HP previews new AI PCs, printers, and gaming devices at CES 2026

HP used CES 2026 in Las Vegas to present a wide range of new products and services focused on what it calls the “future of work,” including new AI-powered PCs, updated consumer laptops, smarter printers, and new gaming devices. The company says these announcements are meant to address how people work today, especially in hybrid and distributed setups.

HP CES2026

Why It Matters: HP is positioning AI not just as a feature, but as something built into everyday work tools like laptops, keyboards, and even printers. This shows how PC makers are now treating AI as a standard part of productivity rather than an optional extra.

One of the more unusual products shown is the HP EliteBoard G1a, which HP describes as a full AI PC built into a keyboard. The company says it is its smallest and lightest AI PC so far and is designed to be carried and used in different work environments.

HP CES2026 1

For business users, HP introduced the EliteBook X G2 Series, a new generation of premium laptops designed for AI workloads. HP says these, along with the OmniBook Ultra 14, are among the first notebooks to offer up to 85 TOPS of NPU performance using the Snapdragon X2 Elite platform.

HP also refreshed its entire OmniBook consumer lineup, adding Snapdragon X2 options and OLED displays. One of the highlights is the new OmniBook 3 16, which HP says offers the longest battery life in its class for a 16-inch OLED AI laptop.

Beyond PCs, HP announced its first integration of Microsoft Copilot into HP Office printers. With this, users can do tasks like document summarization, translation, and basic organization directly from the printer, aiming to reduce the steps needed to handle documents in offices.

For IT teams, HP added a new firmware-level recovery feature to its Workforce Experience Platform. This is meant to help administrators fix serious device problems even when a system cannot boot normally, which is becoming more important in large, distributed workforces.

HP also showed new accessories, including an updated ergonomic mouse, a compact USB-C charger, and new protective sleeves, all designed to support more flexible work setups.

In gaming, HP announced that it is unifying its OMEN and HyperX brands under the HyperX name. As part of this move, it introduced the HyperX OMEN MAX 16, which it describes as its most powerful gaming laptop so far, using a fully internal cooling system and AI-assisted performance tuning.

Another new service is HP Digital Passport, which gives users a single place to see information about their PC, including setup help, product features, and sustainability details.

HP also confirmed that its Future of Work Accelerator program will return in 2026. The program provides funding, hardware, and training to organizations working on technology and skills development. Applications will open on January 12 and close on February 6.

With these announcements, HP is showing how it plans to blend AI into many parts of work and home computing, from laptops and desktops to printers and management tools. Do you think features like AI inside printers and keyboards will actually change how people work day to day?

Carl walked away from a corporate marketing career to build WalasTech from the ground up—now he writes no-fluff tech stories as its Founder and Editor-in-Chief. When news breaks, he’s already typing. Got a tip? Hit him up at [email protected].