Those companies had booked about 400,000 square feet of event space, 20 percent of the overall show.
Autonomous vehicles remain a staple of CES. While they may be upstaged by EVs this year, the show concludes Saturday, Jan. 7, with the Indy Autonomous Challenge at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It will be the event's second consecutive year as part of CES, with advances expected in both speed and complexity from the nine teams competing.
Race organizers say the cars are getting better at anticipating the movements of their competitors at high speeds, which eventually will help autonomous vehicles operating on public roads plan for the unexpected.
"That's the value of what we're doing, teaching cars to react to something they didn't expect at very high speeds," said Paul Mitchell, president of the Indy Autonomous Challenge. "Some of these technical advances are getting closer and closer to the kind of racing that human-driven race cars are able to achieve."
For all the technical advances and achievements on display throughout CES, one of the most prominent innovations featured in 2023 might be one of the most basic.
CES has always been a nexus for business meetings. In the age of remote work and decentralized teams, it will now be a place where co-workers come together—in some cases, meeting for the first time.
"I hadn't even thought about this until it came up at one of our board meetings," Shapiro said. "But one of the advantages of CES and other events, especially since COVID, is that it actually gives companies an opportunity. There's a lot of issues with onboarding staff and people working remotely. When they go to an event like CES, they really do bond."