China’s Next AI Breakthrough – Physical AI
AI-Generated Summary
China is leading the global race in embodied AI, integrating advanced robotics into industrial automation, EVs, delivery drones, and humanoid robots. With nearly 100 robotic products developed in the past year, China claims 70% of the global market, driven by its robust supply chain, AI advancements, and chip innovations. The government has invested $138 billion to bolster this sector, creating a surge in job opportunities and high salaries for engineers. Companies like Hangzhou-based Unitree are pioneering consumer robotics, offering humanoid AI avatars and agile robots. China’s rapid automation, supported by state policy, is reshaping industries and personal life, signaling a transformative future for AI-driven robotics.
📜 Full Transcript
When you look at your embodied eye is
all the rage in China. From industrial automation to autonomous
EVs, from delivery drones to increasingly advanced robotic humanoids
and pets. A.I.
is on board and with their sensors, motors and natural language processing.
Now they’re interacting with us and the rest of the physical world, and it’s
arriving in much more lifelike packaging.
As creepy as that may be. China’s Ministry of Industry and
Information Technology says China since last year has produced nearly 100
embodied A.I. robotic products, claiming the country
holds 70% of the global market due largely to its unrivaled stem to stern
supply chain of critical parts and advancements in its own AI and chips.
The embodiment, if you will, of China’s deep seek moment is the ushered in a
whole of corporate culture where we’re trying many Jedi I use case we have also
labs and these who are working on these things when with this ever impact the
bottom line will have a real impact. I think that’s the question.
We do know that the central government has put out a venture fund tapping about
$138 billion for the development of humanoid robots, for industry and for
personal use. That is a lot of money and probably just
the tip of the iceberg in an otherwise difficult job market in China.
Online recruitment firm Galpin says. The number of job openings in China’s
humanoid robotics sector has quadrupled so far this year from last year, with
salaries for the needed algorithm engineers rising well past the average
urban pay. Hangzhou based Unitary is one of the
pioneers of consumer robotics in China, offering its latest so-called humanoid
agent AI Avatar, the four foot two inch £77 G one on the web for $16,000.
So you can do all kinds of things. You can run, you can jump, you can get
your coffee or for $600, there’s the for the ultra wide recognition lidar
equipped goto door with plenty of tricks up its 12 flexible knee joint motors it
can stand. It is just the beginning stage for
China’s vast industrial complex as well. Rapid automation includes the increasing
use of inspection and diagnostic bots with embodied AI, such as Lenovo’s six
legged Daystar, deployed in places unreachable by or unsafe for humans.
I think the Chinese robots will come into the world, you know, in a way that
as a price for money, the parts of value that will be quite feasible with the
backing of state policy and funds. Expect a myriad of new embodied AI
products to try and grab your attention. Like it or not, we may be staring
directly into the future. Stephen Engle.
Bloomberg News, China.
all the rage in China. From industrial automation to autonomous
EVs, from delivery drones to increasingly advanced robotic humanoids
and pets. A.I.
is on board and with their sensors, motors and natural language processing.
Now they’re interacting with us and the rest of the physical world, and it’s
arriving in much more lifelike packaging.
As creepy as that may be. China’s Ministry of Industry and
Information Technology says China since last year has produced nearly 100
embodied A.I. robotic products, claiming the country
holds 70% of the global market due largely to its unrivaled stem to stern
supply chain of critical parts and advancements in its own AI and chips.
The embodiment, if you will, of China’s deep seek moment is the ushered in a
whole of corporate culture where we’re trying many Jedi I use case we have also
labs and these who are working on these things when with this ever impact the
bottom line will have a real impact. I think that’s the question.
We do know that the central government has put out a venture fund tapping about
$138 billion for the development of humanoid robots, for industry and for
personal use. That is a lot of money and probably just
the tip of the iceberg in an otherwise difficult job market in China.
Online recruitment firm Galpin says. The number of job openings in China’s
humanoid robotics sector has quadrupled so far this year from last year, with
salaries for the needed algorithm engineers rising well past the average
urban pay. Hangzhou based Unitary is one of the
pioneers of consumer robotics in China, offering its latest so-called humanoid
agent AI Avatar, the four foot two inch £77 G one on the web for $16,000.
So you can do all kinds of things. You can run, you can jump, you can get
your coffee or for $600, there’s the for the ultra wide recognition lidar
equipped goto door with plenty of tricks up its 12 flexible knee joint motors it
can stand. It is just the beginning stage for
China’s vast industrial complex as well. Rapid automation includes the increasing
use of inspection and diagnostic bots with embodied AI, such as Lenovo’s six
legged Daystar, deployed in places unreachable by or unsafe for humans.
I think the Chinese robots will come into the world, you know, in a way that
as a price for money, the parts of value that will be quite feasible with the
backing of state policy and funds. Expect a myriad of new embodied AI
products to try and grab your attention. Like it or not, we may be staring
directly into the future. Stephen Engle.
Bloomberg News, China.