News on China's scientific and technological development.

Overbom

Brigadier
Registered Member
Growth is coming to an end, just like Bitcoin was an extension of the Petrodollar, the Metaverse is meant to be an economic extension of the real world riding on top of the blockchain protocol accessed through the Internet and with VR/AR/chip interfaces...

Soon virtual activities will count towards real GDP. Take a fake vacation in VR and it adds to the gdp as if you took a real one, this is like imputed rent on steriods... airlines will be operating a portion of their business as virtual flights for the same suckers who seem to be willing to pay more for a virtual NFT picture of a tulip than a real one. Solves climate change and energy crisis at the same time recycling the excess currency in the system!

In the virtual world you dont have to obey the second law of thermodynamics and there is no concern for global peak energy decline, everything is virtualized and software defined programmatically through API calls... etc

This is how the real life matrix started

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Could also be part for the sci-fi concept of uploading human brains into the digital realm. Would be quite neat to explore how consciousness works.

Ofc I am talking about things 40+ years into the future, but the trend is quite clear with metaverse. We are slowly entering the digital realm.
 

In4ser

Junior Member
Growth is coming to an end, just like Bitcoin was an extension of the Petrodollar, the Metaverse is meant to be an economic extension of the real world riding on top of the blockchain protocol accessed through the Internet and with VR/AR/chip interfaces...

Soon virtual activities will count towards real GDP. Take a fake vacation in VR and it adds to the gdp as if you took a real one, this is like imputed rent on steriods... airlines will be operating a portion of their business as virtual flights for the same suckers who seem to be willing to pay more for a virtual NFT picture of a tulip than a real one. Solves climate change and energy crisis at the same time recycling the excess currency in the system!

In the virtual world you dont have to obey the second law of thermodynamics and there is no concern for global peak energy decline, everything is virtualized and software defined programmatically through API calls... etc

This is how the real life matrix started

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Fiction becomes reality and bleak futures written as a warning becomes a blueprint for success:

“Author Neal Stephenson coined the term "metaverse" in his 1992 science-fiction novel "Snow Crash," which envisions a virtual reality-based successor to the internet. In the novel, people use digital avatars of themselves to explore the online world, often as a way of escaping a dystopian reality.”
 

gelgoog

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Fiction becomes reality and bleak futures written as a warning becomes a blueprint for success:

“Author Neal Stephenson coined the term "metaverse" in his 1992 science-fiction novel "Snow Crash," which envisions a virtual reality-based successor to the internet. In the novel, people use digital avatars of themselves to explore the online world, often as a way of escaping a dystopian reality.”

Neuromancer and the Sprawl Trilogy predate that. I think Neal Stephenson is an ok author but he gets way too much credit.
 

semiconprof

New Member
Registered Member
NFT do have their uses and place, but auctioning shitty ass stoned ape pictures was not one of them. Especially if it can integrate into digital rmb
The jpg trading scam does provide incentives for people to spend money and time to further develop this technology though.
 

Overbom

Brigadier
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Chinese investors are pivoting to new opportunities in hard technologies with venture capital investments in related areas hitting a new high, which experts believe will help replicate the success of the consumer internet in new growth.
More than 1.27 trillion yuan ($198.9 billion) of funds had been raised from China's equity investment market in the first three quarters of 2021, which is a hefty 50.1 percent rise year-on-year, said a report from domestic investment research institute Zero2IPO Research.
Among all invested industries, information technology, biotech and medical care, semiconductor and electronic equipment top the list, as over 5,000 investment cases in the reporting period are in these areas.
 

Strangelove

Colonel
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

  • Researchers say their serpentine attachment – with each segment an independent robot – can get into tight corners for in-orbit repairs
  • The robotic tentacle could crush a small satellite like ‘a python strangles its prey’ but that China does not plan to use it as a weapon, says observer


Stephen Chen in Beijing

Published: 11:00pm, 14 Feb, 2022

Updated: 1:06am, 15 Feb, 2022

An artist’s impression of the robotic snake, designed to work in orbit for a wide range of tasks such as cargo transport, assembly, repairs and inspection. Photo: Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

An artist’s impression of the robotic snake, designed to work in orbit for a wide range of tasks such as cargo transport, assembly, repairs and inspection. Photo: Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

A large robotic snake of unprecedented strength, flexibility and lifespan has been built to explore space, the Chinese research team behind the project said amid long-running concerns about
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
.
The 1.5-metre (5-foot) long robot, which attaches to a spacecraft, consists of nine segments, each capable of generating a torque of 190 Newton-metres – nearly double that produced by a 1,200cc Harley-Davidson Iron motorcycle.

The joints between segments can twist and rotate extensively, allowing the robot to snake through a complex environment to reach a narrow corner of a space station or satellite that is inaccessible to astronauts or robotic arms at present, according to the researchers.
An artist’s impression shows how the robotic arm might work. Its developers say the technology will save China’s space programme money and increase access to tight spots on a space station or satellite. Photo: Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences


An artist’s impression shows how the robotic arm might work. Its developers say the technology will save China’s space programme money and increase access to tight spots on a space station or satellite. Photo: Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
A damaged or malfunctioning segment of the robot can be removed or replaced with a new one, allowing it to be in service for an unlimited time, in theory.

“Making repairs in a complex space environment costs a great deal of human and material resources. The modular hyper-redundant manipulator is an effective solution to this problem,” said the team led by Professor Xu Zhenbang, of the key laboratory for on-orbit manufacturing and integration for space optics system at Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics in a paper published in the domestic peer-reviewed journal Robot last month.

The robots could also work together as tentacles to move or manipulate a large object, Xu and his colleagues said.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
China could use similar technology to disable other countries’ satellites. The US military voiced concerns about China’s anti-satellite capabilities, in particular Shijian 17, an experimental probe with a robotic arm that conducted unusual manoeuvres after its launch in 2016.

The Chinese government has said China’s space robotic technology was developed for peaceful purposes, such as building large-scale infrastructure, serving spacecraft or satellites in orbit and removing
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
.
In a
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
released this month, the China National Space Administration said it planned to turn the clean-up of space junk into a profitable business within five years.

Snake-like robots are already used to inspect undersea cables and other tasks but, because of engineering challenges, there are no reports of their use in space.
In the Chinese machine developed by the Changchun Institute, for instance, each segment is technically an independent robot, each with motors, transmission, a processor and high-precision sensors inside.

The researchers said packing the components into a limited space and under multiple layers of protection was not easy.
Another challenge was to build a joint that was strong as well as flexible. Xu’s team came up with a unique design that could boost the torque of an electric motor more than 3,000 times.

Each segment needed to communicate with other segments, share power and coordinate every movement to complete a task, requiring the help of cutting-edge artificial intelligence technology, according to the researchers.
Xu’s team said they had tested the snake robot in simulated tasks on the ground, including exploring unknown territory. The robot had to identify gaps, enter a narrow space and adjust its body segments quickly to avoid contact with obstacles while moving forward.

Despite its strength, the robot could write letters on a blackboard with chalk or nudge a party balloon safely, the researchers said.
The modular hyper-redundant manipulator developed for China’s space programme moved through obstacles in a ground experiment. Photo: Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences


The modular hyper-redundant manipulator developed for China’s space programme moved through obstacles in a ground experiment. Photo: Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Xu said they would further improve the robot before it went into space. Some components made of metallic alloy, for instance, would be upgraded to carbon fibre to reduce weight.
The machine has used some electric motors from Switzerland, microprocessors from Texas Instruments in the US and gearboxes from Japan.
The researchers did not say whether these parts would be replaced, but Chinese space authorities usually require critical components to be made in China to reduce security and sanction risks.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

A Beijing-based space scientist said the robot was strong enough to crush a small satellite like “a python strangles its prey”.
But revealing the machine in a publicly accessible journal suggested China had no plan to use it as a weapon, said the researcher who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The design and specifications of similar technology used in military applications could be quite different, he added.
 

Strangelove

Colonel
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

By Global Times Published: Feb 15, 2022 08:01 PM


Alibaba's in-house semiconductor unit Pingtouge unveils self-developed cloud chip Yitian 710 in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang Province on October 19, 2021. Photo: VCG

Alibaba's in-house semiconductor unit Pingtouge unveils self-developed cloud chip Yitian 710 in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang Province on October 19, 2021. Photo: VCG

Chinese digital forensics company Meiya Pico claimed on Tuesday that it has made stable and reliable electronic data forensics equipment and domestic alternatives to big data platforms, achieving a major technological breakthrough two years after being put on the US Entity List in October 2019.

The company, based in China's coastal province of Fujian, said that after being put on the US Entity List, it immediately launched an "ice-breaking plan" and an "ice-breaking laboratory" was established to underdo vigorous tech innovation.

Now, it has achieved breakthroughs to resolve key "stranglehold" problems, it said on an investor interactive platform on Tuesday.

Established in 1999, Meya Pico is a leader in domestic electronic data forensics sector, and is expanding from traditional network security to sectors like industry and commerce, taxation, customs, municipal supervision, and emergency response, according to the company's introduction.

The low-profile company gained fame after being blacklisted by the US in October 2019. Companies added to the so-called Entity List since then include facial recognition start-ups Sensetime, Megvii and Yitu, video surveillance specialists Hikvision and Dahua Technology, and AI leader iFlyTek, and Yixin Science and Technology Co.

Analysts said Meiya's statement showed the latest efforts by Chinese companies to counter the US coercion in high-tech innovations.

The breakthrough may be linked to software upgrading, on which China still relies on imports, Zhang Xiaorong, director of the Beijing-based Cutting-Edge Technology Research Institute, told the Global Times on Tuesday, while notin in the digital forensics industry, Chinese companies are now on the same level as other global counterparts.

According to its website, Meiya Pico is one of the two listed companies in the global electronic data forensics industry, and it does business not only in China, but also in countries and regions along the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative.

Nevertheless, observers said the digital forensics industry may represent only a small portion of the increasingly intense China-US competition in the high-tech sector. A more burning issue remains the gap in cutting-edge semiconductor manufacturing that China may need many years to overcome.

"China has the ability to make low-end chips, and it has achieved breakthroughs in some key areas along the industry chain in recent years, but it lags behind in some key areas," veteran telecom analyst Fu Liang told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Fu said the semiconductor industry chain is not a matter of competition between China and the US, but a much more complicated one that no country can achieve on its own.

China may depend on the US for some technologies, while for US firms, there's no doubt "China is a market that American firms need when developing cutting-edge technology," said the analyst.

In 2021, China remained the largest semiconductor market, with sales of $192.5 billion, up 27.1 percent, according to data from the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Global chip sales hit a record $555.9 billion in 2021, up 26.2 percent from the previous year. The association expects global chip sales to grow 8.8 percent in 2022 as chipmakers continue to expand capacity to meet demand.

The burgeoning demand will last for years, driven by Chinese firms' rapid development in 5G and other information industries, Fu noted.
 
Top