Lenovo, the world’s largest personal computer maker, is expanding its reach in the AI space by forming partnerships with multiple large language models (LLMs) globally. This move is part of the company’s strategy to integrate AI technology into a wide range of products, from PCs and smartphones to wearables. According to Lenovo’s Chief Financial Officer, Winston Cheng, the company aims to establish itself as a prominent global AI player, leveraging AI capabilities to enhance its product ecosystem.
A New Era of AI-Driven Devices
Lenovo’s recent introduction of Kira, a cross-device intelligence system, marks a significant step in its AI integration journey. Kira seamlessly integrates with various LLM partners, bringing advanced AI capabilities to Lenovo’s expansive product line. The company is looking to collaborate with a diverse set of AI developers to power its devices, contrasting with Apple’s more exclusive partnerships with OpenAI and Google’s Gemini.
Strategic AI Partnerships
Lenovo is exploring potential collaborations with several LLM developers worldwide, including Humain in Saudi Arabia, Mistral AI in Europe, and Alibaba and DeepSeek in China. Cheng highlights that Lenovo is taking an “orchestrator approach” to AI partnerships, rather than developing its own language models. This strategy allows the company to remain flexible, adapting to regulatory environments around the world while also ensuring a wide variety of AI solutions for its devices.
Impact on Consumer Electronics
With the rising costs of memory chips impacting the consumer electronics sector globally, Cheng mentioned that Lenovo plans to pass these price increases onto customers. Despite these challenges, Lenovo’s commitment to advancing AI integration across its product range remains a key focus.
Collaboration with Nvidia
Lenovo also unveiled a partnership with Nvidia in January, aimed at accelerating the deployment of AI-powered data centers. This collaboration focuses on a liquid-cooled hybrid AI infrastructure, designed to help AI cloud providers set up their systems more efficiently. The partnership will play a critical role in the global deployment of this technology, with potential launches in Asia and the Middle East.







