For Chinese language firms, the guess is that decrease costs and extra AI options will persuade folks to put on sensible glasses all day, recording their lives by fixed video and audio. In case you decrease the worth to round $200, “folks will begin to use them each day,” says Brian Chen, normal supervisor of Appotronics’ innovation heart. That shift would elevate apparent privateness and safety considerations that each Rokid and Appotronics have acknowledged, however they see the potential payoff as definitely worth the danger.
From Vacuums to Vehicles
A number of main Chinese language electrical car firms, together with Geely and Nice Wall Motor, introduced their automobiles to CES, however what stole the present have been two manufacturers that nearly nobody had heard of earlier than. Nebula Subsequent and Kosmera each confirmed off smooth, luxurious electrical sports activities automobile prototypes, neither of which can be found in the marketplace but. Each manufacturers have connections to Dreame, a number one Chinese language robotic vacuum firm, however they declare to function independently from it. At CES, nonetheless, the Nebula Subsequent and Kosmera cubicles have been tied to Dreame within the convention’s listing.
Placing apart this sophisticated company relationship, the thought of a robotic vacuum firm investing in EVs is just not as absurd because it sounds. If something, it’s simply the most recent instance of how Chinese language electronics firms are parlaying their present manufacturing experience into making automobiles. The founding father of Roborock, one other Chinese language vacuum firm, began an EV firm in 2023. Xiaomi, the Chinese language smartphone and residential gadget large, launched its first EV in 2024.
Dreame isn’t the primary and gained’t be the final Chinese language firm crossing over from electronics to EVs, says Lei Xing, an unbiased automobile market analyst and the previous chief editor of the China Auto Assessment, who checked out Kosmera’s prototypes at CES with me. China’s subtle provide chain, engineering expertise, and manufacturing ecosystem make it comparatively simple for newcomers to take a shot at constructing automobiles, Xing explains, however only some will succeed. Others may find yourself extra like Apple, whose long-running automobile undertaking finally collapsed. “Life and demise can be a pure consequence,” Xing says.
Robovans Are Coming
Once I went again to China final 12 months, I made certain to strive Baidu’s robotaxi service, which is roughly on par with Alphabet’s Waymo within the US. What stunned me in China, nonetheless, was what number of autonomous parcel supply automobiles there have been roaming the identical open streets alongside my robotaxi.
Neolix is the main firm in China making each the {hardware} and software program for robovans. It says the variety of them deployed in China is rising roughly tenfold every year and reached about 10,000 in 2025. (For comparability, there’re about 2,500 Waymo automobiles working within the US.) Neolix claims to characterize greater than 60 p.c of the market and has no main rivals globally, says Zhao You, the corporate’s government president. Neolix introduced three of its automobiles to CES, ranging in dimension from a mini-fridge to a golf cart: tiny, windowless containers perched on outsized wheels, with no driver inside.
Neolix is raring to increase internationally and already has pilot initiatives underway within the Center East, East Asia, and Latin America. It’s eyeing the American market too. Zhao advised me he’s conscious that any self-driving firm within the US will face heavy scrutiny on points like security and information safety, however he’s hoping to work with native companions who may assist navigate compliance necessities right here. “As a tech firm, working with one cloud service supplier for any market is essentially the most reasonably priced possibility, nevertheless it gained’t work. It’s important to speak to native regulators and study which cloud suppliers they approve of,” Zhao says.
Producing Viral Movies
When OpenAI launched Sora 2 final 12 months, it was making an formidable guess that generative AI will be not only a instrument however a content material style large enough to maintain a whole social media platform. That imaginative and prescient hasn’t absolutely materialized but, however at CES I met with two AI video firms which might be competing with OpenAI’s Sora.
Kling is the AI division of Kuaishou, a massively fashionable Chinese language short-video platform. The Kling app and web site mixed have greater than 60 million registered customers, nearly all of which the corporate says are primarily based outdoors China. About 100 folks attended Kling’s panel occasion at CES with the platform’s energy customers. Jason Zada, an award-winning director who made Coca-Cola’s controversial 2024 AI-generated vacation industrial, mentioned he just lately used Kling to generate a YouTube video that includes a fire calmly burning as Santa, turkeys, astronauts, and snowmen make inexplicable appearances. Zada mentioned he created over 600 clips with Kling and pieced them collectively to make the ultimate 105-minute video. It price about $2,500 in token credit.
