Cozyla Unveils 55-Inch Rolling Smart Calendar at CES 2026

Cozyla Unveils 55-Inch Rolling Smart Calendar at CES 2026

> At a Glance

> – Cozyla’s Calendar Plus Max smart display measures 55 inches

> – The wheeled touchscreen works as a family calendar, TV, and video-call screen

> – Compatible with Google, Apple calendars and likely Nest cameras

> – Why it matters: A jumbo home hub that merges planning, entertainment, and security in one movable panel

calendar

Cozyla’s CES 2026 booth features a smart display so large it dwarfs even Amazon’s Echo Show 21. The Calendar Plus Max rolls from room to room on built-in wheels, turning any wall into a touch-controlled command center.

A 55-Inch Touchscreen on Wheels

The 55-inch panel is essentially a household TV turned interactive smart-home tablet. Its frame hides casters so parents can tug it from kitchen to living room without lifting.

Inside, the hardware handles the usual display tricks:

  • Live security-camera grids
  • Video calls via Zoom and FaceTime
  • Streaming shows and fitness apps

Calendar That Eats Your Paper Planners

True to its name, the device syncs with Google, Apple, and other calendar platforms. Cozyla layers on digital sticky notes, shared task lists, meal plans, homework check-ins, virtual lesson links, and vacation itineraries.

Function What It Replaces
Wall calendar Synced family schedule
Whiteboard Digital sticky notes
Chore chart Shared task lists
Recipe printouts Meal-plan tiles

Security and Streaming Gaps Still Unknown

The giant screen can show multiple camera feeds at once, but Cozyla hasn’t listed which security platforms it supports beyond the expected Nest compatibility. Release date and price remain under wraps.

Key Takeaways

  • Largest consumer smart display yet at 55 inches
  • Doubles as rolling TV, calendar, and video-call screen
  • Full security-platform compatibility still unconfirmed
  • Launch details not announced

If the final software list matches the hardware ambition, the Calendar Plus Max could become the kitchen-wall command center families never knew they needed.

Author

  • My name is Amanda S. Bennett, and I am a Los Angeles–based journalist covering local news and breaking developments that directly impact our communities.

    Amanda S. Bennett covers housing and urban development for News of Los Angeles, reporting on how policy, density, and displacement shape LA neighborhoods. A Cal State Long Beach journalism grad, she’s known for data-driven investigations grounded in on-the-street reporting.

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