News on China's scientific and technological development.

defaultuser1

Banned Idiot
That's not exactly the same. SpaceX has people filled with experience. If you told me the Mark Zuckerberg of aerospace engineers right out of college did it, then that would be something else.
This is true, but the speed is almost unbelievable, along with the fact that it's all reusable which is a new concept. If you assembled the top team of Chinese with experience in the field, I wonder if they would have been able to pull it off.
 
Last edited:

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
With time and experience... yeah. That just shows you how powerful experience is.

Look at China's BX-1 micro satellite that was tested on the last Shenzhou mission. Since the US is having trouble with their own similar program, people can't say that was stolen. Pretty large feat of engineering for a country that doesn't have much experience.
 

Martian

Senior Member
New 'stacked' chip saves research time and cost: CIC

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


"New 'stacked' chip saves research time, cost: CIC
by James Lee
2011/03/29 18:23:37

hXc26.jpg

[Taiwan's "MorPack" multi-layered chip reduces "the development time of chips by two-thirds and the cost by one-half."]

Taipei, March 29 (CNA) Taiwan's National Chip Implementation Center (CIC) released a new method of building IC chips on Tuesday that can cut the development time of chips by two-thirds and the cost by one-half.

The new technology allows electronics developers to stack chip modules with different functions on top of each other, thereby saving space and resources on a carrier board.


The developers have dubbed their technology "MorPACK" to give it a punchy image of providing a wide array of usage within one tightly-bound package.

Chiueh Tzi-dar, the director general of CIC under National Applied Research Laboratories, said MorPACK can cut down development time of chips from 6-9 months to 2-3 months and reduce development costs of each project by as much as NT$1.5 million (US$508,600) . Six universities are already using this technology for their research and development projects.

The new technology can be applied to developing chips for any electronic devices, including communications, security, medicine or recreation gadgets, said Huang Chun-ming, head of the development team.


Huang explained that every electronic device needs different chips to function and each chip is composed of different modules. For example, for a digital camera's multiple tasks, such as taking pictures, zooming in and out, and detecting faces, each requires a separate module.

Using this technology, developers can stack up different modules into one chip instead of laying out modules separately, which would occupy too much space on a carrier board.

"We used the concept of building blocks," Huang said, adding that this not only saves board space, but also boosts performance because the circuits are closer to each other.

Still in its prototype phase, this new chip technology already has three patents and is applying for another eight worldwide, CIC said.

Even though researchers will need time to refine the product, CIC told reporters at the press conference that industry can expect to benefit from this technology by the second half of 2011.

The IC industry has been called "Taiwan's national treasure." With an output of NT$1.76 trillion in 2010, Taiwan has the biggest market share in the global wafer foundry, IC packaging and IC testing industries, according to CIC."
 

Martian

Senior Member
Google losing ground in China

x2rza.jpg

Baidu owned "75.5 percent of China’s search-engine market by revenue in the fourth quarter" of 2010. This means Baidu is also the sales leader in China's on-line advertising market. Internet Ad Leaders: Baidu, Alibaba, Google, Sina

OZcKk.jpg

"Analysis International is reporting that the statistics from Enfodesk, the Seasonal Survey of China Online Ad market in Q3 2010, have Baidu (30.09%) leading in market share ahead of Alibaba (9.27%), Google (8.90%), and Sina (8.89%). Tencent (6.14%) and Sohu (5.57%) trail. Noteworthy is Google has slipped from 2nd to 3rd in market share with this report, although Google has stated Q3 China revenues did increase from Q2."

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


"Google losing ground in China
From: NewsCore
April 01, 2011 5:37AM

cjAt6.jpg

Taking hits: Google Inc is experiencing difficulty in gaining traction for its ventures in China.

A year after Google Inc. moved its search services out of China, the internet giant is struggling to maintain traction on a range of businesses there.

Chinese online media company Sina Corp. said this week that it dropped Google's web search service from its popular portal site, marking an end to one of its most important remaining partnerships in the market. ["Google may fall further behind as companies such as Sina, owner of China’s third-most-visited website, said it dropped Google’s search engine to use its (own) proprietary technology."]

At the same time, Google's free Gmail email service has become difficult to use in China; the company blames stepped up efforts by censors to disrupt Gmail access.

Meanwhile, new regulations to tighten oversight of online map providers make the future of Google's map service in China unclear.

On Thursday - the deadline for applying for new online mapping licenses - Google said it was in discussions with the government on how it can continue operating the service. It would not comment on the likely outcome of those talks.

The developments are the latest signs that significant parts of Google's business in China, home to more than 450 million internet users, have been unraveling since last March.

It was then that Google replaced its self-censored China search service with an unfiltered version based in Hong Kong, citing censorship and cyberattacks that the company said were traced to Chinese hackers.

The company's share of search market revenue in China dropped to 19.6 per cent last quarter from 35.6 per cent a year earlier, or just before Google's announcement, according to research firm Analysys International.

Chinese rival Baidu Inc. has thrived in the wake of weakened competition from Google, increasing its share of search market revenue to 75.5 per cent in the fourth quarter from 58.4 percent in the last three months of 2009, according to Analysys.

Meanwhile, Android phones shipped officially in China from Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. come pre-installed with links to search products by Baidu and Microsoft Corp.'s Bing, but not Google.


Still, Google has fared better than the most dire expectations after that move, which some analysts said might trigger a complete block of its services in China. Google still offers music-search service in China and maintains operations such as sales and research.

While its web search services are now hosted overseas, and are often unstable due to sporadic connection disruptions by China's web filters, the search sites remain accessible.

Google president of Asia-Pacific operations Daniel Alegre said in January that Google is still committed to China and continues to invest "aggressively." He did not provide details.

Google spokeswoman Jessica Powell said growth in China is not dependent on web search traffic there, and that the company continues to experience growth in revenue from China through sales of ads on its international websites purchased by Chinese companies targeting overseas users, as well as display ads on third-party websites."
 
Last edited:

Martian

Senior Member
New Taiwan Electric Scooter Available

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


"New Taiwan Electric Scooter Available
by Aaron Colter, April 6th, 2011

Taiwan-based company Green Diamond Power has released its
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
called the Green Baby. The product is more conducive to short, urban trips than a long-journey road motorcycle, but has some nice features none-the-less.

The Green Baby electric scooter is almost six feet long, a little over two feet wide, and just over four feet tall. The zero-emission vehicle has a weight load up to 330 pounds and has a top speed of approximately 37 miles per hour.

K23Al.jpg

image via Green Diamond Power

The electric scooter has a brushless DC hub-motor that has a rated power of 48 volts / 900 watts. The 22 pound, lithium-ion LiFeO4 battery can be charged using a 110 or 220 volt outlet and takes approximately four hours to fully charge. Green Diamond Power claims the battery is usable up to four years for most drivers, and can power the vehicle for about 40 miles depending on load.

Green Baby is currently
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
looking to import the vehicle to the American market, and comes in silver, red, yellow, green, black, or blue models. The electric scooter is about on-par with similar models that we’ve recently covered from manufacturers like Fido and Vectrix, but has a more traditional body design.

And no, as far as we know, the model pictured above does not come with the scooter."
 

Martian

Senior Member
This Cotton Repels Water and Sun

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


"This Cotton Repels Water and Sun
Analysis by Nic Halverson
Thu Apr 7, 2011 10:00 AM ET

XeerB.jpg

Water droplets on cotton (Photo: Lingling Wang)

Washing loads of clothes and getting a sunburn have never been particularly enjoyable experiences. However, scientists have developed a coating for cotton fibers that could not only lighten your laundry load, but protect your skin from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays.

Using the water-repellent and UV-blocking functions of zinc oxide nanorods, researchers from Northeast Normal University in China created a coating for textiles that not only mimicks the water-repelling nature of the lotus leaf, but was found to have a UV protection factor (UPF) of 101.51, double the highest possible rating.

Previous experiments have created self-cleaning, UV-repellent fabrics through a surface application of titanium dioxide and zinc oxide films. But when team leader Lingling Wang and the rest of the research team modified cotton textiles with zinc oxide nanorods and dumbell-shaped zinc oxide crystallites, they found the material could potentially block a wider range of UV rays.

However, doing so meant carefully suppressing the photoactivity of zinc oxide, which reacts with sunlight in a way that compromises the water repellant nature of the nanorods. So they coated the nanorods with with a silica shell that not only effectively blocks the photoactivity of zinc oxide, but helps it retain hydrophobicity.

The scientists believe this technology will be useful in the surface modification of cotton textiles, creating durable, multifunctional fabrics with enhanced superhydrophobic and UV-ray blocking properties."
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Re: This Cotton Repels Water and Sun

Excellent news for an avid hiker like me. I can expect more affordable sport jacket in the future. Good news for Chinese clothing industry,They now can go on producing higher margin sport jacket without paying astronomical licencing fee to the likes of Gortex

When can I buy hip and cheap sport jacket?
 

Martian

Senior Member
China builds 300 km/h HSR from central Lanzhou to western Urumqi (1,776 kilometers)

qJwAI.jpg

Lanzhou, capital of Gansu Province, is located in central China. Urumqi is the capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. China's new HSR will reduce the "travel time between Lanzhou and Urumqi to about six hours" for the 1,776 kilometer (or 1,104 mile) distance.

RFGf5.jpg

By 2015, China's high-speed rail will extend to western China's Urumqi. In the picture, a bullet train runs on the Shanghai-Hangzhou 350 km/h rail line. [Han Chuanhao / Xinhua]

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


"China takes fast rail ambition to new heights
by Xinhua writers Wang Aihua, Xu Wenting
English.news.cn 2011-04-09 12:45:39

QILIAN MOUNTAINS, Qinghai, April 9 (Xinhua) -- Deep in the Qilian Mountains in northwest China, early spring is marked with heavy snow and freezing temperatures.

In this desolate place in Qinghai Province, at an altitude of 3,700 meters above sea level, migrant worker Li Bingui is seldom separated from his jackhammer, which moves his whole body as he works to break apart bedrock.

Li, along with more than 1,800 other workers, are at the mercy of a ruthless environment as they construct the world's highest high-speed railway.

HIGHER, TOUGHER

Li and others are carving out a 9,490-meter tunnel through the rugged mountain range, one of the most difficult parts of building the line to link Lanzhou, capital of Gansu Province, with Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The 1,776-kilometer second line of Lanxin Railway runs across Gansu and Qinghai provinces to Xinjiang, traversing the wind ravaged Gobi Desert.

Started in late 2009 and scheduled to be completed in 2015, the line is designed for trains traveling at up to 300 kilometers per hour
, much faster than the current 120 kilometers/ per hour on the existing line, cutting travel time between Lanzhou and Urumqi to about six hours.

Ren Shaoqiang, chief engineer with the China Railway 20th Group Co., Ltd., which is in charge of the construction, told Xinhua that compared with the Qinghai-Tibet plateau railway and the existing line between Lanzhou and Urumqi, construction of this fast rail line is more challenging.

"Take the tunnel project for example. There's no precedent to draw from," said Ren, who also played a significant role in building the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, the highest rail link in the world.

"We have to make innovations, just like when we worked on the Fenghuoshan Tunnel of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway."

In the past year or so, engineers have worked with researchers from several universities in China on natural disaster forecasting, water discharge, measuring of wall rock transfiguration, among other things.

Other worries are more immediately pressing, such as the lack of oxygen in the air because of the high altitude, which poses a threat to the health of workers.

Zhang Hong, a director at the site, said natural oxygen content in the tunnel is only around 65 percent of that in low-lying areas.

"Besides, from October to June, the mountain is frequently covered by ice and snow," Zhang added.

Construction worker Wu Xuelin said working on the tunnel project is far more stressful than working on similar projects in coastal areas like in Shandong Province or Shanghai.

"I could not adapt well at the beginning, suffering headaches, nausea, and had difficulty sleeping," Wu said.

The company has stepped up safety measures to better protect workers, providing them with oxygen tanks and setting up rooms at cave exits for workers to inhale oxygen.

It has also built oxygen-generating stations to provide more oxygen in the tunnel.

Live video surveillance and alarm systems have also been set up.

"We only need to switch on a computer and log in to our accounts to know what's happening in the tunnel, even if we are thousands of kilometers away," Ren said. "We can also remotely control operations."

Despite all these measures, Guo Yuhong, Secretary of the Communist Party of China and Union Committee for the Qilian Mountains Tunnel, said, "Under such conditions, nobody can stand a high workload for a long time."

Guo, 44, has been stationed at the construction site since last year, and his hair has turned gray during that period of time.

MORE EXPENSIVE, MORE CONTROVERSIAL

According to Ren, building the line through difficult terrain like in the Qilian Mountain area requires twice as much investment compared with similar high-speed line construction on low-level flat areas.

Wages for construction workers is also double, he said.

For regular high-speed rail lines with a designed speed of 350 kilometers an hour, construction costs can reach 100 million yuan (about 15.15 million U.S.dollars) per km, much higher than lines designed for allowing trains to travel at a speed of 200 kilometers per hour.

As the first long-distance high-speed rail line in west China, the second line of Lanxin Railway has a planned investment of more than 140 billion yuan in total, but the actual figure is yet to be revealed.

The project, designed as a passenger route, will make way for the existing Lanxin Railway to be used exclusively for freight.

Analysts are divided over whether the benefits outweigh the costs of building high-speed lines in the ecologically fragile western regions.

Some say higher construction costs will only push up ticket prices and, like other high-speed lines in coastal areas, might not be much favored by many passengers. Others take it as an effective means to develop the economy in the generally under-developed regions.

A senior researcher with the China Academy of Railway Sciences told Xinhua, on condition of anonymity, that it will be difficult to make money from building such a line.

"It's more of a political thing," he said. "It's more about national defense and ethnic unity."

The new railway is expected to facilitate transport of energy resources from the vast desolate northwest to other regions of the country.

Take Xinjiang for example: rich in oil, coal and natural gas reserves, the region is aiming to supply more of its resources to other areas in the coming five years.


Wang Tieshan, a PhD of economics at the Xi'an Jiaotong University, said high-speed railways are vital for closer links between cities in the west regions as they are usually far apart.

So far, several provinces and regions in the west, including Shaanxi Province in the northwest and Guizhou in the southwest, have laid out ambitious plans for high-speed rail construction over the next five years.

Currently, high-speed rail has linked Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi, with Zhengzhou, capital of central China's Henan Province. More such links between Xi'an and other west cities like Chengdu and Yinchuan are either under construction or in the planning.

At the political sessions held in early March, high-speed rail remained one of the hottest topics among national legislators and political advisors, particularly as the high-growth industry was shrouded in uncertainties following the sacking of former railway minister Liu Zhijun in February on suspicion of graft.

Sheng Guangzu, the new railway minister, said Liu's case was only an individual one and that China would continue to develop the industry in the coming years in accordance with the country's mid-and-long-term railway network plan.

Under China's economic master plan unveiled in March for the next five years, China aims to have more than 16,000 kilometers of high-speed railway by 2015. Currently, more than 8,000 kilometers of high-speed rail line are in operation, already the most in the world.

As to concerns about the massive debts caused by high construction costs and low occupancy rate due to expensive ticket prices, Sheng said the debt ratio of around 56 percent is "normal" and "controllable."

Sheng also has pledged strict and high quality standards on the construction of high-speed rails to ensure safety.

However, legislators and political advisors have called for a restraint on the expansion of the high-speed rail network to avoid over-investment driven by an irrational pursuit for speed.

Political advisor Feng Pei'en suggested that new railway construction plans be made public to solicit feedback and that decisions be made based on objective analysis of passenger flows by air, rail and road.

Zhuang Wei, another political advisor, argued that China should focus on building railways with speeds at around 250 kilometers per hour because those at higher than 300 kilometers an hour are not only much more expensive but also tend to produce more pollution. (Xinhua correspondents He Wei and Wen Yiwei contributed to the story.)

Editor: Fang Yang"
 
Last edited:
Top