They must first ban the president and most government officials.I don't if this the right thread to put it but the us just went to a new low
They must first ban the president and most government officials.I don't if this the right thread to put it but the us just went to a new low
This assertion sounds like liberal arts student rallying cry on the streets.Yes! This economic freedom is key. Freedom to access of information is key. The Internet firewall in China is actually detrimental to Chinese growth in the long term.
A $2.8 billion dollar chip companies
Again not necessarily. For example, Tacoma Semiconductor was a $2.8 billion joint venture between Nanjing. It just flopped after only a few years.
Semiconductor is not easy. Money is only a portion of the equation.
Tacoma didn't have Mongsong Liang though. Sometimes having the right talent leading the team is the difference between success and failure.
Agree that the right talent(s) is key. Sometimes having one genius can make the needed breakthrough. But note, Liang betrayed TSMC by leaking trade secrets to Samsung. Then left TSMC for a high paying job in Samsung, and now SMIC. What makes you think he will be loyal to China or SMIC?
I don’t know if that is true at SMiC. But it is true in some chinese tech companies, where employees are follow the 996 work culture, end up doing a lot of meaningless busy work, and are afraid to leave work until their bosses leave. Not the most productive work culture.A problem in SMIC i hear is a lot of TSMC youngsters pulling China's legs and just raking in the 3mil RMB/year and BSing on the work.
I don’t know if that is true at SMiC. But it is true in some chinese tech companies, where employees are follow the 996 work culture, end up doing a lot of meaningless busy work, and are afraid to leave work until their bosses leave. Not the most productive work culture.
A surprising level headed opinion piece from the Guardian about the Huawei fiasco. The opinion piece assertion is that this Huawei fiasco is politically, and not trade driven.
Opinion
The tensions over Huawei are not about trade, but global supremacy
Laurie Macfarlane
The real fear for the US and the UK is that China’s authoritarian economic model could spell the end of liberal capitalism
Thu 16 Jul 2020 08.22 EDT
Rest of the article.
Agree that the right talent(s) is key. Sometimes having one genius can make the needed breakthrough. But note, Liang betrayed TSMC by leaking trade secrets to Samsung. Then left TSMC for a high paying job in Samsung, and now SMIC. What makes you think he will be loyal to China or SMIC?
The chinese people's to decide that, not you.Yes! This economic freedom is key. Freedom to access of information is key. The Internet firewall in China is actually detrimental to Chinese growth in the long term.