Operations & Scale

AI Platforms and the Changing Mechanics of Cross-Border Sourcing

How ChinaMarket uses digital tools to make cross-border sourcing faster and more accessible for smaller businesses

Updated

April 23, 2026 10:00 AM

A rack of colourful scarves. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

The 5th RCEP (Shandong) Import Commodities Expo opened this week at the Linyi International Expo Center, bringing together more than 5,300 buyers and over 400 exhibitors from 48 countries. Alongside the scale of the event, a quieter shift was visible in how trade itself is being organised.

ChinaMarket, the official platform of Linyi Mall, used the expo to show how sourcing is moving from manual coordination to software-led systems. On the first day, it hosted procurement matchmaking sessions and signed agreements with buyer groups from Argentina, South Korea and Ghana. But the focus was less on the deals themselves and more on the mechanism behind them.

The platform operates as a structured network of verified manufacturers, grouped by industrial clusters. Instead of buyers searching supplier by supplier, the system uses data and AI tools to match demand with production capacity. At the expo, this process was made visible through real-time data screens and guided sourcing sessions, where procurement teams connected directly with factories across categories such as building materials, textiles and electronics.

"Sourcing suppliers separately was time-consuming and inefficient. ChinaMarket accurately matches our needs and recommends reliable factories, saving us considerable effort," commented an Argentine buyer.

The underlying problem being addressed is not new. Cross-border sourcing is often slow, fragmented and dependent on intermediaries. What is changing is how that process is being compressed. By combining supplier verification, demand matching and communication into a single system, platforms like ChinaMarket aim to shorten sourcing cycles. They also reduce uncertainty in procurement decisions.  

Financing is another layer where the model is evolving. Even when suppliers and buyers are matched efficiently, access to capital can still slow transactions down. Small and medium-sized firms often face constraints around payment terms and access to credit in international trade.

ChinaMarket’s “data + order financing” model links transaction data with financial services, allowing funding decisions to be tied more directly to verified orders rather than external collateral. In practice, this shifts part of the risk assessment from institutions to platform-level data.

The company is also extending this structure into agricultural supply chains. At the expo, it signed an agreement with a local government in Yinan County to build a digitally managed agricultural belt. The model combines sourcing at origin with platform distribution, with an emphasis on traceability for buyers across RCEP markets. This reflects a broader attempt to standardise supply visibility in sectors that are typically less digitised.

Geographically, the platform has been expanding into Southeast Asia. It has launched a digital marketplace in Malaysia and established operations in Indonesia, including support for government-linked procurement projects. These moves suggest a focus on embedding the platform within regional trade flows rather than operating as a standalone marketplace.

"We aim to be a 'super connector' between Chinese industrial belts and global markets", said Quan Chuanxiao, Chairman of Depth Digital Technology Group and ChinaMarket. "By digitizing the cross-border trade process, we solve trust and efficiency issues, making it simpler, faster, and more reliable for overseas buyers to source from China".

What emerges from the expo is less about a single platform and more about a shift in infrastructure. Trade is gradually moving toward systems where discovery, verification, negotiation and financing are handled within integrated digital layers. The question is not whether sourcing can be digitised, but how reliably these systems can scale across industries where trust and execution still depend on physical outcomes.

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Artificial Intelligence

How AI Toys Are Learning to Talk, Listen and Adapt to Children

From plush figures to digital pets, a new class of AI toys is emerging — built not around screens or sensors, but around memory, language and emotional awareness

Updated

March 17, 2026 1:02 AM

Spielwarenmesse toy fair. PHOTO: SPIELWARENMESSE

Spielwarenmesse in Nuremberg is the global meeting point for the toy industry, where brands and designers preview what will shape how children play and learn next. At this year’s fair, one message stood out clearly: toys are no longer built just to entertain, but to listen, respond and grow with children. Tuya Smart, a global AI cloud platform company, used the event to show how AI-powered toys are turning familiar formats into interactive companions that can talk, react emotionally and adapt over time.

The company’s central argument was simple but far-reaching. The next generation of artificial intelligence toys will not be defined by motors, sensors or screens alone, but by how well they understand human behavior. Instead of being single-function objects, smart toys for children are becoming systems that combine language models, emotion recognition and memory to support ongoing interaction.

One of the most talked-about examples was Tuya Smart’s Nebula Plush AI Toy. At first glance, it looks like a soft, expressive plush figure. Inside, it uses emotional recognition to change its LED facial expressions in real time. If a child sounds sad or excited, the toy’s eyes respond visually. It supports natural conversation, reacts to hugs and touch and combines storytelling, news-style updates and interactive games. Over time, it builds memory, allowing it to behave less like a gadget and more like an interactive AI toy that recalls past interactions.

Another example was Walulu, also developed using Tuya’s AI toy platform. Walulu is an AI pet built around personalization. It can detect up to 19 emotional states and speak more than 60 languages. It connects to major large language models such as ChatGPT, Gemini, DeepSeek, Qwen and Doubao. Through simple app-based controls, users choose traits like cheerful, quiet, curious or thoughtful. Those choices shape how Walulu talks and reacts. Instead of repeating scripts, it adjusts its tone and behavior over time. The result is not a novelty item, but an emotionally responsive AI toy that feels consistent in daily use.

Tuya also showed how educational AI toys can extend into learning and exploration. Its AI Learning Camera blends computer vision with interactive content. When it recognizes an object, it links it to cultural and learning material. If a child points it at a foreign word, it offers real-time pronunciation and translation. It can also turn drawings into digital artwork, encouraging active creativity rather than passive screen time. In this sense, AI toys for kids are becoming tools for learning as much as play.

These products point to a larger strategy. Tuya is not just making toys — it is building the AI toy development platform behind them. Through its AI Toy Solution, developers can design a toy’s personality, memory logic and behavior without training models from scratch. The system integrates with leading AI models and supports multi-turn conversation and emotional feedback, turning standard hardware into responsive AI companions.

The platform supports multiple development paths. Brands can use ready-to-market OEM solutions, add AI to existing products or build custom toys around their own characters. Plush toys, robots, educational tools and wearables can all become AI-powered toys without changing their physical design.

Because these products are made for children and families, safety is built in. Tuya’s system includes parental controls, conversation history review and content management. It supports standards such as GDPR and CCPA with encryption and data localization.

From a business standpoint, Tuya’s pitch is speed and scale. The company says its AI toy infrastructure can cut development time by more than half and reduce R&D costs by up to 50 percent. Its AIoT network spans over 200 countries and supports more than 60 languages, making global deployment of AI toys easier.

What emerged at Spielwarenmesse 2026 was not just a lineup of smart gadgets, but a clear shift in the category. AI toys are evolving into emotionally aware systems that talk, listen, remember and adapt. Their value lies not in sounding clever, but in fitting naturally into everyday life.

The fair did not present AI toys as a distant future. It showed them as products already entering the mainstream. The real question now is not whether toys will use AI, but how carefully that intelligence is designed for children.