Chinese consumers interested in AI phones

Chinese smartphones upgraded with an artificial intelligence (AI) assistant can now easily translate a 3,000-word English news report into Chinese, write a summary and provide an understanding of the article. Celia, the voice-activated assistant from Huawei, has become smarter thanks to the company’s self-developed large language model (LLM), a key technology that enables computers to perform multiple tasks, such as writing essays, sketching out business plans, and creating videos. Celia can assist the user in copywriting, and in providing personalized suggestions and recommendations. Chinese consumers are increasingly interested in next-generation AI smartphones, or those that run on-device generative AI LLMs. AI has become the focal marketing message at recent flagship smartphone launches, with more to follow this year, according to experts and company executives.

As AI impacts all corners of the devices market, smartphones are expected to drive the AI revolution into every home, according to a report by global market consultancy International Data Corp (IDC). IDC’s preliminary forecast suggests 170 million next-generation AI smartphones will be shipped in 2024, representing almost 15% of total smartphone shipments and a sizable jump from the roughly 51 million shipped in 2023. This share is expected to climb rapidly beyond 2024 as industry players push aggressively toward new chips, and as use cases evolve further, IDC said. “Nobody wants to be seen as being behind the curve, and AI is just the talk of the town. It is the buzzword this year that all the vendors are going to be jumping on,” said Bryan Ma, Vice President of client devices research at IDC.

Chinese smartphone vendors, who are well aware of the opportunities ahead, are scrambling to announce that they are “all in on AI”. Oppo said in February it has established an AI center, dedicated to research and development (R&D) into AI and its applications. “Following feature phones and smartphones, next-gen AI smartphones will represent the third major transformative stage in the mobile phone industry. In the era of AI smartphones, both the mobile phone industry and user experience will witness revolutionary changes,” said Pete Lau, Chief Product Officer of Oppo.

The company said that in the second quarter of 2024, the Oppo Reno 11 Series will be equipped with advanced generative AI capabilities, including the innovative AI Eraser function which can help consumers automatically erase unwanted objects on their photos. Oppo has released its own LLM AndesGPT, which has three major technical characteristics – dialogue enhancement, personalization, and cloud-device collaboration. Following the introduction of its Find X7 series, Oppo’s existing generative AI features include intelligent object removal in photos and phone conversation summaries, the company said.

Rival Xiaomi Corp is also strengthening R&D efforts to crack the high-end, AI-backed smartphone market where competitors are all pushing to expand their presence, despite what experts call “limited progress” so far. Lei Jun, CEO of Xiaomi, has said that this is “the only way for Xiaomi to grow” and has described it “as a battle of life and death”. “Xiaomi fully embraces the research on AI LLMs,” Lei said, adding that the company’s voice-activated AI assistant has been upgraded to support an LLM. He said Xiaomi has engaged in AI research since July 2016 and that the company had established a team in April last year for R&D of an LLM. It has, at present, over 3,000 employees working on AI-related research.

Chinese smartphone brand Realme has also enhanced its AI push to gain an advantage amid fierce competition, as the technology is expected to give a strong boost to the smartphone sector. Xu Qi, Vice President of Realme, said the company is strategically positioning itself to capitalize on this opportunity by extensively integrating AI into its smartphones. Realme has been laying the groundwork for AI for several years, boasting a dedicated AI team actively advancing related initiatives, Xu said. In the broader context of the smartphone industry, major players like Huawei, Honor and Oppo have already embraced AI, incorporating large models, AI systems and functionalities. Realme aims to differentiate itself by focusing on AI assistants, AI entertainment, AI imaging and AI efficiency around the overall use scenario of young users.

Xiaodu Technology, the smart speaker unit of Baidu, has also released its education-oriented smartphone equipped with an AI-powered LLM that is targeted at students, in a bid to carve out a niche in the world’s largest smartphone market. The company said the smartphone, called Xiaodu Qinghe, provides AI-enabled tutoring, English-speaking training and interactive learning guidance for primary and middle school students, as the company aims to extend its footprint in the education hardware segment.

Chinese smartphone company Honor is also eager to integrate AI into its devices. Zhao Ming, CEO of Honor, said: “We believe AI will reconstruct operating systems and rebuild our future smartphone experience. Honor will advance our AI strategy by integrating it across our operating system and all devices, ensuring a human- centric experience that delights our users with every interaction.” Honor has invested more than CNY10 billion into specialized AI R&D, the China Daily reports.