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China's tech giants, including Tencent, Baidu, and Lenovo, are making significant strides in integrating AI into their products. Despite restrictions from Washington, these companies are stockpiling chips and finding workarounds to advance their AI capabilities. Chinese software as a service companies are also embedding AI into their offerings to attract investors. Baidu has partnered with Lenovo to feature its generative AI technology in Lenovo's smartphones, marking the third such deal in China's AI smartphone market. Companies are facing the challenge of demonstrating the benefits of AI while avoiding the negative impact of job cuts.
Baidu partners with Lenovo in third China AI smartphone deal https://t.co/CoFNTB3N1I https://t.co/Re0Zmdu1bX
A growing number of companies face an AI two-step of sorts: showing investors how AI helps do more with less, while simultaneously avoiding the reputational impact of directly linking technology with job cuts. https://t.co/gGfphqVycT
⚠️ BAIDU PARTNERS WITH LENOVO IN THIRD CHINA AI SMARTPHONE DEAL (Reuters) China's Baidu has partnered with Lenovo to feature its generative artificial intelligence (AI) technology on Lenovo's smartphones, in the latest team up with a phone manufacturer as it seeks practical… https://t.co/TMjmX1BY6S
More and more Chinese software as a service companies are embedding AI into their offerings. That’s helping some remain attractive as investors pull back in lieu of any major success stories. https://t.co/NzAwXcg8p3
#FPTech: #Lenovo bets big on AI-powered laptops, eager to make localised, on-device #AI PCs easily accessible https://t.co/z52ciye60a
WATCH: China's tech giants from Tencent to Baidu have made notable progress in generative AI despite Washington’s restrictions. Stockpiling chips and creative workarounds are working, but Robyn Mak explains the fast-approaching limits to that strategy. https://t.co/VBgAclClFh https://t.co/vdcHBrVMHl