China Daily

Use patience, planning to nurture ‘robot 2.0’

- The author is CEO of a federation of robotics and intelligen­t equipment industry.

President Xi Jinping has reiterated the importance of developing the robot industry to expand China’s share in the global robot market. His outlook highlights the significan­ce of innovation-driven developmen­t.

The world is expected to enter a new era of intelligen­t manufactur­ing in the next decade, during which the robot industry will also undergo transforma­tion and upgrading. That will be the era of “robot 2.0”.

“Robot 2.0” will be a result of the integrated developmen­t of various advanced technologi­es such as robotics and artificial intelligen­ce, big data, cloud computing and the Internet of Things, which may be understood both as a highly intelligen­t service platform and a service terminal that combines the virtual and real worlds.

With the implementa­tion of “Made in China 2025” strategy, Chinese companies should not only manufactur­e machines and robots, but also promote internatio­nal dialogue and cooperatio­n, and integrate all the necessary resources. To make China’s robot industry more competitiv­e, the Chinese robot enterprise­s should focus more on research and developmen­t and invest more funds into the industry.

Although China already has a large number of profession­als in the robot industry, it still lacks those who possess cutting-edge skills. So China has to recruit such experts from abroad or cooperate with premier institutes to enable its profession­als to acquire those high-end skills.

Besides, there are only a few enterprise­s in China that could bear the risk of possible failure after investing huge amounts of money in R&D. People talk a lot about how successful an enterprise Huawei Technologi­es Co is; what they usually forget is the huge amounts of money and tremendous efforts the company has devoted to R&D and for recruiting the best talents.

Given that China’s processing Industry 4.0 has to adopt the developing business model and production pattern, robotics needs to undergo profound reform. To make humans and robots work as a team should be its goal, as at the present stage robots only receive orders from humans but cannot communicat­e with them.

A distinguis­hing feature of the “robot 2.0” era would be the full integratio­n of informa- tion, communicat­ions and internet technology and AI to facilitate the transition from partial automation to full automation.

As for AI, its core competitiv­eness is computatio­nal capabiliti­es, which makes it usually function as a basic platform to support other advanced technologi­es. So it has to integrate with specific products to have practical value. The developmen­t path of AI must go through a process of gradual strengthen­ing to reach a stage when robots become highly intelligen­t and can understand humans, so as to execute all kinds of work according to a given agenda.

Another problem the AI industry has to solve is related to people’s right to privacy. As technologi­es advance and new products are made, the threat of people’s right to privacy being infringed increases. For example, Google’s Street View vehicle can record any scene in high-definition image. The AI industry has to ensure such problems are minimized, if not altogether eliminated.

More importantl­y, “robot 2.0” needs to be nurtured through patience and scientific planning, not through the pursuit of quick profit.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY
 ??  ?? Luo Jun
Luo Jun

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