Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (BABA) is making a big bet that you'll want one app to rule them all. The Chinese tech giant is working to transform its Qwen chatbot from a simple AI assistant into the central nervous system for your entire digital life.
Building the Everything App
Here's the concept: Instead of bouncing between separate apps for shopping, paying bills, booking travel, and ordering takeout, Alibaba wants you to just talk to Qwen. The company is connecting its AI chatbot directly to Taobao (its massive e-commerce platform), Alipay (China's dominant payment app), Fliggy (travel booking), and Amap (mapping and navigation).
The integration has entered public testing in China, and the numbers are impressive. Qwen already has more than 100 million users who can now order food, book trips, and make payments without leaving the chatbot interface, according to a Bloomberg report on Thursday.
It's Alibaba's most ambitious move yet to turn Qwen into what tech companies love to call a "super-app"—though in this case, it's more like a super-assistant that connects all your other apps.
Does It Actually Work?
At a launch event in Hangzhou, Alibaba executives showed off Qwen handling real tasks like recommending a robot vacuum cleaner and booking flights, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday. The demos went reasonably well, though the system isn't perfect yet. Food delivery works end-to-end right now, with full in-app transactions supported. Broader shopping categories are still being integrated, and early testing revealed some hiccups—the app struggled with certain requests like generating direct product links for specific items.
Alibaba first launched Qwen in November as its major consumer AI play and has been steadily adding features since. The company recently introduced an invite-only "task assistant" that tackles more complex jobs, like making phone calls or processing large document batches.




