The dream of a home that “thinks” for itself has been around for decades. However, it usually ends up meaning we just have more apps to check. At CES 2026 , SwitchBot is showcasing what they call “ Smart Home 2.0,” a product ecosystem where robots don’t just vacuum but actually interact with your physical world.
Here are the highlights from their latest showcase that actually feel like they might change your daily routine.
SwitchBot’s onero H1 home robot and Lock Vision Series
The most ambitious reveal is the onero H1. While we are used to puck-shaped robots that stay on the floor, the onero H1 is a humanoid-style household robot designed to handle chores that typically require a human touch—like organizing a cluttered table or opening doors.
It uses a system called “OmniSense” to understand depth and tactile feedback. This means it can “feel” how hard it is pushing or pulling an object. It is designed to work in tandem with the smaller, specialized robots SwitchBot is known for, acting as a sort of foreman for your home automation. Pre-orders are expected to open on their website soon .
SwitchBot is also moving into the security space with the Lock Vision Series. This isn’t just another smart lock but the first deadbolt to use 3D structured-light facial recognition. Instead of a flat photo, it uses 2,000 infrared points to map your face in three dimensions.
This tech is significantly harder to trick with a photo or video and even recognizes you if you are wearing glasses or makeup. For those times when your hands are full or dirty, the Vision Pro model adds palm-vein recognition. That is, it can scan the unique vascular patterns inside your hand for a contactless unlock.

AI MindClip “second brain” and Weather Station with E-Ink display
One of the more experimental devices is the AI MindClip. Weighing only 18 grams, this tiny wearable acts as a personal knowledge assistant. It continuously captures audio from meetings or daily conversations and uses cloud AI to turn that fragmented information into searchable summaries and to-do lists. If you are the type of person who constantly forgets the details of a conversation from three days ago, this is essentially a searchable “second brain” that supports over 100 languages.
Another notable product is the new SwitchBot Weather Station features a 7.5-inch E-Ink display. Unlike a bright tablet or phone screen, the E-Ink looks like paper and is easy on the eyes. It syncs with your calendars and displays everything from air quality to a six-day forecast. It even offers “AI briefings”—personalized daily recommendations based on the weather, like suggesting a specific coat or reminding you to water the garden.

Meet the OBBOTO globe
Last, but not least, there is OBBOTO, a globe-shaped light for your desk. With nearly 3,000 LEDs, it uses motion sensing and AI to react to your presence with mood animations. It can visualize your music or act as a pixel-art clock, aiming to bring a more “expressive” and human feel to a standard workspace setup.
