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Lenovo introduces a new ambient AI system connecting all your devices

Lenovo logo closeup
Lenovo headquarter

Your digital life just got smarter

Ever wish all your gadgets worked together? Lenovo’s big CES reveal aims to make that dream real. They introduced a new AI system called Qira that connects your devices seamlessly.

This isn’t just a simple voice assistant. Qira acts as a personal ambient intelligence across your phone, laptop, and tablet, learning your routines to offer proactive help.

Artificial intelligence concept

Meet Qira, your AI companion

Qira is designed to feel like a natural part of your day. It stays quietly in the background, ready to assist when you need it. You control when and how it interacts with your information.

Think of it as a helpful partner that knows your projects and schedule. It can suggest your next task or find a file before you even ask, saving you time and mental energy.

Rear view at woman writing email on laptop at home

Seamlessly switch between devices

Stop losing your train of thought when switching from phone to computer. Qira maintains the context of what you were doing. It lets you pick up right where you left off.

That half-written email on your phone is ready to finish on your laptop instantly. Your workflow becomes fluid, moving with you through your day without frustrating interruptions.

Lenovo logo closeup

Your privacy stays protected

An AI that is involved needs trust. Lenovo states that user control is its core principle. You decide what Qira can access and when it is active through clear permissions.

A hybrid system keeps your most sensitive data secure on the device itself. Less personal information is processed in the cloud, aiming to provide help while respecting your digital privacy.

AI chatbot on phone

It doesn’t just talk, it acts

This separates Qira from common chatbots. It can complete multi-step tasks for you, not just answer questions. This turns it from a tool you query into an agent that works on your behalf.

Lenovo demonstrated examples in which Qira coordinates tasks such as moving files between devices and assembling information into a draft report to speed common workflows. It handles the boring steps, freeing you up for more important creative or strategic thinking.

Expedia logo displayed on phone screen

Your personal travel assistant

Imagine browsing beach photos, then getting smart hotel suggestions. Qira can notice your interests and later surface relevant travel options when you’re planning. It partners with services like Expedia.

When you’re ready to book, it can smoothly hand you off with your details prepared. This turns casual dreaming into concrete plans with remarkably little effort on your part.

Motorola logo displayed on phone

The wearable AI pin

Motorola showed Project Maxwell as a proof-of-concept wearable that can capture audio and video to provide context-aware assistance in demonstrations, but it is not a commercial product, and no ship date has been announced.

In demonstrations, Lenovo suggested the system could support real-time translation and context-aware reminders, but those features were shown as possibilities rather than confirmed shipping capabilities.

Man sleeping in bed.

A summary of what you missed

Drowning in notifications from different apps? Qira’s catch me up feature fights this overload. It provides a concise, readable summary of important updates across your devices after a meeting or a good night’s sleep.

You quickly learn about crucial emails, messages, or project changes. This helps you filter out the digital noise and focus only on information that truly requires your attention.

Lenovo logo is displayed on phone

Rollable screens and AI glasses

Lenovo showcased exciting concept devices. The ThinkPad Rollable XD concept expands vertically from a compact 13.3-inch workspace to a larger, nearly 16-inch workspace, providing extra screen area when needed. This shows how hardware itself might adapt to our needs.

Another concept, Lenovo AI Glasses, offers a heads-up display for information. These glimpses suggest a future where our tech blends more naturally into our physical world.

ThinkPad logo displayed

Supercharged laptops for creators

Lenovo highlighted new Aura Edition and Copilot Plus PCs, and some models include next-generation neural processing hardware and processors designed to accelerate on-device AI tasks for features like Qira. This means faster, more private assistance.

For creators, this power can also accelerate editing software and manage complex project files. Your computer becomes a more intuitive and powerful partner in your creative process.

Notebook with empty list of goals with houseplant, glasses and pen

More than a gimmick

This represents a major shift in how we use technology. The goal is ambient computing, where assistance is woven into your environment. Tech fades into the background, supporting you without constant screens and clicks.

It focuses on making your life simpler, not managing more apps. The promise is a digital experience that feels less like work and more like having a capable, invisible helper.

Lenovo logo displayed on a phone screen on laptop

The starting line for smarter tech

Lenovo says Qira will begin rolling out on select Lenovo and Motorola devices during 2026. The plan is to expand to more devices over time, potentially even to other brands. This isn’t designed to be a closed ecosystem.

Its success hinges on proving reliable and truly useful in daily life. If it works, it could mark the beginning of the end for fragmented, frustrating digital experiences.

Want to see another piece of Lenovo’s innovative future? Check out Lenovo’s powerful new 12-core AMD laptop.

Man using laptop

A new chapter for personal tech

This is a bold step into a future where our devices truly collaborate. The old model of each gadget working alone feels outdated. Qira envisions a unified, intelligent digital layer that ties everything together.

It invites us to imagine a less cluttered relationship with our technology. The focus finally shifts from the devices themselves to the person using them.

To see how this vision is taking shape, check out Lenovo’s new AI glasses that act as a personal teleprompter.

Would you welcome an AI assistant like Qira into your daily routine? Share your thoughts below and give this post a thumbs up.

This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.

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