When politicians visit technology factories

When politicians visit technology factories




German Chancellor Friedrich M visited the city of Guangzhou, one of the main technological hubs in China, and made sure to include in his agenda a stop at Unitree Robotics, one of the fastest growing companies in the humanoid sector.


The visit was not symbolic, Friedrich Merz attended live demonstrations, including presentations of the so-called Wubot, a martial arts performance with robots and even fights between humanoids used to show coordination, balance and dynamic control.


During the meeting, Unitree founder Wang Xingxing presented the systems directly to the chancellor, who got to examine robotic components up close, listening to technical explanations about sensors, actuators and motion control, but the most important thing was not the demonstration itself, it was the context.


The visit was part of Friedrich Merz's first official trip to China, accompanied by a large delegation with about 30 executives from German companies in the automotive, chemical, pharmaceutical, industrial and technological sectors. In addition to Unitree, the chancellor met with representatives of artificial intelligence, interfaces, brain machines, electric vehicles and advanced computing companies.


In other words, this was not technological tourism, it was industrial diplomacy. Germany, one of the world's greatest engineering powers, is closely watching Chinese advancement in robotics and artificial intelligence. The reason is clear, the next industrial revolution will not just be digital, it will be physical. Humanoids, autonomous vehicles, neural interfaces and intelligent systems are beginning to redefine production, logistics, mobility and even defense.


According to the founder of Unitree himself, the European market has enormous potential and international cooperation can accelerate the development of intelligent robotics on a global scale, but behind the discourse of cooperation there is also competition, China, the United States and Europe are racing to lead the next generation of technology and this time it is not just about software, it is about machines that walk, manipulate, learn and work in the real world.


The fact that a head of government personally visits a robotics company shows that humanoids stopped being an experiment and became a strategic issue and when politics, industry and artificial intelligence begin to mix, it generally means that we are facing a change of era.





Posted Using INLEO



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