Smartphones

Smartphone maker Honor bets on AI-powered ‘intelligent phone’ – The Star Online


BARCELONA: Chinese smartphone maker Honor said March 2 it was working on an AI-powered “intelligent phone”, adding that it would invest US$10bil (RM44.58bil) into artificial intelligence collaborations.

In a statement ahead of the Mobile World Congress that opens in Barcelona Monday, Honor said the future device would include a “personal mobile AI agent” able to carry out tasks like making restaurant reservations.

The “envisioned” phone is part of Honor’s push to become a “leading AI device ecosystem company”, it said.

Artificial intelligence “agents” are the latest trend in the emerging technology.

Industry giants such as OpenAI are promising tools that will take tasks like scheduling and research off human hands – although for now the services mostly still require significant user supervision and input.

Honor said partnerships it announced Sunday with both Google Cloud and smartphone chipmaker Qualcomm would boost its AI agent efforts.

Beyond agents, Honor said it would use AI to improve the quality of photos snapped with the company’s handsets.

The company also plans on-device features to detect AI-generated “deepfakes”, or images and video featuring the likenesses of real people.

And it announced new laptop and tablet models integrating the company’s latest AI tools.

MWC is often the venue for new model announcements, with competitor Xiaomi on Sunday trailing its latest flagship phone offering high-quality photography with a Leica camera.

Honor recently replaced its chief executive in the run-up to an independent stock market flotation for the company.

New boss Jian Li said in Sunday’s statement that he expected AI to “reshape the paradigm of the device industry”.

He added that global tech firms needed to “open up our industry boundaries and co-create” the AI ecosystem, vowing US$10bil (RM44.58bil) of investment into such collaborations over the coming five years.

Scoring internationally with high-end phones and foldable devices, Honor was spun off in 2020 from tech heavyweight Huawei as it suffered under US trade sanctions.

Honor has in recent months shored up support from other Chinese giants, including a deal for cloud services with Tencent and selling a stake to leading network operator China Mobile. – AFP



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