The Beijing-based company Lenovo holds 28 percent of the global PC market, ahead of HP and Dell, showing its strong position in the industry.
The new AI agent, called Qira, is designed to act on its own. Instead of just answering questions, it can complete tasks and ‘remember user context’.
Lenovo said Qira reflects the company’s wide product range. It covers laptops, tablets and smartphones under the Motorola brand, along with servers and supercomputers.
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The company also showed early versions of connected smart glasses and an AI-powered pendant. The pendant records “important moments” with user permission.
Motorola’s Angelina Gomez said the pendant can capture conversations, while Lenovo vice president Luca Rossi explained it “sees what you see and hears what you hear.”
A task can begin on the pendant, continue on a phone, and finish on a laptop. Qira keeps track of everything across devices.
The AI can summarize a user’s day, write and send emails, and choose photos to post on social media.
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Lenovo said Qira is not meant to compete with Microsoft’s Copilot. Instead, Copilot will be integrated into Motorola smartphones.
At CES, Lenovo stood out as the only major Chinese company on the main stage, highlighting its global business and leadership team from different countries.