China’s DeepSeek teams with Tencent, HKU on AI tool to sharpen 3D design - South China Morning Post
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMirAFBVV95cUxNekNQeTd6b0pQT0RtNGt6WVV5YzZoWWpZakxjb1BDLTdVMzZheXN1OVFTbE42NU1FT21haHNnWHE5SzRwLS1SejZPVkhFRXB2U2g3b3lwMnE0b3hMemFPaThHa0NsNS1iTkdmU0xvVW1ZQ3VRWUxnb2lPbVNGT1ctNGxzWWlpVVEtNDY0QlVkNFZRWmNtZlpCamxpaS1DSUt2LTk4bFZWeXF1SnpL0gGsAUFVX3lxTE9kMV9nMU05QUdfNXpyaGF3U2hOMHdXVkl6b1BPYldzUFdVcVJNaVhCSVk5N2pfeTNmLV96blBPWERBcWlWZllfMV96ZDFjdUVsZWd4Sjg3eC1HX1o3d1gtellTSXhYSEI2NGljeTMyTVMyVS10VEZxMUFndmU0QkQxWFdqSUtZeUhPUjRvWkg3VmNCbmFSNjhoWXl1RUZxeXIxX3d1QklfNHZMUWg?oc=5" target="_blank">China’s DeepSeek teams with Tencent, HKU on AI tool to sharpen 3D design</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">South China Morning Post</font>
Could not retrieve the full article text.
Read on Google News - Tencent AI →Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
china
University town to be fast-tracked, Eric Chan says after mainland China visit
Hong Kong’s No 2 official has pledged to fast-track a new university town’s development following a visit to similar projects in mainland China and said authorities will devise a strategy to attract top institutions from across the border and overseas to take part. Chief Secretary Eric Chan Kwok-ki and his working group on the university town’s planning and construction, which falls under the Committee on Development of the Northern Metropolis, concluded their three-day visit to the mainland...
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.
More in Products

Just Because We Can: The Strategic Risks Of Automating Everything
While AI and automation can be powerful, many applications use complex global systems to solve simple problems that could be handled locally. Guest author Itay Sagie shares three risks of undisciplined automation of everything, urging more thoughtful and disciplined use of technology.
The Morning After: NASA’s Artemis II is on a voyage around the Moon
NASA’s Artemis II successfully launched on April 1 , with its crew on a 10-day mission to circle the Moon. It’s the first crewed Artemis flight and a major step toward humanity returning to our little neighbor in the future. Since launch, the vehicle has separated from its launch system and been manually piloted, testing how the Orion capsule will dock with future lunar landers. There have been some snags, however: The onboard toilet went awry, and Microsoft Outlook has been acting screwy . Jokes aside, there is something magnificent about seeing humanity taking to the stars once again. That, for all of our worst instincts, we can still come together to solve problems and explore beyond our own horizons. — Dan Cooper The other big stories (and deals) this morning SpaceX has reportedly file

The end of the browse-and-click era: The roadmap to agentic commerce
The agentic commerce era is here — but how much does it matter? The short answer: enormously, and more so every day. McKinsey has estimated that five years from now, agentic commerce — meaning AI agents acting autonomously on behalf of consumers to search, compare and buy across platforms — could account for $1 trillion in the US business-to-consumer (B2C) retail market, and $3 trillion to $5 trillion globally. At the January conference of the National Retail Federation, participants noted that what was experimental is fast becoming operationalized , and implementations that used to take two to three months are now being done in a few weeks. Common standards and practices are being established, such as the Agentic AI Foundation , as well as tools like the Agentic Commerce Protocol and the

PMI builds commerce engine to glean customer insights
Counterfeit tobacco sales account for as much as 75% of South Africa’s total market. And while Mary Mahuma, CIO for Southern Africa PMI, admits that the challenge facing the business is significant, she finds solutions by tackling the root cause of the issue: customer insights . According to her, other FMCG brands also struggle to clearly understand consumer behavior, how they engage with brands, and what they actually want. This is especially true in rural and informal markets. “One might expect a brand like PMI to try to address these challenges by focusing on big fish,” she says. “But there’s so much value in better targeting our strategies toward understanding the hidden market for tobacco products.” This market, consisting of small, independent convenience or general trade stores, is




Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!