The prevailing AI theme at CES has shifted dramatically. Gone are the days of quirky, standalone AI gadgets from small players. This year is dominated by major product line announcements from giants like NVIDIA and Amazon, indicating the AI industry is maturing from a phase of novelty to a more serious era of defining and owning entire product categories.
After years of inflated promises, the market is moving past the initial AI hype cycle. Leaders realize that simply attaching "AI" to a company name is not a strategy. This shift leads to a more realistic understanding of where AI provides practical value, which will stabilize hiring and investment.
As foundational AI models become more accessible, the key to winning the market is shifting from having the most advanced model to creating the best user experience. This "age of productization" means skilled product managers who can effectively package AI capabilities are becoming as crucial as the researchers themselves.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman now publicly hedges that winning requires the best models, product, *and* infrastructure. This marks a significant industry-wide shift away from the earlier belief that a sufficiently advanced model would make product differentiation irrelevant. The focus is now on the complete, cohesive user experience.
As consumers become wary of "AI," the winning strategy is integrating advanced capabilities into existing products seamlessly, like Google is doing with Gemini. The "AI" branding used for fundraising and recruiting will fade from consumer-facing marketing, making the technology feel like a natural product evolution.
For years, Google has integrated AI as features into existing products like Gmail. Its new "Antigravity" IDE represents a strategic pivot to building applications from the ground up around an "agent-first" principle. This suggests a future where AI is the core foundation of a product, not just an add-on.
The novelty of new AI model capabilities is wearing off for consumers. The next competitive frontier is not about marginal gains in model performance but about creating superior products. The consensus is that current models are "good enough" for most applications, making product differentiation key.
The current AI landscape mirrors the historic Windows-Intel duopoly. OpenAI is the new Microsoft, controlling the user-facing software layer, while NVIDIA acts as the new Intel, dominating essential chip infrastructure. This parallel suggests a long-term power concentration is forming.
Consumer innovation arrives in predictable waves after major technological shifts. The browser created Amazon and eBay; mobile created Uber and Instagram. The current AI platform shift is creating the same conditions for a new, massive wave of consumer technology companies.
As foundational AI models become commoditized, the key differentiator is shifting from marginal improvements in model capability to superior user experience and productization. Companies that focus on polish, ease of use, and thoughtful integration will win, making product managers the new heroes of the AI race.
NVIDIA's robotics strategy extends far beyond just selling chips. By unveiling a suite of models, simulation tools (Cosmos), and an integrated ecosystem (Osmo), they are making a deliberate play to own the foundational platform for physical AI, positioning themselves as the default 'operating system' for the entire robotics industry.