News on China's scientific and technological development.

ansy1968

Brigadier
Registered Member
From TaiShang ( Pakistan defense forum)

@Hendrik_2000 bro from our favorite Japanese director Ryo Takeuchi.

[IMG alt="Japanese documentary director Ryo Takeuchi Photo: Courtesy of Ryo Takeuchi
"]
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Japanese documentary director Ryo Takeuchi Photo: Courtesy of Ryo Takeuchi



Following rounds of US crackdowns, Chinese telecom giant Huawei’s overseas reputation may take a serious hit in the eyes of some Europeans or Americans. Can the company still survive under sanctions and how will it continue to develop? Japanese documentary director Ryo Takeuchi, who is now living in China, entered the company and brought a real Huawei to center stage through his camera.

“First we should know all of it and then we can comment on it,” Takeuchi told the Global Times.

In the Faces of Huawei, Takeuchi interviews and films nearly 100 employees in different positions from different departments at the company.

After filming, the director reached the conclusion that the long-term vision of the company’s employees will enable Huawei to weather this storm. They are not just focused on the now, but have their sights trained on a decade or two in the future.

“I filmed the documentary to stimulate entrepreneurs in Japan or other countries because Chinese companies are different from what they remember. Chinese products are no longer low-quality and cheap,” Takeuchi said.

“They should recognize and face these changes or they will fall behind,” he said.

The five-episode documentary has attracted the attentions of several overseas TV stations including those in Japan, Spain and Cambodia.

What Huawei is like in the documentary

The first episode, more than 30 minutes long, was released on video platforms such as Tencent and YouTube on March 2.

Takeuchi got permission to enter and film the company at the end of 2020. Huawei promised not to interfere in the shooting and production of the documentary.

The director told the Global Times that the shooting was not interrupted.

In the first episode, he talked with foreign employees of the company, employees in finance department and Rotating and Acting Chairman Guo Ping.

Tremblay Jean Francois, a Canadian employee, told the director that the bias most Western countries have toward Huawei started from the US and he was shocked over the US politicians’ groundless accuse of Huawei products for eavesdropping on their military bases.

Another US employee Winter Wright said his friends recommended that he leave Huawei because the governments of other countries are afraid of the company since it is considered to have the most advanced technology and support from the Chinese government.

Takeuchi asked the rotating chairman: Does Chinese government stand behind the company?

Guo said that he joined in the company in 1988 when it was 2 years old, so he knows information about every shareholder.

I can tell you that as of today, 100 percent of the shares of Huawei are owned by Huawei employees and former employees who have retired,” the chairman said in the documentary.

Employees in the documentary seemed optimistic and unworried about the fate and development of the company despite the sanctions.

Those who work in the finance department said the company’s annual revenue can reach 300 billion yuan (about $50 billion).

When Zhang Yincheng, who leads the department, discussed the survival of Huawei, he was confident and said that the cash flow of the company has not been affected much.

Zhang mentioned “Top Minds”, a human resource plan of the company launched in 2020, a time when the company was having a tough time. The plan aims to attract young talents proficient in AI and telecommunication by offering high salaries.

What Huawei is like behind the scenes

The filming of the documentary lasted over three months, with Takeuchi’s team traveling to Northwest China’s Qinghai Province, Shenzhen in South China’s Guangdong Province and Shanghai.

They also planned to visit Huawei’s overseas branches but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, that plan was unable to be carried out.

As a bystander, the director said he felt the sanctions have, to some extent, affected the company’s normal operations.

“For example, researchers who are developing new mobile phones are facing the challenge that they cannot purchase materials such as chips due to the sanctions, which has impeded their work, so they have had to figure out some coping strategies,” Takeuchi told the Global Times.

But he is still confident that the company will continue its development, since it doesn’t follow the latest trends but sets new ones instead.

For instance, before foldable mobile phones came into the market, the researchers had already been using them for a year.

The director considered that the US government’s sanctions against Huawei is similar to the sanctions against Japanese companies in the 1980s.

“The US government has always been afraid of sharp rise of these new tech companies,” said Takeuchi.

When the first episode was uploaded on YouTube, most netizens gave positive feedbacks, commenting that the documentary shows a real and different side of Huawei.

“I like this documentary which is really different from the media of the US,” a YouTube user “EREN KOYUNCU” wrote under the video.

The second episode will be released in mid March.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


www.globaltimes.cn
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Here's the Huawei documentary by Ryo Takeuchi.
Wow thanks for the link I watch it amazing video for once we get to see what kind of company is Huawei and point blank question. As I said they have immense resources and talented and motivated people working for the company I have no doubt that not only Huawei will survive but they will prosper and go into all kind of new and pathfinder technology we see it they go to pig farming, mining, new energy automotive enabler technology. Great video from director Ryo Takeuchi as always. I am glad young Japanese, Korean and other Asian now work. study, and Married in China just like in the time of Tang dynasty China is slowly capturing their glory once again.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Huawei is still the larges Telco company in spite of restriction and denial to technology access from the west. via one by one
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Huawei still tops global telecom equipment makers in 2020​


Chinese technology giant Huawei Technologies remained top ranked in the global telecom equipment market during coronavirus-plagued 2020 with increased business revenue, despite a US-led discriminative crackdown, an industry report said.

Huawei had a 31-percent market share in terms of global telecom equipment revenue in 2020, followed by Nokia and Ericsson, each having a 15-percent share. Chinese telecom equipment vendor ZTE was No.4 with a 10-percent share, according to the report released on Monday by market research firm Dell'Oro Group.

While both Ericsson and Nokia improved their radio access network positions outside of China, initial estimates suggest Huawei's global telecom equipment market share, including in Chinese mainland, improved by two to three percentage points for the year.


"With investments in China outpacing the overall market, we estimate Huawei and ZTE collectively gained around three to four percentage points of global revenue share between 2019 and 2020, together comprising more than 40 percent of the global telecom equipment market," said the report.

Although Huawei was affected in the 5G segment due to microchips supply cut due to a US government discriminative ban, its advanced 5G technologies still lead other suppliers by one or two years, and it has played an irreplaceable role in China's rapid rollout of 5G base stations to date, telecom industry observers said.

China has 718,000 5G base stations, mostly in medium-sized to large cities, including 330,000 shared among the country's four major telecom operators, data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said. More than 600,000 5G base stations were built and put into operation in China in 2020.

"Unlike microchips supply for mobile phones, Huawei can easily manage the chip supply for its 5G base stations," said Xiang Ligang, an independent telecom analyst, predicting faster growth of 5G shipment this year for Huawei, despite some Western government's unfair geopolitical restrictions.

A senior executive of Huawei claimed earlier that the company has built more than 140 commercial 5G networks that are deployed in 59 countries and regions so far.


The COVID-19 pandemic-related supply chain disruptions that affected some telecom networks in the early part of 2020 were mostly alleviated toward the end of the year, the Dell'Oro report said.

Analysts at Dell'Oro remain optimistic about 2021 and project the overall telecom equipment market to advance 3-5 percent on a yearly basis.
 

ansy1968

Brigadier
Registered Member
Huawei is still the larges Telco company in spite of restriction and denial to technology access from the west. via one by one
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Huawei still tops global telecom equipment makers in 2020​


Chinese technology giant Huawei Technologies remained top ranked in the global telecom equipment market during coronavirus-plagued 2020 with increased business revenue, despite a US-led discriminative crackdown, an industry report said.

Huawei had a 31-percent market share in terms of global telecom equipment revenue in 2020, followed by Nokia and Ericsson, each having a 15-percent share. Chinese telecom equipment vendor ZTE was No.4 with a 10-percent share, according to the report released on Monday by market research firm Dell'Oro Group.

While both Ericsson and Nokia improved their radio access network positions outside of China, initial estimates suggest Huawei's global telecom equipment market share, including in Chinese mainland, improved by two to three percentage points for the year.


"With investments in China outpacing the overall market, we estimate Huawei and ZTE collectively gained around three to four percentage points of global revenue share between 2019 and 2020, together comprising more than 40 percent of the global telecom equipment market," said the report.

Although Huawei was affected in the 5G segment due to microchips supply cut due to a US government discriminative ban, its advanced 5G technologies still lead other suppliers by one or two years, and it has played an irreplaceable role in China's rapid rollout of 5G base stations to date, telecom industry observers said.

China has 718,000 5G base stations, mostly in medium-sized to large cities, including 330,000 shared among the country's four major telecom operators, data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said. More than 600,000 5G base stations were built and put into operation in China in 2020.

"Unlike microchips supply for mobile phones, Huawei can easily manage the chip supply for its 5G base stations," said Xiang Ligang, an independent telecom analyst, predicting faster growth of 5G shipment this year for Huawei, despite some Western government's unfair geopolitical restrictions.

A senior executive of Huawei claimed earlier that the company has built more than 140 commercial 5G networks that are deployed in 59 countries and regions so far.


The COVID-19 pandemic-related supply chain disruptions that affected some telecom networks in the early part of 2020 were mostly alleviated toward the end of the year, the Dell'Oro report said.

Analysts at Dell'Oro remain optimistic about 2021 and project the overall telecom equipment market to advance 3-5 percent on a yearly basis.
@Hendrik_2000 yup despite the sanction and the ban they're still number 1 with a wide margin...LOL. But I resign myself regarding their Smartphone business, what a shamed compare to Apple they are definitely more superior since I'm a Huawei user myself. :(
 

voyager1

Captain
Registered Member
Huawei is still the larges Telco company in spite of restriction and denial to technology access from the west. via one by one
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Huawei still tops global telecom equipment makers in 2020​


Chinese technology giant Huawei Technologies remained top ranked in the global telecom equipment market during coronavirus-plagued 2020 with increased business revenue, despite a US-led discriminative crackdown, an industry report said.

Huawei had a 31-percent market share in terms of global telecom equipment revenue in 2020, followed by Nokia and Ericsson, each having a 15-percent share. Chinese telecom equipment vendor ZTE was No.4 with a 10-percent share, according to the report released on Monday by market research firm Dell'Oro Group.

While both Ericsson and Nokia improved their radio access network positions outside of China, initial estimates suggest Huawei's global telecom equipment market share, including in Chinese mainland, improved by two to three percentage points for the year.


"With investments in China outpacing the overall market, we estimate Huawei and ZTE collectively gained around three to four percentage points of global revenue share between 2019 and 2020, together comprising more than 40 percent of the global telecom equipment market," said the report.

Although Huawei was affected in the 5G segment due to microchips supply cut due to a US government discriminative ban, its advanced 5G technologies still lead other suppliers by one or two years, and it has played an irreplaceable role in China's rapid rollout of 5G base stations to date, telecom industry observers said.

China has 718,000 5G base stations, mostly in medium-sized to large cities, including 330,000 shared among the country's four major telecom operators, data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said. More than 600,000 5G base stations were built and put into operation in China in 2020.

"Unlike microchips supply for mobile phones, Huawei can easily manage the chip supply for its 5G base stations," said Xiang Ligang, an independent telecom analyst, predicting faster growth of 5G shipment this year for Huawei, despite some Western government's unfair geopolitical restrictions.

A senior executive of Huawei claimed earlier that the company has built more than 140 commercial 5G networks that are deployed in 59 countries and regions so far.


The COVID-19 pandemic-related supply chain disruptions that affected some telecom networks in the early part of 2020 were mostly alleviated toward the end of the year, the Dell'Oro report said.

Analysts at Dell'Oro remain optimistic about 2021 and project the overall telecom equipment market to advance 3-5 percent on a yearly basis.
Another own goal by the US and some of the countries that completely banned Huawei. Huawei from all accounts has the most comprehensive and affordable 5G products. So by banning it from.installing the country's 5G network, which lets face it, building networks are not.the most profitable thing in the market, it results in the USA slowing down on its 5G rollout.

And.now that Huawei is banned from.the US it will redirect its production capacity to better serve the Chinese market and thus speeding China's rollout lol!

So by gaining an additional year or more, China now has more time to experiment with 5G applications, field the first products in the market, gather most of the profits and set international standards which exclude your competitors.

If Trump wanted to restrict but not affect the economy too much then he could restrict Huawei's 5G on the government's network or national security related industries (military contractors, cutting edge tech etc) and place requirements on Huawei (provide the source code etc)

Germany was smart though, it talked the talk on being tough on Huawei, but when it came to walk the walk lol it left massive Huawei loopholes. Same applies to other EU countries and you will see in the near future some of the consequences of it.

Another masterstroke from the Trump administration...
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Another own goal by the US and some of the countries that completely banned Huawei. Huawei from all accounts has the most comprehensive and affordable 5G products. So by banning it from.installing the country's 5G network, which lets face it, building networks are not.the most profitable thing in the market, it results in the USA slowing down on its 5G rollout.

And.now that Huawei is banned from.the US it will redirect its production capacity to better serve the Chinese market and thus speeding China's rollout lol!

So by gaining an additional year or more, China now has more time to experiment with 5G applications, field the first products in the market, gather most of the profits and set international standards which exclude your competitors.

If Trump wanted to restrict but not affect the economy too much then he could restrict Huawei's 5G on the government's network or national security related industries (military contractors, cutting edge tech etc) and place requirements on Huawei (provide the source code etc)

Germany was smart though, it talked the talk on being tough on Huawei, but when it came to walk the walk lol it left massive Huawei loopholes. Same applies to other EU countries and you will see in the near future some of the consequences of it.

Another masterstroke from the Trump administration...
Correct by restricting Huawei the west just shoot themselves in the foot. See the 4G spawn the like of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and they make billion dollar out of it because US had the advantage of first mover. Great as they maybe it is only entertainment, social media and search engine But the 5G and AI will be truly revolutionary and affect live like it never before imagine, Smart city, Autonomous driving, unmanned busses and delivery service, Automated factory and who know what kind of killer software they might invent. But this time it will be the Chinese that has first mover advantage because as you say they have plenty of time to experiment, invent etc
 

ansy1968

Brigadier
Registered Member
Correct by restricting Huawei the west just shoot themselves in the foot. See the 4G spawn the like of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and they make billion dollar out of it because US had the advantage of first mover. Great as they maybe it is only entertainment, social media and search engine But the 5G and AI will be truly revolutionary and affect live like it never before imagine, Smart city, Autonomous driving, unmanned busses and delivery service, Automated factory and who know what kind of killer software they might invent. But this time it will be the Chinese that has first mover advantage because as you say they have plenty of time to experiment, invent etc
@Hendrik_2000 And they laugh at Huawei for going into piggery business not knowing that its part of the Fourth Industrial revolution.
 

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
Correct by restricting Huawei the west just shoot themselves in the foot. See the 4G spawn the like of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and they make billion dollar out of it because US had the advantage of first mover. Great as they maybe it is only entertainment, social media and search engine But the 5G and AI will be truly revolutionary and affect live like it never before imagine, Smart city, Autonomous driving, unmanned busses and delivery service, Automated factory and who know what kind of killer software they might invent. But this time it will be the Chinese that has first mover advantage because as you say they have plenty of time to experiment, invent etc

I know. That consequence was obvious 2 years ago during discussions in this thread.

I never thought the US was going to be so stupid to conduct a tech war with China.
 
Top