According to a South China Morning Post report, a demo video posted on X (formerly Twitter) racked up over 200,000 views in less than a day, with tons of comments begging for access. The team claims Manus beats OpenAI’s “Deep Research” AI on a popular test called GAIA (basically like an AI report card). They haven’t shared details about how it works yet, but people are already calling it a glimpse into the future of AI.
Why China’s AI push matters
China is racing to become a global leader in AI, and projects like Manus show they’re serious. While the U.S. has giants like OpenAI and Google, China is investing heavily in its own tech to compete. AI is a big deal for jobs, security, and innovation—countries that master it could control everything from healthcare to military tech. Manus might just be the start of China’s plan to prove it can build AI that’s as smart (or smarter!) than what’s made in Silicon Valley.For now, Manus is a reminder that the AI race isn’t just about chatbots—it’s about who can create robots that act like humans, not just talk like them. And China wants to win.
FAQs:
What are some of the most popular AI platforms?Some of the most popular AI platforms in the world include the likes of ChatGPT, Manus AI,