
Zepsor
LAS VEGAS — In an era where "always-on" technology is the standard, the hidden cost of our connected world is the constant, silent drain on batteries and the electrical grid. At CES 2026, a groundbreaking innovation from Zepsor is promising to flip this paradigm on its head. The company has unveiled the world's first "zero-power presence sensor," a technology that allows machines to remain completely dormant until the very moment they are needed.
By replacing energy-hungry cameras and microphones with a tiny, mechanical masterpiece of physics, Zepsor is paving the way for a future where devices are truly "environmentally aware" without sacrificing battery life.
The core of Zepsor's innovation is a tiny mechanical switch. Unlike traditional sensors that require a constant flow of electricity to monitor their surroundings, Zepsor's switch is passive.
This allows a machine to "respond to the environment where there is human presence" without the "power system standby" drain that currently plagues modern electronics.

Zepsor
One of the most profound implications of Zepsor's technology is its inherent respect for privacy. In the current smart-home and industrial landscape, "presence detection" is often synonymous with cameras or microphones—devices that raise significant ethical and security concerns.
Zepsor offers a middle ground. By making a machine "aware of the environment without using cameras or microphones," Zepsor provides the utility of human-responsive tech without the invasive data collection. The machine doesn't "see" or "hear" you; it simply knows you are there because of the physical reality of your body's heat.
The practical application of a zero-power sensor is most evident in battery-operated devices. By eliminating the standby power draw, Zepsor is capable of "extending battery lifetime significantly."
Zepsor's appearance at CES 2026 marks a major milestone in the company's evolution. While they participated in the previous year's show, their 2026 presence represents a leap from theoretical research to practical application.
As Zepsor moves from a demonstrator to a supplier, the focus is shifting toward large-scale integration.
When asked about the future for CES 2027, the company outlined an ambitious roadmap focused on OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) partnerships. "We should expect to see this chip integrated in some higher level... demonstration," a representative shared. This means that by next year, we may not just be seeing the Zepsor chip on a display stand, but inside the flagship products of major global brands.
Zepsor is proving that the next great leap in technology isn't just about doing more—it's about doing it with less. By mastering the physics of a zero-power mechanical switch, they have solved one of the most persistent problems in the Internet of Things: the inefficiency of the "always-on" state.
As Zepsor begins sampling its chips to the world's leading manufacturers, we are standing on the threshold of a new era of "quiet" technology. It is a future where our machines are as efficient as they are intelligent, waking up only when we need them and remaining perfectly, powerlessly silent when we don't.
