AI browser race has just started, Google is still welding Gemini to Chrome, and OpenAI's Atlas is still loading the page, but a red lightning bolt has already emerged from the side - Quark, with the Qwen large model and Qianwen AI assistant, directly embeds AI into the system's core, launching six consecutive moves in one go: sidebar, screen reading, word selection, screenshot, floating ball, and quick box, all without switching tabs. Press Alt+Space to instantly open the AI cheat code. The monthly fee is only $19.90, and it works perfectly on domestic networks without any magic.

This "system-level six-attack cheat" first introduces the Qianwen sidebar, which can summarize web pages, PDFs, and video comments with one click. Even the three sentences of the 5000th floor Bilibili post from the Kangxi era can be clearly sorted out; Qianwen screen reading turns the browser into a transparent shell. When you stare at the poster of the "Interstellar Navigation College" of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, it immediately tells you that this is not science fiction but real enrollment; screenshot image recognition can instantly respond to the "round-headed orange cat Hakiimi" meme; word selection translation, floating ball, and quick box weld AI to the mouse and keyboard, select and ask, ask and answer immediately, as if the computer itself has developed a brain.

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Even more impressive is the productivity scenarios: reading papers, making PPTs, editing PDFs, and format conversion can be done with one sentence, eliminating the need to search for cracked websites all over the place; intelligent tags automatically arrange dozens of chaotic windows by semantics, keeping your thoughts organized while jumping between documents; remote transfer plus Quark Cloud Drive allows instant transfer between computers and phones, with data processed seamlessly in the cloud.

While competitors are still floundering in the shallow waters of "browser + plugins", Quark directly integrates AI into the system's foundation, transforming AI from a "web tool" into an "operating system cheat", intercepting users from the source - after all, it's better to let AI wait for you in the browser than to first open the browser and then search for AI.

After testing, the most direct feeling is that the computer finally starts to think on its own. The monthly fee is $19.90, and it works right away on domestic networks, with no ads and no memory usage. Compared to the back-and-forth of Chrome + plugins, Quark AI browser uses "system-level AI" to create a differentiated advantage, leading the AI browser from the "plugin era" into the "cheat era".