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Meet the world’s first truly agentic AI smartphone — and yes, it comes from China, not Silicon Valley. In this video, we’re diving into the story behind the ZTE–ByteDance Nubia M153, a prototype device that shocked the AI world after demo clips went viral. What makes this phone different isn’t a faster processor or camera upgrade. This is the first smartphone where the AI doesn’t just answer your questions — it literally uses the phone like a human. 👉 Subscribe here: / @aitidesx This device isn’t an assistant. It’s an autonomous operator running on top of a custom Android build, powered by ByteDance’s Doubao AI and a second on-device model called Nebula-GUI. Together, they form a full-stack agentic system that can see your screen, read buttons, navigate apps, execute multi-step actions, make payments, change bookings, negotiate with other bots, and run the entire phone without you touching it. It’s a second DeepSeek moment — and it might redefine how smartphones work. The Nubia M153 prototype, priced at 3,499 yuan ($494), runs on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, with 16GB RAM, 512GB storage, a massive 6,000mAh battery, and four 50MP cameras. But the real story is its autonomy. In the demos shared by Taylor Ogan, you can see the agent book queue-standing services, select apps on its own, fill forms, confirm payments, and handle tasks most people don’t even know which app to use for. When booking a hotel, the AI figures out the property from a single photo, checks pet policies, finds the best rate, opens Ctrip, fills details, and completes checkout — all without instructions about which app to use. The two-layer architecture is what makes this possible. Doubao (cloud) interprets intent, context and semantics. Nebula-GUI (on-device 7B model) handles the physical screen actions: tapping, scrolling, typing, opening apps, interacting with payment screens, and performing human-like gestures. That mix also makes sensitive actions more private, with the vision model running locally so passwords and payment flows never leave the device. This system even handles dynamic real-world contexts. In one demo, Ogan asks for a robotaxi, and the AI chooses Baidu Apollo, navigates menus, confirms a ride, and later updates the drop-off point mid-trip. It recognizes ongoing sessions, interprets the app’s state, and takes action like an experienced user. It can also answer incoming confirmation calls from Meituan and negotiate with their automated systems — a bot talking to another bot. But this level of control brings massive privacy concerns. After clips went viral, ByteDance scaled back the agent’s powers. Major apps like Alipay, Taobao, Pinduoduo, and Ele.me restricted interactions, citing fairness, security, and fraud concerns. ByteDance then disabled Doubao’s control over sensitive apps, competitive gaming features, and reward systems. WeChat even began blocking logins triggered by the agent, causing crashes and suspensions. The company later clarified that no screen data is stored or used for model training, but users remain wary — a smartphone that can “see everything” pushes comfort levels to the limit. Despite the pullback, the Nubia M153 remains the closest thing to a fully autonomous personal device the world has seen. Unlike Apple’s and Samsung’s guarded, API-bound AI assistants, Doubao + Nebula-GUI shows what happens when a company bypasses app permissions and operates directly on the OS layer. This isn’t a chatbot on your phone — the entire phone becomes the agent. The controversy highlights a bigger shift in AI: assistants becoming operators, and smartphones becoming agentic platforms that act on intent instead of taps. Whether this future excites you or terrifies you, one thing is clear — the first real agentic smartphone didn’t come from the U.S., Korea, or Europe. It came from China’s rapidly accelerating AI ecosystem, and it might reshape everything we expect from mobile computing. 👉 Subscribe here: / @aitidesx Chapters: 00:03 - Introduction to agentic AI smartphone 00:31 - Nubia M153 prototype overview 01:28 - Full stack AI control at OS level 01:58 - Demo: autonomous service booking 02:28 - Comparison with Siri and Google Assistant 03:00 - Duba AI architecture and hardware 03:32 - Image recognition and booking demos 04:36 - Robo taxi and app interaction demos 05:04 - Drone delivery and AI negotiation 05:35 - Phone specs and pricing 06:14 - App restrictions and backlash 07:13 - Privacy concerns and regulatory gap 08:08 - Future of agentic AI smartphones 08:39 - Closing remarks and call to action