logo
Watch: China showcases OW5 laser weapon in ‘border control' exercise

Watch: China showcases OW5 laser weapon in ‘border control' exercise

First Post5 days ago
Chinese media highlighted laser weapons' ability to instantly destroy targets with unlimited ammunition, dependent on the power supply read more
China on Monday (July 21) conducted a warfare demonstration showcasing a wide array of uncrewed systems, in an attempt to position itself as a major global drone supplier. State media CCTV reported that the exercise was held at an Inner Mongolia testing ground, and it simulated the 'seizure and control of critical border locations.'
The drill featured six phases of a futuristic battlefield scenario, including reconnaissance, AI planning, infiltration, aerial attack, elimination, and anti-access, deploying various Chinese-made systems.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Burning out drone circuits in seconds! China's OW5 laser weapon system, displayed Monday in North China's Inner Mongolia, is a high-mobility, vehicle-mounted, low-altitude anti-drone system. It can rapidly switch targets after taking one down. pic.twitter.com/OD4R6AS6UF — Global Times (@globaltimesnews) July 22, 2025
Displayed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) included ISR drones, long- and short-range loitering munitions, uncrewed helicopters, and tactical first-person view (FPV) devices.
Ground systems, such as smart command-and-control units and anti-drone defences, were also showcased.
A rare live-fire demonstration featured the OW-5 anti-drone laser weapon, whose 'high-energy beam barely visible to bare eyes' downed a drone 'a few kilometres away,' CCTV reported.
Unveiled statically at the 2021 Zhuhai air show, the upgraded OW5-A50, with a 50-kilowatt output, integrates command-and-control, radar, sensors, and a laser gun on an 8x8 Dongfeng truck, enabling standalone or networked air defence.
CCTV highlighted laser weapons' ability to instantly destroy targets with unlimited ammunition, dependent on the power supply.
The exercise demonstrated drone-artillery coordination, with a 155mm howitzer engaging targets using real-time UAV-transmitted coordinates.
Small tactical drones, including a flying jammer disrupting electro-optical equipment over several kilometres, were also featured.
Notable drones included the Flying Frog (VTOL reconnaissance), Flying Falcon (high-speed loitering munition), Black Bee (grenade-throwing), and Flying Whale (bomb-dropping).
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'With these smart partners, our infantry soldiers can evolve into future nodes with full-domain situational awareness and precision strikes, to win by intelligence on the modern battlefield,' CCTV stated.
Norinco, China's largest arms manufacturer and exporter, organised the event, unveiling its Feilong (Flying Dragon) loitering munitions family.
The series includes the anti-personnel Feilong-10, with a range under 10km, and the Feilong-300A, an anti-radiation drone targeting air defence radars up to 300km away.
The Feilong-60 serves as a reconnaissance source or hoverable cruise missile, launchable from rocket systems, while the Feilong-30 adapts to trucks, vehicles, or ships. These drones can form a networked swarm for saturated attacks, per CCTV.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Samsung in talks with OpenAI and Perplexity AI for powering its upcoming Galaxy S26 series
Samsung in talks with OpenAI and Perplexity AI for powering its upcoming Galaxy S26 series

United News of India

time2 hours ago

  • United News of India

Samsung in talks with OpenAI and Perplexity AI for powering its upcoming Galaxy S26 series

Business Economy New Delhi, July 26 (UNI) Samsung Electronics is currently involved in strategic talks with OpenAI and Perplexity AI to integrate advanced services in its upcoming Galaxy S26 series. This move is intended to expand the service horizon beyond 'Google Gemini' and provide a great experience to mobile users. Reportedly, now Samsung could replace Gemini as the default AI assistant on the model lineups of the Galaxy S26 series. Analysts also take this move as the intention to compete with rival Motorola, which has recently announced a bunch of features to the 'Moto AI suite' after partnering with Microsoft, Perplexity, and Google. Choi Won-Joon (President, Mobile eXperience (MX) Development Division) stressed the company's commitment to the customers by giving them a great user interface with multiple options under its upcoming flagship smartphones. Choi pointed towards collaboration and termed it as 'open to any agent out there.' 'We are in talks with multiple vendors. As long as these AI agents are competitive and offer better user experiences, we are open to any out there.' Choi added. UNI SAS RN More News Samsung in talks with OpenAI and Perplexity AI for powering its upcoming Galaxy S26 series 26 Jul 2025 | 10:56 PM New Delhi, July 26 (UNI) Samsung Electronics is currently involved in strategic talks with OpenAI and Perplexity AI to integrate advanced services in its upcoming Galaxy S26 series. This move is intended to expand the service horizon beyond 'Google Gemini' and provide a great experience to mobile users. see more.. Big win for UP's urban poor: PMAY gets Rs 12,031 Cr boost 26 Jul 2025 | 9:42 PM Lucknow, July 26 (UNI) In a major push towards 'Housing for All', the double engine government has secured financial approval of Rs 12,031 crore under PMAY (Urban) Mission 2.0, officials here on Saturday said. see more.. Odisha logs rise in maritime trade, logistics capabilities 26 Jul 2025 | 9:11 PM Bhubaneswar, July 26 (UNI) Odisha's maritime trade and logistics capabilities have strengthened substantially, both domestically and globally, officials claimed on Saturday. see more.. India challenges Chinese hegemony in smartphone market 26 Jul 2025 | 7:31 PM New Delhi, July 26 (UNI) The data reported by the US International Trade Commission (USITC) shows that US imports of smartphones from India surged massively in the first five months of the current year. On the other hand, the Chinese proportion in US smartphone imports fell from 82 percent to 49 percent between the same months. see more..

Rivalling Musk's Optimus Robot, China Unveils Rs 5 Lakh Bot That Can Fist-Fight
Rivalling Musk's Optimus Robot, China Unveils Rs 5 Lakh Bot That Can Fist-Fight

NDTV

time3 hours ago

  • NDTV

Rivalling Musk's Optimus Robot, China Unveils Rs 5 Lakh Bot That Can Fist-Fight

A humanoid robot that can fist-fight and even do cartwheels has been unveiled by a Chinese company that costs a little over Rs 5 lakh ($6,000), rivalling other companies producing similar bots. The new R1 robot by Unitree Robotics, unveiled on Friday, could be seen performing handstands and throwing combination punches. The R1 weighs about 55 pounds and has 26 joints to allow for flexible movement. It is also equipped with multimodal artificial intelligence, including voice and image recognition. The robot's capabilities, as shown in the viral video, mark a significant leap forward in robotic locomotion and balance. Apart from displaying ample boxing capabilities, the robot also performed "kip-up' -- a complex gymnastic manoeuvre involving a person or robot transitioning from a supine position to standing without using their hands. See the viral video here: Unitree Introducing | Unitree R1 Intelligent Companion Price from $5900 Join us to develop/customize, ultra-lightweight at approximately 25kg, integrated with a Large Multimodal Model for voice and images, let's accelerate the advent of the agent era!🥰 — Unitree (@UnitreeRobotics) July 25, 2025 As of the last update, the video had garnered nearly three million views and hundreds of comments, with the majority asking if the robot could perform everyday chores. "Will it fight anyone you point at? Asking for a friend," said one user while another added: "Can it walk my dog and serve breakfast to my kids?" Meanwhile, other users tagged Elon Musk and his Tesla Optimus company, which also develops general-purpose, bipedal humanoids, capable of performing tasks that are unsafe, repetitive or boring. "Yo @Tesla@Tesla_Optimus@elonmusk. You guys still trying compete? Hope you're not still in the lab in few years while these guys are ramping and deploying next year?" the user said. Apart from Mr Musk's company, US firm Boston Dynamics and its Atlas robots have also helped pioneer the humanoid robot market. However, an advanced human-like bot for just Rs 5 lakh, if done successfully, could mark a major milestone for China in the robotics and AI race. Currently, Unitree's larger, more advanced humanoid robot H1 sells for more than Rs 77 lakh ($90,000). Unitree's older G1 humanoid, which has costs Rs 13.8 lakh ($16,000), grew popular for use in research labs and schools.

Humanoid robots embodiment of Chinas AI ambitions
Humanoid robots embodiment of Chinas AI ambitions

Mint

time6 hours ago

  • Mint

Humanoid robots embodiment of Chinas AI ambitions

Serving craft beer, playing mahjong, stacking shelves and boxing, the dozens of humanoid robots at Shanghai's World AI Conference this weekend were embodiments of China's growing AI prowess and ambition. The annual event is primed at showcasing China's progress in the ever-evolving field of artificial intelligence, with the government aiming to position the country as a world leader on both technology and regulation as it snaps at the United States' heels. Opening the event on Saturday, Premier Li Qiang announced China would set up a new organisation for cooperation on AI governance, warning the benefits of development must be balanced with the risks. But in the cavernous expo next door, the mood was more giddy than concerned. "Demand is currently very strong, whether in terms of data, scenarios, model training, or artificial construction. The overall atmosphere in all these areas is very lively," said Yang Yifan, R&D director at Transwarp, a Shanghai-based AI platform provider. This year's WAIC is the first since a breakthrough moment for Chinese AI this January when startup DeepSeek unveiled an AI model that performed as well as top US systems for an apparent fraction of the cost. Organisers said the forum involved more than 800 companies, showcasing over 3,000 products the undeniable crowd pleasers being the humanoid robots and their raft of slightly surreal party tricks. At one booth, a robot played drums, half a beat out of time, to Queen's "We Will Rock You" while a man in safety goggles and a security vest hyped up a giggling crowd. Other droids, some dressed in working overalls or baseball caps, manned assembly lines, played curling with human opponents or sloppily served soft drinks from a dispenser. While most of the machines on display were still a little jerky, the increasing sophistication year-on-year was clear to see. The Chinese government has poured support into robotics, an area in which some experts think China might already have the upper hand over the United States. At Hangzhou-based Unitree's stall, its G1 android around 130 centimetres tall, with a two-hour battery life kicked, pivoted and punched, keeping its balance with relative fluidity as it shadowboxed around a ring. Ahead of the conference's opening, Unitree announced it would launch a full-size humanoid, the R1, for under $6,000. Most high-tech helpers don't need hardware though. At the expo, AI companions in the form of middle-aged businessmen, scantily clad women and ancient warriors waved at people from screens, asking how their day was, while other stalls ran demos allowing visitors to create their own digital avatars. Tech giant Baidu on Saturday announced a new generation of technology for its "digital humans" AI agents modelled on real people, which it says are "capable of thinking, making decisions, and collaborating". The company recently ran a six-hour e-commerce broadcast hosted by the "digital human" of a well-known streamer and another avatar. The two agents beat the human streamer's debut sales in some categories, Baidu said. Over ten thousand businesses are using the technology already, the department's head Wu Chenxia told AFP. Asked about the impact on jobs one of the major concerns raised around widespread AI adoption Wu insisted that AI was a tool that should be used to improve quality and save time and effort, which still required human input. For now, few visitors to the WAIC expo seemed worried about the potential ramifications of the back-flipping dog robots they were excitedly watching. "When it comes to China's AI development, we have a comparatively good foundation of data and also a wealth of application scenarios," said Transwarp's Yang. "There are many more opportunities for experimentation."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store