Lenovo Group plans to unveil its first "AI Super Agent" targeting the global market during CES, positioning it as a strategic-level application for the company. The brand name for this agent has not yet been publicly announced. However, according to sources familiar with the matter, the AI capabilities of this application are comparable to the Doubao mobile assistant, but it is expected to offer more comprehensive features and enable cross-device connectivity and coordination.
The source, who has seen a demo of the application's test version, stated that unlike a single application or voice assistant, this AI Super Agent can exist simultaneously across Lenovo's Motorola smartphones, PCs, tablets, and wearable devices, allowing for seamless use across multiple terminals. "This super agent has broken through Lenovo's hardware ecosystem and achieved cross-device, cross-system functionality," the source commented.
The source clarified that this super agent is not an operating system but rather a system-level application that can connect different AI capabilities and hardware terminals. It helps users coordinate multiple agents in the background to achieve functions similar to the Doubao mobile assistant. Furthermore, it can interact with users through text, voice, and environmental awareness, and learn individual habits over long-term use.
Earlier this month, ByteDance, in partnership with ZTE, launched a "Doubao Phone" application. This application can invoke services across different apps based on user commands to assist with tasks such as ordering food delivery, booking flights, comparison shopping, and even replying to WeChat messages or operating mini-program games. The phone resulting from this collaboration has been referred to by the market as the "Doubao Phone."
According to IDC data, Lenovo Group is the PC manufacturer with the highest global market share, holding 25.5% in the latest quarter. Shipments of Lenovo's Motorola smartphones in the latest quarter exceeded 16 million units, with revenue surpassing $3.9 billion, capturing a 4.9% global market share and ranking eighth in the global smartphone market. This suggests that compared to ByteDance, Lenovo's Super Agent may have an advantage in terms of system-level embedding permissions and cooperation on either smartphones or PCs.