{"id":177501,"date":"2023-01-05T05:40:59","date_gmt":"2023-01-05T05:40:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/ces-2023-day-0-recap-all-the-early-news-you-missed\/"},"modified":"2023-01-05T05:40:59","modified_gmt":"2023-01-05T05:40:59","slug":"ces-2023-day-0-recap-all-the-early-news-you-missed","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/ces-2023-day-0-recap-all-the-early-news-you-missed\/","title":{"rendered":"CES 2023 Day 0 recap: All the early news you missed"},"content":{"rendered":"
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CES is back! for real. Sort of. While the show has never actually gone away in spirit, this year is the first time since the pandemic that Engadget has a team on the ground. The show proper kicks off on Thursday Jan 5th, but the news has already been coming hot and heavy. If we count Jan 4th as Day 1, since it’s usually the media preview day, that would make today\u2026 Day 0. Some companies couldn’t even wait and broke their news on New Year’s day, those eager beavers. From Samsung’s eye-catching display prototypes and home appliances, to a slew of chips and laptops, here’s what you missed from Day 0 of CES 2023.<\/p>\n

Samsung beat everyone to the punch by announcing some of its news early. On Monday, the company unveiled new QD-OLED TVs that will hit up to 2,000 nits of brightness, as well as a 57-inch 8K gaming display. But most intriguing are the new wall ovens that will livestream a video feed of what you’re cooking, plus a new prototype mobile display that can both slide and fold.<\/p>\n

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CES is also a big show for chip makers like Intel, AMD and NVIDIA. This year, Intel unveiled its 13th-gen CPUs for laptops, which can offer up to 24 cores. NVIDIA had a slew of news, including the mid-range RTX 4070 Ti, which costs $800, as well as a series of RTX 4000 cards for laptops. The latter promises serious leaps in gaming performance for portable machines, with the flagship 4080 and 4090 GPUs reportedly being powerful enough to play games across three 4K monitors at 60 frames per second. NVIDIA is also expanding its GeForce Now game streaming to cars, while bringing the processing power of the RTX 4080 desktop GPU to the cloud gaming service.<\/p>\n

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