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Every Eye-Catching Piece of Next-Gen Tech Unveiled at CES 2025

The next-gen tech from this year’s CES trade show blew our minds. Like always, we kick the year off at CNET with some of the coolest and innovative releases in the tech world, culminating in our official Best of CES awards – and we come away with so many impressive show-stoppers that we can’t ever wait to show you what we found.

This year’s CES tech extravaganza served scads of AI tools, tech for your smart home, slick new TVs, groundbreaking EVs, powerful laptops, ingenious health tech and a bounty of robots.

Scroll down for some of the most interesting products at CES 2025. For more CES coverage, check out all of the delicious (and gross) food created by CES kitchen tech or read about the top seven biggest disappointments at CES.

Nike x Hyperice

Tech-filled “shoes” that soothe your aching feet with topical warmth and compression.

Nike partnered with fitness recovery tech company Hyperice to make a tech-filled boot that can help sore feet recover. First deployed at last year’s Paris Olympics, the Nike x Hyperice boot (no more official name) slips around your foot and applies heat and compression with buttons to adjust either. It’s technically a “system of dual-air Normatec bladders bonded to warming elements,” but there was only one word when our CNET Senior Reporter Lisa Eadicicco wore them on the Vegas show floor: relief.

Nike’s Prototype Shoes Squeezed and Heated Our Weary Feet at CES 2025. Here’s What They Feel Like.

Kirin Electric Salt Spoon

Soup too bland but lowering salt intake? Use this spoon to add flavor… through electric shocks.

The pitfall of salt is that it tastes so good, but many of us are on low-sodium diets for our health. Rather than use an untasty alternative, why not turn to science? Japanese appliance company Kirin has a new experimental soup spoon. It’s large and requires an awkward grip to engage the sensors, so you kinda look like a toddler using it. But pull it off and weak electrical current will simulate the taste of salt (varying per person), making it an imperfect but promising piece of dinnerware tech.

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