Categories
Selected Articles

Rangers got first-hand look what their game is missing as home woes reach concerning level

J.T. Miller wasn’t alone during the postgame in letting it be known he’s just about out of answers as the Rangers had Wednesday off before returning to practice Thursday, with a game in Detroit Friday, thankfully not at the Garden.
Categories
Selected Articles

Zohran Mamdani’s DSA allies are flexing power in Albany — and no corner of the state is safe

Zohran Mamdani’s victory gives a huge political boost to his Democratic Socialists of America comrades embedded in the New York state Legislature — and they have big plans.
Categories
Selected Articles

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy’ on Amazon Prime Video, a Quasi-Holiday Rom-Com From the Quantity-Over-Quality Filmmaker

Perry is quickly becoming the master of making movies with titles punning on their protagonists’ names.
Categories
Selected Articles

How to Watch Pelicans vs Mavericks: Live Stream NBA Basketball, TV Channel

The New Orleans Pelicans travel to American Airlines Center to face Cooper Flagg and the Dallas Mavericks in this Wednesday.
Categories
Selected Articles

Trump’s Net Approval Rating on Handling Government Shutdown Hits New Low

With the shutdown becoming the longest in U.S. history, the resulting disruption has affected millions of Americans.
Categories
Selected Articles

The Louvre used mind-blowingly weak password for core security system ahead of $102M jewel heist: report

It might as well have been “password.”
Categories
Selected Articles

Cody Bellinger vs. Kyle Tucker shouldn’t even be a conversation for the Yankees

Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman discuss if the Yankees should target Kyle Tucker over Cody Bellingerin free agency. Full Episode: https://youtu.be/fldKAjz_3DA
Categories
Selected Articles

FBI names third man accused of planning Halloween terror attack in Michigan

FBI names third man accused of planning Halloween terror attack in Michigan [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Categories
Selected Articles

I worked at Baidu, ByteDance, and Microsoft. Now, I’ve raised millions to build robotic pets.

He Jiabin is now building AI-powered robotic pets in Beijing.
He Jiabin left jobs in Big Tech and is now building AI-powered robotic pets.

  • He Jiabin, now 35, built smart backpacks in college — a project that launched him into China’s Big Tech scene.
  • He worked at Microsoft Research Asia, Baidu, and ByteDance before deciding to leave Big Tech behind.
  • Now, he’s the CEO of a robotics startup called Ropet, building AI-powered robotic pets.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with He Jiabin, 35, the CEO of Ropeta, a Beijing-based robotics startup. His words have been translated and edited for length and clarity.

When it comes to decisions, I follow my instincts.

I grew up in Zhuzhou, Hunan, in central China. At 17, I left home to study product design at Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology, where I started researching wearable hardware. In my third year, I interned at Microsoft Research Asia, where I helped scientists turn lab prototypes into products that people could actually use.

One project explored whether a watch screen could be touch-sensitive — before the Apple Watch even existed. That inspired my graduation project: a line of smart backpacks. One tracked location for parents, another recorded video for cyclists, and a third powered a phone for seven days. The project earned national TV coverage.

One of my professors encouraged me to pursue academia, saying China needed more people developing a homegrown design discipline, rather than continuing to follow practices imported from foreign institutions.

But I was curious about how large companies scale and how their management methods drive tens of thousands of people to innovate. I wanted to approach things from a market perspective.

After graduation, He Jiabin wanted to learn how large companies scale ideas and drive innovation.
After graduation, He wanted to learn how large companies scale ideas and drive innovation.

From Big Tech to startup builder

After graduation, I joined Baidu’s learning lab as an interface designer, working on smart bicycles, self-driving cars, and smart glasses before moving to its research institute. While autonomous driving succeeded, other promising projects weren’t pursued. I wanted to create products people could actually use.

So I joined the founding team of Ling Technology, which built Luka — an owl-shaped robot that reads to kids. We sold 4 to 5 million units. I was promoted to partner, overseeing product, design, production, and marketing. I stayed for five years, until intense competition drove down prices, and China’s “Double Reduction” policy — which curbed after-school tutoring — cut investor interest in education tech.

We couldn’t raise more funds, so I left.

In 2021, I joined Bytedance, as the leader of its industrial design department. I believed that among all the major tech companies, Bytedance was the most profitable, most aggressively innovative, and the one with the greatest potential for growth.

I worked on the leading brand of VR headsets in China. At our peak, the team had more than 2,000 people. But with such a big team, I didn’t always feel involved or impactful.

At the same time, investors were looking for potential entrepreneurs.

Having spent a decade in human-computer interaction, I saw how “weak AI” products often disappointed users — and how the new AI wave could change that.

At a big company, the business is often quite vertical, leaving little freedom to explore.

He Jiabin is CEO of a robotics startup called Ropet, where he's building AI-powered robotic pets.
He says that the robots require emotional subtleties in product development.

I wanted to build something from scratch.

I’m now the cofounder and CEO of Ropet, where I lead business management and product direction. I felt that making companion robots was a great direction. They require emotional subtleties in product development, not just a tech-oriented approach.

The company was founded in 2022 by Zhou Yushu, and I joined a year and a half later.

We secured $3 million in our first funding round, 10 million yuan in the second, and most recently, in August, we raised 30 million yuan, or about $4.2 million.

I’ve realized I’m not suited for big companies. I prefer working in a small team that innovates quickly. In a startup, I get direct market feedback. My goal is to sell 20,000 units by the end of the year.

We want to become the leading brand for cute pet robots globally.

Lessons learned along the way

Microsoft taught me how foreign companies operate. At Baidu, programmers led innovation, more than designers. Bytedance paid well but set tough goals, so people were very competitive.

At a big company, I could clock out at the end of the day. Now, there’s no room to hide. No one else is there to solve problems. I think about the product and company issues 24/7. When I’m creating value, I don’t see it as “work.”

Do you have a story about starting a company in China that you want to share? Get in touch with the editor: akarplus@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider
Categories
Selected Articles

The AI Era Demands a New Kind of Leader

We need a new kind of leader, one who combines emotional intelligence with technological fluency: the Super Leader.