Lenovo Group recently announced that it will partner with its Motorola brand to launch a localized AI assistant called "Qira." The assistant is scheduled to officially launch later this quarter, deeply covering all Lenovo PC and Motorola smartphone models, marking a key step for Lenovo in building its own AI ecosystem.

As a system-level integrated assistant, Qira adopts a "always present" design philosophy. Users do not need to manually switch or open specific applications; Qira can run silently in the background and proactively offer suggestions based on user needs or specific scenarios. Relying on a machine learning system, Qira can gradually build a "dynamic model" of users, deeply understanding personal behavior patterns, long-term usage contexts, and operational continuity. In terms of functionality, Qira covers mainstream AI application scenarios such as email writing, real-time meeting transcription and translation, and intelligent summary generation.

Regarding privacy concerns, Lenovo emphasized that Qira uses a hybrid architecture prioritizing local computing power, ensuring that data is not collected without permission, achieving an "secure, ethical, and accountable" AI experience.

Industry background shows that although Microsoft Copilot is deeply integrated with the Windows system, its active user growth has been sluggish (weekly active users reached about 20 million in 2024), far below the explosive growth of ChatGPT (weekly active users reached 800 million by the end of 2025). In the current landscape where general large models hold advantages, Lenovo chose to launch a cross-device local AI assistant, aiming to break through by providing a more personalized experience that better understands user behavior. However, how Qira will coexist with existing assistants like Copilot and Gemini, as well as its specific hardware computing power requirements, have not yet been clearly explained by Lenovo.