News on China's scientific and technological development.

KlRc80

Junior Member
Registered Member
China is worried strategically that it is choked of oil enough to beef up its military. It then makes sense that it should worry more about its supply of chips, since its chip imports are higher in value than oil.

That industrial policy is meant to help China reduce its 1.75 trillion yuan ($276.4 billion) in annual chip imports, a value dwarfing its oil imports.

China Wants Its Own Brains Behind 30 Million Self-Driving Cars
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China’s aspiration to deploy 30 million autonomous vehicles within a decade is seeding a fledgling chip industry, with startups like
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emerging to build the brains behind those wheels.

The Beijing-based company is taking aim at
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and
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just as the autonomous-driving business takes off and uncertainty looms over international trade. Annual revenue from the chips used in driverless vehicles globally should more than double to $5 billion by 2021, according to
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A screen shows a demonstration of the cognition level of Horizon Robotics’ Journey processor.

Photographer: Giulia Marchi/Bloomberg
Horizon Robotics is an example of China’s resolve to move up the manufacturing value chain by focusing less on commodity smartphones and TVs, and more on sophisticated semiconductors and artificial intelligence that can help cars drive themselves or spaceships land on the moon. That industrial policy is meant to help China reduce its 1.75 trillion yuan ($276.4 billion) in annual chip imports, a value dwarfing its oil imports.

“China has to spare no efforts to pick up and develop its own chip technology to improve our own sense of security, especially when the U.S. government is making us fearful about any protectionism against China,” Wei Shaojun, director of the Beijing-based
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at Tsinghua University, said at a forum in Shanghai.

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A Horizon Robotics processor sits onboard a vehicle.

Photographer: Giulia Marchi/Bloomberg
China’s push for self-reliance is a priority for President Xi Jinping’s administration, which set up a 200 billion-yuan fund for investments in homegrown chipmakers, Bloomberg News
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.

Overseers of the world’s largest car market -- and
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-- want to put Chinese-developed chips under those hoods and behind those dashboards. The government expects to have a manufacturing industry for parts such as sensors and embedded chips with a production value exceeding 100 billion yuan by 2020.

More Chips in Your Tesla
Market for sophisticated semiconductors set to boom as cars get more features

Source: Gartner, Bloomberg Intelligence

“Everyone is on the same starting line, thus creating an opportunity for China,” said Ding Wenwu, president of the state-backed
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Horizon Robotics was founded in 2015 by Yu Kai, the former head of
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’s artificial-intelligence business called the Institute of Deep Learning. Its investors include Intel Capital Corp., Shanghai-based
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, Russian billionaire Yuri Milner and state-owned
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The company completed a $100 million funding
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in December.

Horizon’s smaller-than-a-postage stamp circuit board is called “Journey 1.0,” which was showcased inside a
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GMC Yukon XL at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January. The processor can detect as many as 200 targets -- including pedestrians, vehicles and lane markings -- in real time and help the driverless car avoid collisions.

“Chinese companies have been evolving from the positions of made-in-China to created-in-China,” said Yu, 42. “And now we are heading to invented-in-China.”

The company is cooperating with
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’s Audi;
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, the local
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of
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; and parts supplier
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to get inside future autonomous vehicles. A self-driving Changan car
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a 1,200-mile road trip in China in 2016.

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Horizon Robotics’ second generation Journey processor.

Photographer: Giulia Marchi/Bloomberg
In an industry where the number of LEDs in a brake light is scrutinized for impact on gas mileage, processing data from laser, radar and camera sensors without draining an electric battery poses an enormous challenge for chipmakers.

“What we are seeking is a horse that can run fast and long but eats as little as possible,” Yu said. “If the embedded vehicle chip consumes too much power, it will lead to a burning car rather than a running car.”

Audi selected Horizon Robotics for a China-specific project and will evaluate the outcome before taking any next steps, Johanna Barth, a Beijing-based spokeswoman for Audi, said without elaborating.

Audi still uses Nvidia and Mobileye sensors in cars sold outside China, she said.

Nvidia, based in Santa Clara, California, has
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revenue growth of more than 20 percent for the last seven quarters, partly because of increasing demand for autonomous vehicles. It teamed with Baidu to develop an autonomous-vehicle platform, with plans to install that in cars made by
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“We are working with Chinese automakers and the Chinese ecosystem, as well as global automakers that sell vehicles in China,” said Danny Shapiro, senior director of automotive at Nvidia.

One of those customers is
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, a Beijing-based startup
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self-driving trucks. Tusimple, set to start commercial operation of truck fleets in Arizona and Shanghai next year, is backed by investors including Nvidia.

“We are satisfied with Nvidia’s chip, which has the strongest computing power for self-driving solutions,” said Hou Xiaodi, Tusimple’s chief technology officer.

Jerusalem-based Mobileye, bought by Intel last year for $15 billion, provides image sensing and processing technology for driver-assistance features. It wants to expand in China through its fourth-generation EyeQ chip and a mapping system called Road Experience Management, said Danielle Mann, a spokeswoman for Intel.

Mobileye will bring the mapping system to China via partnerships with SAIC Motor Corp. and Beijing-based digital map provider
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Yet, China has the money and commitment to make itself a force in semiconductor development, just as it’s doing now with electric vehicles.

China’s industrial priorities include becoming a leader in advanced manufacturing businesses, including integrated circuits, 5G mobile communications, aircraft engines and new-energy vehicles, Premier Li Keqiang told the National People’s Congress on March 5.

The government envisions spending about $150 billion in the next decade.

“All major governments around the world are deploying all kinds of resources in policies, talents and capital to upgrade their industries,” Tsinghua University’s Wei said. “And China is no exception.”
 

antiterror13

Brigadier
With facial recognition and ubiquitous cctv cameras, there will literally no refuge for law breakers in the future.

well, the criminal will find a way to fool the systems and then the systems improving .. again and again, remember the tech also available for both sides, including the criminals ... there have always been ..... there is no such thing of perfect systems ... unfortunately ;)
 

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
China is worried strategically that it is choked of oil enough to beef up its military. It then makes sense that it should worry more about its supply of chips, since its chip imports are higher in value than oil.

US almost killed a huge Chinese company ZTE a couple of years ago through sanction of parts. Chinese government would've been irresponsible if it doesn't encourage import substitution
 
today the story appeared on a major Czech server (
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), this is how I noticed
Chinese man caught by facial recognition at pop concert

13 April 2018
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Chinese police have used facial recognition technology to locate and arrest a man who was among a crowd of 60,000 concert goers.

The suspect, who has been identified only as Mr Ao, was attending a concert by pop star Jacky Cheung in Nanchang city last weekend when he was caught.

Police said the 31-year-old, who was wanted for "economic crimes", was "shocked" when he was caught.

China has a huge surveillance network of over 170 million CCTV cameras.

Mr Ao was identified by cameras at the concert's ticket entrance, and apprehended by police after he had sat down with other concert goers.

"The suspect looked completely caught by surprise when we took him away,"
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.

"He didn't think the police would be able to catch him from a crowd of 60,000 so quickly," Mr Li, from Honggutan police station in Nanchang city, added.

Mr Li also told China Daily that
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'I wouldn't have gone'
Mr Ao had reportedly driven 90km (56 miles) from Zhangshu to Nanchang with his wife specially to catch the concert.

News site Kan Kan released
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, saying: "If I knew, I wouldn't have gone [to the concert]."

This is not the first time Chinese police have used facial recognition systems to catch suspects.

In August last year, police in Shandong province arrested 25 suspects using a facial recognition system that was set up at the Qingdao International Beer Festival.

China is a world leader in facial recognition technology and regularly reminds its citizens that such equipment will make it almost impossible to evade the authorities.

The country has been building what it calls "the world's biggest camera surveillance network".

An estimated 170 million CCTV cameras are already in place and some 400 million new ones are expected be installed in the next three years.

Many of the cameras use artificial intelligence, including facial recognition technology.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Via Adam Wang
Huawei wins the world's first 5G CE-TEC certification

2018-04-17 08:05
timg

Left: TÜV Sindh North Asia CEO Fan Wade

Right: Gan Bin, Vice President of Huawei 5G Product Line

Huawei officials announced that after several rounds of rigorous testing and evaluation, Huawei's 5G NR products to be commercial-listed worldwide this year successfully passed the certification verification of TÜV SÜD Group, a professional certification body of the European Union, and won the world’s first 5G product CE-TEC (European Union’s Wireless Equipment Directive Type certification) certificate. This shows that Huawei's 5G products have officially obtained market commercial licenses, and they have taken a big step toward commercial success at the 5G scale.
323AD476D64C91AA92538EC7F8CF3EA795A776A3_size155_w469_h640.jpeg

According to reports, Huawei's 5G C-band Massive MIMO AAU (Active Antenna Unit) base station verified by CE-TEC test is based on the 3GPP 38.104 protocol development. It faces eMBB large-capacity scenarios and can achieve outdoor continuous xGbps user experience with low latency. Ms-class wireless base station equipment.
 

antiterror13

Brigadier
Via Adam Wang
Huawei wins the world's first 5G CE-TEC certification

2018-04-17 08:05
timg

Left: TÜV Sindh North Asia CEO Fan Wade

Right: Gan Bin, Vice President of Huawei 5G Product Line

Huawei officials announced that after several rounds of rigorous testing and evaluation, Huawei's 5G NR products to be commercial-listed worldwide this year successfully passed the certification verification of TÜV SÜD Group, a professional certification body of the European Union, and won the world’s first 5G product CE-TEC (European Union’s Wireless Equipment Directive Type certification) certificate. This shows that Huawei's 5G products have officially obtained market commercial licenses, and they have taken a big step toward commercial success at the 5G scale.
323AD476D64C91AA92538EC7F8CF3EA795A776A3_size155_w469_h640.jpeg

According to reports, Huawei's 5G C-band Massive MIMO AAU (Active Antenna Unit) base station verified by CE-TEC test is based on the 3GPP 38.104 protocol development. It faces eMBB large-capacity scenarios and can achieve outdoor continuous xGbps user experience with low latency. Ms-class wireless base station equipment.

but it may be banned in the US ... and the US ending up have no 5G networks :p

Huawei equipment is widely used in NZ ... I can't wait to try 5G speed here :)
 

B.I.B.

Captain
Huawei did make a breakthrough on chañnel coding technology with"Polar Code"
Amongst other geeky tech stuff Polar Code is?The most competitive choice for the implementation of 5g equipment.
 

SilentObserver

Junior Member
Registered Member
in no time there will be more CCTV than the population
When do you expect that to happen? Are you referring to CCTV in the traditional sense or including all potential cameras? There are lots of people in China.

China is worried strategically that it is choked of oil enough to beef up its military. It then makes sense that it should worry more about its supply of chips, since its chip imports are higher in value than oil.
China is indeed worried about the supply of chips, that's why it is investing heavily in the whole IC supply chain. Made in China 2025 includes that as well. It would still import in large amounts, even if it feels vulnerable, as long as conditions allow it to. Most of the imported chips goes into electronics for export. The computers with Intel, AMD, and NVIDIA chips inside are assembled in China but the high value IC components are imported. If China stops importing them then the final assembly would move elsewhere. In that case China would have to find value added in technologies it is competitive in, that is fine if it is able to dominate a certain part of the supply chain.

It is not planning to reduce imports by limiting their flow but to displace traditional suppliers from the market through innovation fuelled by R&D. Imports of CPUs for PCs would still be high for a long time, due to the nature of China's economy. China's IC industry is starting with more industrial uses, in areas where it is easier to enter. It doesn't plan on competing against foreign CPUs with Chinese brands until 2030.

The trade imbalance between China and US is over played, the trade war threat is about industrial policy and technology rather than simply trade. The surplus counts the total value of the goods exported to the US while China imports most of the value in the form of components from South Korea and Japan, earning a smaller value added and has a trade deficit with these nations. US also has a trade surplus on China in services and earns most of the value in branded electronics in the form of design and marketing.
 
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