- Alibaba’s Tongyi Lab unveils Qwen Robot Suite
- Its first embodied-AI models are divided into navigation (RobotNav), a video “world model” (RobotWorld) and manipulation (RobotManip)
- The move comes after Nvidia recently unveiled and publicized its own Cosmos 3 offerings
As much of its AI competition continues to focus on LLMs and making them faster and more skilled, Alibaba may be looking at another frontier alongside its LLM ambitions in tow: robots.
The company’s Tongyi Lab has unveiled the Qwen Robot Suite, what it calls a family of models focused on “embodied AI,” which is centered on enabling machines to perceive space, reason, and act accordingly.
This comes on the heels of Nvidia’s own Cosmos 3, a frontier model for physical AI, further bolstering CEO Jensen Huang’s narrative that China’s developer ecosystem remains relatively unaffected by chip restrictions, even as the focus in the West continues to shift to powering many of the sprawling data centers being built in the US.
A competitor or a supplement to Nvidia’s playbook?
The Qwen-Robot Suite consists of three core models: Qwen-RobotManip, a generalizable vision-language-action model; Qwen-RobotNav, a scalable vision-language navigation model; and Qwen-RobotWorld, a video world model designed for embedded intelligence.
However, there’s no denying that robotics is being treated as perhaps the most defining frontier of artificial intelligence, even as LLMs continue to evolve, with both Google and Nvidia among the companies pouring billions into research into their respective Gemini Robotics and open-source Cosmos offerings.
Alibaba claims that the model, which utilizes a lighter Qwen3.5-4B model rather than its Qwen 3.7 Max, which has over a trillion parameters, manages to top the RoboChallenge real-robot benchmark, scoring an impressive 59.83 and a 45% task success rate.
With other interested parties such as Tencent, Unitree, AgiBot, UBTech, Galbot, Spirit AI and GigaAI, in addition to interest from EV companies including Xpeng and Xiaomi, all shaping the future of Chinese AI robotics, R&D in the industry continues in full swing, although upcoming IPOs are expected to further propel the industry forward with easier access to capital.
The South China Morning Posta wholly owned subsidiary of Alibaba, noted that “Alibaba’s entry comes as embedded intelligence is fast becoming the next frontier in global artificial intelligence.”
Nvidia’s stance on the matter is perhaps more nuanced with it trying to act as an ‘enabler’ over a direct competitor as it pushes its open source model to perhaps form the same building block that CUDA does for GPUs, with Cosmos, GR00T, Isaac and similar offerings being the playbook this time to ensure that future robotics platforms are built around most N software platforms and stvidia tools.
Alibaba’s announcement may not be a sign that the Chinese giant has developed Nvidia, but with the Chinese government at least informally insisting on a decoupling, or at the very least, no reliance on US-based hardware or software, it could be seen as an intention to build a similar ecosystem for Chinese robotics companies.
In the absence of Nvidia’s presence in China, it can be difficult to compare the two offerings, although their scales differ significantly: Cosmos 3 is an open-world foundation model with multiple vendor-reported scores that do not cover RoboChallenge, whereas Alibaba’s are self-reported from exactly one benchmark. Until both approaches can be directly compared, one cannot assume that one is superior to the other.
What is perhaps painfully obvious to Nvidia, however, and has been warned about again and again by its CEO, is that China, irritated by US policies around AI, is no longer looking for chips, models or even open source solutions to incorporate into its ecosystem, but wants to build them from scratch.
This could result in a lack of exposure to what was the second most lucrative market for the chip designer, a move that could cost it billions of dollars in revenue in the robotics segment alone from what is still widely considered the “factory of the world” because of its huge manufacturing base.
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