The country is celebrating the eight-day Lunar New Year holiday that typically sees people return home to eat, drink and make merry with family and friends.
From dragon dances to incense offerings, the festival is also a time to nurture centuries-old traditions -- though in this corner of the capital, they come with a high-tech twist.
Billed as an "AI temple fair", the event in Beijing's well-heeled Haidian district is a chance for local technology firms to display their products to the public.
"(Robots) can already do a lot of things, like take things off the shelves and make coffee," said Sophia Wu as she strolled among silicon shop assistants and binary baristas.
"I'd love to have a robot, and then it could do all my chores for me, and that would free up a lot of my time," the 48-year-old housewife and retired engineer told AFP.
A troupe of robots manufactured by Hangzhou-based tech firm Unitree made global headlines this week after they performed a synchronised dance on China's Spring Festival TV gala.
The singular dancer in the mall, however, put on a more modest show, staying rooted on the ground while jerkily swaying its hips and arms.
Described as a "high-quality human imitation robot" called Xiao Xin, it was capable of communicating with people and making tiny adjustments to the expressions on its lifelike prosthetic face, a display placard said.
Nearby, a visitor tentatively asked a life-size humanoid dressed as China's traditional wealth god what it had eaten for breakfast.
"This morning, I enjoyed a hearty breakfast that included fresh fruit, delicious fried eggs, and sweet bread," the robot replied in a resounding baritone, shaking its wispy beard and glittering crimson robe.
"I hope that in the new year, you can also eat healthily and deliciously, and be happy every day."
- 'Charm of robots' -
Elsewhere, a motley band of automated musicians cranked out holiday songs on analogue instruments, and finely tuned robotic arms wielded ink brushes to write calligraphy on thick red paper.
Waiting for his scroll to dry, Bai Song, 34, said the exhibition had left him with a "deep impression of the charm of robots".
"Every era inevitably produces different things. It's possible that AI will replace some of us, but there will also be new jobs, or new types of work," the IT professional told AFP.
"Also, we're a socialist country, so there's no way that people's lives are suddenly going to get worse, because the state will provide our safety net."
China leads the world in some advanced technologies and aims to achieve global supremacy in AI by the end of the decade.
An AI chatbot developed by Chinese start-up DeepSeek sent shockwaves through the industry this week with its R1 programme that can match American competitors seemingly at a fraction of the cost.
Still, not everything at the AI temple fair seemed quite so disruptive just yet.
A robotic koi carp repeatedly swam into the wall of its water-filled enclosure, and two semi-automated football teams plodded around an indoor pitch, colliding with each other and scuffing their kicks.
On the touchline, Cheng Cheng, a software development engineer at manufacturer Booster Robotics, said the company was working on "research-oriented applications" like refining foot and hand movements and interactions with AI.
Despite the scrappy game -- won 5-2 by a pair of robots in pink jerseys -- the 36-year-old was upbeat about the firm's future prospects.
"This is a starting point for us to make our robots more robust and fall-resistant... (and to) enhance their strength," he told AFP.
Viral Chinese tourist spot stokes nostalgia with staged rural scenes
Xiapu, China (AFP) Feb 5, 2025 -
A wizened farmer leads a buffalo through a misty copse of gnarled trees in eastern China, closely followed by a woman in a straw hat heaving pails of water.
It is a tranquil image of rural Chinese life -- except for the overhead whirr of a drone, the hiss of a smoke machine and the excited chatter of smartphone-wielding day-trippers.
Residents in Xiapu, Fujian province, have achieved viral online fame by staging picturesque country scenes and charging tourists up to 300 yuan ($40) to photograph them.
By doing so, they indulge visitors' nostalgia for a pastoral idyll that perhaps never truly existed and has been swept away by rampant urbanisation and industrial development.
"Back in the day, when we were sent down to the countryside, we used buffalo for ploughing," said Liang Liuling, 72, on holiday from the southwestern Guangxi region.
In the 1960s and 70s, her generation toiled for years in rural backwaters during Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution -- though many remember their hardships fondly.
"Now, they've become props for us elderly to enjoy," Liang said, smiling after posing for shots with the animals.
"Seeing them here is just wonderful."
- Farming clicks -
About 20 percent of Chinese people lived in cities in 1980, compared to around two-thirds today -- a result of the country's rapid development.
The jarring shift in living styles feeds a trend for reminiscing about economically leaner but arguably simpler times.
A search for Xiapu county -- population 480,000, small by Chinese standards -- returns hundreds of thousands of posts on the country's version of TikTok and on Xiaohongshu, known as Red Note in English.
Many users flaunt stunning photographs of supposedly timeless scenes and offer guides on how to create the best shots.
That the vista is manufactured does not seem to have dampened the enthusiasm of the coachloads of daily visitors.
"We saw this scenic spot online and changed our plans at the last minute to come", said tour guide Huang Jumei as she led a group of people mainly over 60, adding that they were "reluctant to leave".
"It brings back childhood memories for many of us who come from farming families... but as life has improved, most families stopped keeping cattle," she told AFP.
- Nostalgia trip -
Visitors must thrash out a price with buffalo owner Chen Weizuo before he steps in front of the cameras.
The 62-year-old poses several times a day and rents costumes for extra income.
Originally a farmer, a decade ago he borrowed a fellow villager's buffalo and began charging a trickle of mostly local tourists for photos.
Larger groups began arriving a few years back, and he imported his own bovine from Vietnam as "no one in China sells buffaloes anymore".
While his customers revel in nostalgia, Chen is glad to have shaken off his former life working the fields.
"Now, I spend my days under the banyan trees. In the summer it's cool, and when guests come I chat and joke with them," he said.
"It's much more relaxed," he told AFP, adding: "I'm not into taking photos myself."
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