Kim Min-seok, CEO of The Pinkfong Co., said he aims to grow Pinkfong and Baby Shark beyond preschool hits into a global ...
Jan. 8 (Asia Today) --The Pinkfong Company said Thursday it will expand its location-based entertainment business in key Southeast Asian markets including Thailand, Singapore and Indonesia, rolling ...
Stuffed animals that talk back. Chessboards with pieces that move on their own. And a chatty holographic fairy in a crystal ball. Your next toy purchase might be powered by artificial intelligence and ...
new video loaded: What Parents in China See in A.I. Toys transcript A video of a child crying over her broken A.I. chatbot stirred up conversation in China, with some viewers questioning whether the ...
It's Playfong time! Pinkfong introduces ways to have fun.
China's growing AI toy industry is now worth $4 billion. Long a dominant toy manufacturer, China is increasingly incorporating AI into the products as the Xi Jinping administration pushes companies ...
A wave of AI-powered children’s toys has hit shelves this holiday season, claiming to rely on sophisticated chatbots to animate interactive robots and stuffed animals that can converse with kids.
When Toy Story came out in 1995, it completely changed the game for animated films. Suddenly, hand-drawn movies were out, and the age of computer animation was in. Still, technological advancements ...
When a humble Seoul startup uploaded a 90-second nursery rhyme to YouTube in June 2016, nobody, not even its co-founder and CEO Kim Min-seok, imagined it would become the most recognisable jingle on ...
SEOUL, Nov 18 (Reuters) - Shares of South Korean entertainment firm The Pinkfong Company (403850.KQ), opens new tab, producer of the popular children's song "Baby Shark," surged more than 60% in their ...
We know it’s been a pretty crazy year that’s got you wondering how exactly you’re going to make the holiday season extra special, especially for the kids in your life. The good news is that the toy ...
AI chatbots have conquered the world, so it was only a matter of time before companies started stuffing them into toys for children, even as questions swirled over the tech’s safety and the alarming ...