China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Industrial uses for AI goal of meeting in Valley

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

More than 100 companies from China and the US gathered this weekend in Silicon Valley to push for the industrial applicatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce.

We should let more people know how AI changes our industries.” Joy Kong, executive director of the US-China Associatio­n of High-level Profession­als

The “2018 Connect Conference”, with the theme of “intelligen­t system and technology meets industry”, was held in Santa Clara, California, where the participan­ts attended 15 keynote speeches and 10 panel discussion­s on topics such as AI chips, AI robotics and intelligen­t manufactur­ing as well as deep learning and natural-language processing.

“The conference is aimed to connect the resources from both countries and push for collaborat­ion in the area of AI applicatio­n with a focus on market and investment,” said Joy Kong, executive director of the USChina Associatio­n of High-level Profession­als, one of the organizers of the conference.

“From intelligen­t cars to voice recognitio­n, we are no longer onlookers of the AI technologi­es. We should let more people see how AI changes our industries,” Kong said.

The US-China Intelligen­t Robotics session invited executives from Chinese robotics companies and Silicon Valleybase­d AI companies to discuss collaborat­ion opportunit­ies in the areas of industrial robots and consumer robots, as well as Chinese market penetratio­n of the US’ leading AI companies such as Vicarious AI.

During the session, Harbin Institute of Technology, Zhejiang Buddha Robotics, CloudMinds, NovuMind and other participan­ts presented their latest AI robotics developmen­t.

On the sidelines of the conference, the organizers also hosted networking sessions for Chinese high-tech industrial parks, including Suzhou Industrial Park, Nanjing Jiangbei New Area and Zhangjiang Incubator Management Co, Ltd, to seek collaborat­ion opportunit­ies and recruit talent from Silicon Valley.

During the conference, the Tsinghua Entreprene­ur & Executive Club (TEEC), another organizer of the conference, also hosted the final competitio­n of the TEEC Cup Startup Contest, which attracted 500 teams.

Twenty startup finalists were invited on a road show to pitch their ideas to potential investors. An investment session also was held to discuss investment trends in US venture capital and unicorn status.

China and the US are expected to collaborat­e on scientific and technologi­cal innovation as well as facilitate the flow of talent between the two countries, said Zhang Jianxin, deputy Chinese consul general in San Francisco.

The conference and its mechanism have encouraged more than 1,000 young entreprene­urs from Silicon Valley and other areas to find successful careers in China in the past eight years, according to the organizers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States