News

These three Chinese robotics firms are tapping public markets to bankroll their next phase of international growth.
Officials caution only a few licenses will be issued at first, favoring long-term stability over short-term hype.
At WAIC, both Tencent and JD outlined their strategies for embodied intelligence. Notably, neither plans to build robots.
Quin, a hardware company based in Zhuhai, has built a name for itself in overseas markets. Riding the wave of demand for ...
WeRide has begun night-time robotaxi testing in Beijing, operating from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. under a new city permit. The Nasdaq-listed firm aims to build a round-the-clock autonomous mobility network, ...
Taobao will launch a unified membership program that bundles services and perks from Ele.me, Fliggy, and Hema, expanding 88VIP into a comprehensive lifestyle offering. The move reflects Alibaba’s ...
With rising exports, factory rollouts, and new listings, Chinese automakers are redefining what it means to go global.
Chinese fitness app Keep is expecting RMB 10 million in adjusted net profit for H1 2025, with founder Wang Ning calling it “sustained profitability” after cutting unproductive growth. He said Keep ...
The Midea-backed brand is pitching a full-stack system that unifies household tech through large models and adaptive learning ...
Energy efficiency and range remain top priorities for EV buyers. The Li i8 addresses both with a choice of batteries and an ...
More countries, more buyers, and more cross-border deals marked this year’s conference, with Chinese companies making tech ...
Chinese AI firms rolled out a slate of new releases at this year’s WAIC, signaling no slowdown in development.