International visitors get a glimpse of future smart life in Wuxi
What does the future feel like? For eight international guests touring Wuxi in Jiangsu province on July 9, it felt like a stringless guitar, a pair of smart glasses that translate languages in real time, and a chess‑playing robot that refuses to lose — three times in a row.
The delegation, comprising influencers, teachers, and students from six countries, spent the day at the Z·Pilot × AgiBot Player Base and Yadea Technology Group. They got hands‑on experience with AI‑powered eyewear, exoskeletons, chess‑playing robots, humanoid robots, and electric two‑wheelers. The verdict? China's manufacturing prowess is not just impressive — it's startlingly tangible.
From theory to everyday reality
Shahenda Abdelazem, an Egyptian student at Jiangnan University, was drawn to a pair of smart glasses that double as a real‑time translator, camera, and voice‑activated payment device. "Chinese people are literally living in the future," she said. "I'd tell everyone: come to China and see it with your own eyes."
For Ethan Dzimano, a Zimbabwean master's student at the same university, the chess‑playing robot was the highlight — mainly because it beat him every single time. "I've visited several AI exhibitions in China, and what strikes me most is that these technologies are no longer lab concepts," he said. "You can actually use them and benefit from them today." He singled out the exoskeleton and smart glasses as prime examples of innovations that have already moved beyond the prototype phase.
















