Site icon Scott Loftesness

What’s new in AI from China?

February 2026 is a busy time in AI coming out of China coinciding with the Chinese New Year.

I asked Grok this morning for an update and double checked it with Gemini.

Here’s what Grok reported:

Chinese AI is in a very active phase right now (mid-February 2026), with a massive wave of new model releases, upgrades, and applications timed around the Lunar New Year (Spring Festival) holiday. This echoes the “DeepSeek shock” from exactly one year ago, when DeepSeek’s low-cost, high-performance models disrupted global expectations.

Major Recent Releases and Upgrades (mostly this month)

Chinese companies are shipping frontier-level models at a furious pace, often open-source or very low-cost, focusing on efficiency, reasoning, coding, multimodality, agents, and real-world applications.

Many of these are open-weight or open-source, leading to Alibaba’s Qwen family overtaking Meta’s Llama in cumulative Hugging Face downloads.

Broader Themes Right Now

Overall, February 2026 feels like China’s AI industry hitting a coordinated sprint — not just catching up, but pulling ahead in accessible, deployable, cost-effective AI that reaches everyday users, creators, and industries quickly. The US still leads in raw frontier capability and monetization scale, but the gap is shrinking noticeably in deployment and iteration speed.


Gemini’s review included the following:

The report’s observation about the “Two Different Races” is the most insightful part:

US Strategy: Scaling laws for maximum “Frontier Intelligence.”

China Strategy: Scaling for “Deployment Efficiency.” By making models like MiniMax M2.5 and Kimi K2.5 available at a fraction of the cost ($0.15–$0.60 per 1M tokens), China is prioritizing the “AI Agent” economy, where reliability and low cost per task matter more than raw benchmark scores.

Exit mobile version