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SXSW 2026 Updates: What We Expect on Tech and Culture From Austin

Mar 12, 2026 878 views

Innovation. Music. Films. Artificial intelligence. Here's what we're looking forward to at this year's South by Southwest festival and conference.

Film producer Cheryl Miller Houser speaks during a session on human-centered storytelling during SXSW 2025 in Austin, Texas.

The internationally recognized South by Southwest festival, which officially kicks off Thursday for a week of panels and performances, is set to bring icons from TV, film, music, comedy, tech and more to Austin, Texas. SXSW sits at the intersection of technology and culture, giving the floor to a variety of innovators and talent mapping out the future. 

Legendary filmmaker Steven Spielberg, actor Jamie Lee Curtis, fitness guru Robin Arzón and chef José Andrés make up just a fraction of the star-studded lineup. Executives from companies such as Spotify, Nothing, Google DeepMind, OpenAI, Signal, Cloudflare and more will also be there. 

Artificial intelligence will naturally be the talk of the town, with panels delving into how it shapes the way we work, play and live on a daily basis. We expect to hear a lot about how AI is changing the internet, this massive digital web of connections we're all tangled in. And we'll see new ways to experience the world through virtual and augmented reality, immersive tech experiences and physical intelligence.

CNET's writers and producers are on the ground in Texas to witness it all IRL. Check back here for the latest updates and see what's new and what's coming.

It's hard for me to picture what my world looked like before the advent of computers in our pockets, the constant routine of toggling between apps and scrolling through endless notifications. We live our lives inside the attention economy -- and never really step out of it. 

That's the tension the new documentary Your Attention Please confronts, premiering this week at SXSW. 

I got to speak with director Sara Robin, alongside Trisha Prabhu, a participant in the documentary and the inventor of the anti-cyberbullying technology ReThink, about the film. We discussed the process of making the documentary, how social media rewired what we value as humans and how AI is exacerbating the anxieties already brought about by the digital age. You can read my full story on Your Attention Please here

SXSW starts Thursday and runs through March 18. It takes place in Austin across dozens of venues, from big downtown hotels to small music venues.

SXSW is actually several events in one. There's a music festival, a film and TV festival, a comedy festival and an education conference. SXSW 2025 drew more than 300,000 people across all of the events. 

Want to see what's happening at SXSW yourself? The full schedule is available on the website, but much of the programming is limited to on-site attendees who paid for a pass.

Not everything is exclusive to those in Austin, however. You can watch live streams of several events each day, especially keynotes and featured sessions with some of the biggest names. That schedule is here, and streams will be available on YouTube and other platforms. 

Poster artists sold their work in the same Austin Convention Center where speakers and tech companies discussed the use of generative AI to create images at SXSW 2025 in Austin, Texas.

I'm not making the trip to Austin this year, but I was there last year, where I heard a lot of discussion about AI. So much AI. I spoke with experts grappling with the future of this technology and listened to panel discussions about the risks posed by superintelligence and synthetic data

I wondered: Can AI and human creativity get along? While some are using the technology to explore new artistic avenues, others see it as competition -- tech that's stealing their work for training data.

Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, posed a critical question for AI developers when it comes to creating systems users can trust: "Who does it work for?"

While many conversations around AI dealt with how it'll affect the workplace, Nickle LaMoreaux, the chief human resources officer at IBM, said the result will likely be that workers will be judged more on the things only a human can do

Sometimes the thing that makes news isn't what a person says. Then-Bluesky CEO Jay Graber took a jab at Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg without saying his name -- just a carefully and cleverly designed T-shirt. Mashable's Chance Townsend had the story

Austin is known for its barbecue, live music and vibrant, lively atmosphere. It's also known for its ideas, which are as tempting to me as the brisket I'm hoping to devour. 

I'm heading to SXSW this week for the first time. I imagine there'll be a distinct pulse to the city, a palpable electricity that everyone who visits can feel, especially when a massive global event is underway. And between the premieres and panels, and concerts and crowds, I'm hoping to stumble on the next big innovation that will shape our world. 

AI will likely be a focal point, but I'm also expecting to see a true intersection of human connection, art and technology. SXSW has always been a melting pot: directors and actors sharing sidewalks with tech founders, musicians hauling guitars past venture capitalists and comedians, and journalists like me trying to keep up with everything. (And believe me, I'll try my very best to keep up.) 

I'm especially ready to hear about the path of creative storytelling and emerging tech in 2026. How are artists and innovators finessing the AI evolution? How are they trying to reshape how these tools will be used, rather than letting the tools reshape them? 

I'm also jittery for discovery. Which documentary will break open a viral discussion? Which celebrity guest is going to generate the most buzz? What offhand comment in a panel is going to shape headlines for the next few days? 

SXSW has more to see and do than I can reasonably aim to cover in just a few days. I'm told it's chaotic, overwhelming, exhausting, exhilarating and energizing. And that's exactly where I need to be. I can't wait. 

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