a manifesto for the next chapter of human-machine interaction.
The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is a major trade show held every January in Las Vegas, featuring consumer electronics, audio/video, computer hardware and software. This year the event wasn’t about shiny gadgets; it was about recalibrating how we engage with a world where technology doesn’t wait for us to lead. Here’s the pulse of what’s coming, who’s winning, and the blind spots we can’t afford to ignore. Toby Daniels, Founder, ON_Discourse, explores the top trends from CES 2025 in Las Vegas:
Reactive systems? Obsolete. This year’s CES cemented the rise of AI systems that think, decide, and act—before you do. Retail demos spotlighted AI that monitored customer patterns and deployed targeted strategies to optimize sales. It’s no longer assistive; it’s agentic.
But let’s ask the hard questions: When AI is “acting on our behalf,” who holds the reins? The retailers raved about efficiency, but the subtext was chilling. Are we ready to trust machines to outthink us in every domain, or are we simply outsourcing responsibility?
LG and Samsung stole the stage with contrasting AI visions:
Both camps assume consumers know what they want. Yet, the data says otherwise: Branding tech as explicitly “AI-powered” scares off buyers. The lesson? Sophistication sells; sci-fi doesn't. But here’s the twist—what happens when your fridge “understands” you better than your spouse? Let’s discuss trust in tech before we automate intimacy.
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"Let’s not romanticize. The metaverse's future depends on utility, not utopia. If your business isn’t asking, “What tangible problem does this solve?” then you’re still dreaming in 2022.
You probably thought the metaverse was dead. Surprise: It’s thriving—but not where you think. At CES, healthcare applications turned patient data into immersive cityscapes, and Claire’s pivoted from malls to Roblox with stunning success (read more about Shimmerville). The takeaway? The metaverse isn’t about escapism; it’s about solving real problems with virtual tools. Let’s not romanticize. The metaverse's future depends on utility, not utopia. If your business isn’t asking, “What tangible problem does this solve?” then you’re still dreaming in 2022.
Born between 1997 and 2012, Gen Z is rewriting every rulebook. Ignore them at your peril. Gen Z doesn’t want your product—they want you to reflect their world.They also:
READ MORE: The Generation Game: Five Generations In One Workforce
Forget about phones. Sony’s XYN platform revealed a near future where screens vanish and digital interactions become seamless extensions of reality. This isn’t just AR/VR; this is the interface-less future. The question isn’t if this will reshape industries but how fast your competitors will beat you to the punch.
The machines aren’t coming—they’re already here. What CES 2025 reminded us is that technology isn’t just a tool; it’s a partner, an adversary, and sometimes, an existential question. Success won’t come from adopting the latest innovation. It will come from using technology to amplify what makes us uniquely human.
The Agentic Era is a mirror, not a map. How will you reflect?