Dell is making a bold admission ahead of CES 2026: consumers aren’t buying PCs for AI features. The company, long associated with high-performance laptops, says its new products won’t focus solely on AI. Kevin Terwilliger, Dell’s head of product, told PC Gamer that while every 2026 device includes an NPU, AI alone isn’t motivating purchases. “AI probably confuses them more than it helps them understand a specific outcome,” he explained.
This candid acknowledgment highlights a disconnect between tech marketing hype and what everyday users actually want. Despite Microsoft’s push to integrate AI into Windows through Copilot Plus, Dell sees that performance, battery life, and practical usability still drive decisions. Consumers are prioritizing tangible improvements over futuristic AI promises.
Dell has been a key partner for Microsoft’s AI-driven Copilot Plus PCs. These laptops, including the XPS 13 and Inspiron lines, feature Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite chips and even Cloud AI chips for enhanced local AI processing. Yet, the benefits many users notice—longer battery life and smoother performance—come from hardware improvements rather than AI capabilities.
Even Microsoft has struggled with AI adoption on PCs. Its flagship Recall feature for Copilot Plus PCs launched nearly a year late due to security concerns. Delays like this underline the challenges of turning AI promises into real-world advantages that consumers understand and value.
Dell’s shift reflects a broader trend: users want clear, practical benefits rather than buzzwords. AI-powered features may sound exciting on paper, but if they complicate workflows or require extra learning, they fail to resonate. By emphasizing performance, battery life, and reliability, Dell hopes to meet customer expectations while quietly embedding AI in ways that actually improve daily use.
The company’s approach signals a subtle recalibration across the PC industry. While AI continues to evolve rapidly, manufacturers must balance innovation with usability. Dell’s acknowledgment may serve as a reality check for competitors who bet heavily on AI marketing.
CES 2026 gives Dell an opportunity to highlight how AI can enhance devices without overwhelming users. Every announcement at the show includes an NPU, but the focus remains on tangible, user-friendly improvements. Features like faster multitasking, longer battery life, and smarter energy management are expected to resonate more than AI labels alone.
The strategy also reflects lessons learned from last year’s product launches. Dell observed that many consumers could not easily differentiate AI features from standard performance upgrades. By presenting AI as a supporting tool rather than a selling point, Dell hopes to reduce confusion and make its laptops more approachable.
Dell’s admission could influence the broader PC market. Competitors may reconsider how they market AI, focusing less on hype and more on real-world value. For now, users seem more interested in hardware that improves everyday computing than in flashy AI capabilities that may feel abstract or unnecessary.
Analysts suggest this trend could slow the AI-first PC movement temporarily but won’t halt it. AI will still be integrated in useful ways, but manufacturers will need to communicate benefits clearly and avoid overcomplicating features. Dell’s honesty may set a new standard for transparency in tech marketing.
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