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With 700M+ users and 1.4M+ AI apps, DingTalk is redefining the digital workplace in China. Its AI assistant, DingTalk One, powered by Alibaba’s Qwen, transforms fragmented tasks into a smart, scrollable feed. 💡Work just got a whole lot smoother!

109,486 views • 9 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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🇨🇳 China’s AI race is starting to look less like a model race and more like an adoption race. Alibaba’s Qwen App shows how AI becomes powerful when it slips into ordinary research habits. The difference is not capability, it is deployment shape. e.g doctors and medical researchers in China appear to be using it as a workflow layer: gathering papers, sorting evidence, framing mechanisms, shaping charts, and drafting research-style explanations. Alibaba is trying to place Qwen directly inside a mass consumer and services ecosystem, including shopping, payments, maps, travel, office tools, education, and healthcare, so the model is closer to daily task execution rather than only a premium research assistant. The important shift is that Qwen is not being used only as a chatbot that answers questions, but as a workflow tool. This strategy lands right in China’s comfort zone. It has a massive digital economy to spread AI apps fast, and people who are already very comfortable with tech. Ipsos, the polling firm, found that China is more excited about using AI than any other country. OpenAI is building a highly capable research assistant; China may be normalizing AI as a default work surface inside professional life. For Alibaba and China, the interesting part is the adoption surface: Qwen can become a front door to many services, which means ordinary users, students, doctors, researchers, and office workers may meet AI inside routine tasks rather than as a separate tool. A normal health question can become a research task because the app first shapes the question, then searches for relevant studies, then separates weak claims from stronger evidence, then turns the result into a clearer explanation. This matters for medicine because a lot of research work is not one big discovery moment, but thousands of small steps involving literature review, data cleanup, experiment interpretation, figure preparation, and careful writing. So for professors, students, office workers, and ordinary users, the difference is not just that Qwen can summarize text; it is being positioned as a work surface for preparing reports, generating presentations, studying, planning, searching, and completing real-world tasks without jumping between apps. Both superpowers are worried about slipping behind. In 2026, it could start to look like they are racing on separate tracks.

Rohan Paul

84,663 views • 1 month ago