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In the global AI race, China and the United States are heading down very different paths. The US is betting big on general-purpose foundational models, while China is going deep into domain-specific, industry-integrated AI – so who's got it right? In a conversation with CGTN Radio reporter Gao Yingshi, Zhuang Huaixuan, overseas digital tntelligent businesses director at Yonyou Group, notes that China's full-chain data ecosystem – from factory to consumer – offers a massive range of real-world scenarios for AI deployment. China is also moving toward smaller, more efficient models. When asked whether the rapid rise of AI will lead to the death of the software industry, Zhuang says it will not. He expects the industry to evolve into AI-native platforms, where the product is no longer accounts and licenses, but customized software services.
In the global AI race, China and the United States are heading down very different paths. The US is betting big on general-purpose foundational models, while China is going deep into domain-specific, industry-integrated AI – so who's got it right? In a conversation with CGTN Radio reporter Gao Yingshi, Zhuang Huaixuan, overseas digital tntelligent businesses director at Yonyou Group, notes that China's full-chain data ecosystem – from factory to consumer – offers a massive range of real-world scenarios for AI deployment. China is also moving toward smaller, more efficient models. When asked whether the rapid rise of AI will lead to the death of the software industry, Zhuang says it will not. He expects the industry to evolve into AI-native platforms, where the product is no longer accounts and licenses, but customized software services.