📌 MAROKO133 Eksklusif ai: Watch: BYD drops 2-ton tree on EV, vehicle remains intac
A Chinese carmaker recently conducted an extreme durability test on one of its car models. BYD dropped a giant tree on YangWang U8 EV to test the car material’s durability, according to reports.
The vehicle survived the attack from the apartment block-sized palm tree.
The highly cinematic durability test conducted in China’s Hainan showcases the BYD EV can withstand extreme external pressure. The BYD team dropped the massive royal palm tree straight onto the U8L’s roof. The team conducted the same test three times from different distances to show off how tough the big luxury SUV really is.
BYD’s engineers let the crash down on the SUV roof
The vehicle boasts a plug-in hybrid system and some of its variants offer an impressive CLTC (Comprehensive Long Trip Capability) range of up to 1,000 km, ensuring peace of mind during off-road adventures. The Yangwang U8 is powered by two groundbreaking technologies: the e⁴ platform and the DiSus-P Intelligent Hydraulic Body Control System.
In the recent durability test, BYD’s engineers repeatedly hoisted the tree to a vertical position and let the almost 2-ton tree crash down on the roof three times from increasing distances to magnify the force. According to YangWang, the maximum impact energy hit 50.4 kilojoules, which equates to 40,100 lb-ft, or 54,000 Nm. For reference, that is equivalent to an air conditioning unit falling from the roof of a forty story building, reported Carscoops.
The model’s some variants boast unique features such as all-terrain tank turns, tire blowout stabilization, and emergency flotation, ensuring unparalleled safety, exceptional performance, and an extraordinary driving experience. The U8 Premium Edition aims to redefine the million-level new energy off-road segment.
Withstanding powerful external pressure
After the tests, engineers found that the interior of the car remained undamaged, which proves that the vehicle is capable of withstanding powerful external pressure and can keep passengers safe from such external threats.
Earlier, BYD revealed that in extreme conditions, such as flash floods or off-road water obstacles, the U8 Premium Edition can remain afloat for up to 30 minutes, maintaining stability and control for swift evasion. Its 6 kW vehicle-to-load (VTL) discharge capability can power electronic devices and high-power equipment for up to 25 hours.
The Yangwang U8 Premium Edition integrates 38 high-precision components and the robust NVIDIA ADRIVE Orin intelligent driving processor, with a computational capability of up to 508 TOPS. The Yangwang U8 Premium Edition is equipped with Blade Batteries and supplemented with Cell-to-Chassis (CTC) technology, ensuring comprehensive travel safety.
Reports revealed that in the first test, U8L was positioned 300 cm away from the jig and dropped on it with an impact energy of around 36.3 Kj. U8 was positioned 400 cm from the jig in the second test and the Palm tree was dropped on it with 44.7 kJ of energy. In the third test, U8L was positioned 500 cm away for maximum centrifugal force and associated impact energy.
🔗 Sumber: interestingengineering.com
📌 MAROKO133 Hot ai: Gong study: Sales teams using AI generate 77% more revenue per
The debate over whether artificial intelligence belongs in the corporate boardroom appears to be over — at least for the people responsible for generating revenue.
Seven in ten enterprise revenue leaders now trust AI to regularly inform their business decisions, according to a sweeping new study released Thursday by Gong, the revenue intelligence company. The finding marks a dramatic shift from just two years ago, when most organizations treated AI as an experimental technology relegated to pilot programs and individual productivity hacks.
The research, based on an analysis of 7.1 million sales opportunities across more than 3,600 companies and a survey of over 3,000 global revenue leaders spanning the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Germany, paints a picture of an industry in rapid transformation. Organizations that have embedded AI into their core go-to-market strategies are 65 percent more likely to increase their win rates than competitors still treating the technology as optional.
"I don't think people delegate decisions to AI, but they do rely on AI in the process of making decisions," Amit Bendov, Gong's co-founder and chief executive, said in an exclusive interview with VentureBeat. "Humans are making the decision, but they're largely assisted."
The distinction matters. Rather than replacing human judgment, AI has become what Bendov describes as a "second opinion" — a data-driven check on the intuition and guesswork that has traditionally governed sales forecasting and strategy.
Slowing growth is forcing sales teams to squeeze more from every rep
The timing of AI's ascendance in revenue organizations is no coincidence. The study reveals a sobering reality: after rebounding in 2024, average annual revenue growth among surveyed companies decelerated to 16 percent in 2025, marking a three-percentage-point decline year over year. Sales rep quota attainment fell from 52 percent to 46 percent over the same period.
The culprit, according to Gong's analysis, isn't that salespeople are performing worse on individual deals. Win rates and deal duration remained consistent. The problem is that representatives are working fewer opportunities—a finding that suggests operational inefficiencies are eating into selling time.
This helps explain why productivity has rocketed to the top of executive priorities. For the first time in the study's history, increasing the productivity of existing teams ranked as the number-one growth strategy for 2026, jumping from fourth place the previous year.
"The focus is on increasing sales productivity," Bendov said. "How much dollar-output per dollar-input."
The numbers back up the urgency. Teams where sellers regularly use AI tools generate 77 percent more revenue per representative than those that don't — a gap Gong characterizes as a six-figure difference per salesperson annually.
Companies are moving beyond basic AI automation toward strategic decision-making
The nature of AI adoption in sales has evolved considerably over the past year. In 2024, most revenue teams used AI for basic automation: transcribing calls, drafting emails, updating CRM records. Those use cases continue to grow, but 2025 marked what the report calls a shift "from automation to intelligence."
The number of U.S. companies using AI for forecasting and measuring strategic initiatives jumped 50 percent year over year. These more sophisticated applications — predicting deal outcomes, identifying at-risk accounts, measuring which value propositions resonate with different buyer personas — correlate with dramatically better results.
Organizations in the 95th percentile of commercial impact from AI were two to four times more likely to have deployed these strategic use cases, according to the study.
Bendov offered a concrete example of how this plays out in practice. "Companies have thousands of deals that they roll up into their forecast," he said. "It used to be based solely on human sentiment—believe it or not. That's why a lot of companies miss their numbers: because people say, 'Oh, he told me he'll buy,' or 'I think I can probably get this one.'"
AI changes that calculus by examining evidence rather than optimism. "Companies now get a second opinion from AI on their forecasting, and that improves forecasting accuracy dramatically — 10 [or] 15 percent better accuracy just because it's evidence-based, not just based on human sentiment," Bendov said.
Revenue-specific AI tools are dramatically outperforming general-purpose alternatives
One of the study's more provocative findings concerns the type of AI that delivers results. Teams using revenue-specific AI solutions — tools built explicitly for sales workflows rather than general-purpose platforms like ChatGPT — reported 13 percent higher revenue growth and 85 percent greater commercial impact than those relying on generic tools.
These specialized systems were also twice as likely to be deployed for forecasting and predictive modeling, the report found.
The finding carries obvious implications for Gong, which sells precisely this type of domain-specific platform. But the data suggests a real distinction in outcomes. General-purpose AI, while more prevalent, often creates what the report describes as a "blind spot" for organizations — particularly when employees adopt consumer AI tools without company oversight.
Research from MIT suggests that while only 59 percent of survey respondents said their teams use personal AI tools like ChatGPT at work, the actual figure is likely closer to 90 percent. This shadow AI usage poses security risks and creates fragmented technology stacks that undermine the potential for organization-wide intelligence.
Most sales leaders believe AI will reshape their jobs rather than eliminate them
Perhaps the most closely watched question in any AI study concerns employment. The Gong research offers a more nuanced picture than the apocalyptic predictions that often dominate headlines.
When asked about AI's three-year impact on revenue headcount, 43 percent of respondents said they expect it to transform jobs without reducing headcount — the most common response. Only 28 percent anticipate job eliminations, while 21 percent actually foresee AI creating new roles. Just 8 percent predict minimal impact.
Bendov frames the opportunity in terms of reclaiming lost time. He cited Forrester research indicating that 77 percent of a sales representative's time is spent on activities that don't involve customers — administrative work, meeting preparation, researching accounts, updating forecasts, and internal briefings.
"AI can eliminate, ideally, all 77 percent—all the drudgery work that they're doing," Bendov said. "I don't think it necessarily eliminates jobs. People are half productive right now. Let's make them fully productive, and whatever you're paying them will translate to much higher revenue."
The transformation is already visible in role consolidation. Over the past decade, sales organizations splintered into hyper-specialized functions: one person qualifies leads, another sets appointments, a third closes deals, a fourth handles on…
Konten dipersingkat otomatis.
🔗 Sumber: venturebeat.com
🤖 Catatan MAROKO133
Artikel ini adalah rangkuman otomatis dari beberapa sumber terpercaya. Kami pilih topik yang sedang tren agar kamu selalu update tanpa ketinggalan.
✅ Update berikutnya dalam 30 menit — tema random menanti!
