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cauldron commented on U.S. Accuses Huawei of Stealing Trade Secrets, Defrauding Banks   bloomberg.com/news/articl... · Posted by u/ericzawo
ezVoodoo · 7 years ago
As one who speaks Chinese, I find what you said is a blatant lie.

In deed, “打破技术封锁” means to break the technical blockade, but by means of independent innovation, not stealing "trade secrets". Given China has the biggest force of engineers and scientists in the world, it is not so hard to understand.

Fact check, Huawei is the only full 5G solution provider in the world; whereas no such company can be found in the US.

So when you or your friends think the US has much to be stolen by China, think twice.

cauldron · 7 years ago
>independent innovation

As a Chinese, you may also know the inherent hatred and despisement towards "foreigners" mainly the "white skinned pigs", believing that the "foreigners" deserve anything done to them, it's just payback time for what they had done to the Qing dynasty otherwise China would have "still" been the greatest and most powerful country, right?

And the "No matter the cat black or white, it's a good cat if caught the rat" kind winner-take-all, by fair means or foul, mentality is never more prevalent in today's China?

>full 5G solution provider

This refrain again, you really should read less Chinese propaganda, Huawei has always been mainly an assembler and modifier like ZTE, just because they have that cellphone SoC which itself is not that advanced and original and handicapped on GPU, so magically Huawei is now a tech giant?

Tear down what ever Huawei product and especially tele equipment and see how many key parts are "innovated" by Huawei? And how many are from the "foreigners"?

Even that overblown SoC is cobbled together with all kinds of licensed IPs and algorithms from companies all over the world.

Such an innovative and successful marketing company.

Next time whitewashing China, do your homework first, your nonsense works wonderfully in China, but not anywhere else.

>think the US has much to be stolen by China, think twice.

Sounds just like straight from the CCTV with a gigantic complex.

Also have a look at China's latest invention.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_new_inventions

cauldron commented on Samsung Unveils 15.6-Inch Ultra-HD OLED Display for Laptops   anandtech.com/show/13896/... · Posted by u/jseliger
jayd16 · 7 years ago
I'm sure you've heard of screen savers.
cauldron · 7 years ago
>screen savers

You should just turn off the screen when you are away

cauldron commented on Samsung Unveils 15.6-Inch Ultra-HD OLED Display for Laptops   anandtech.com/show/13896/... · Posted by u/jseliger
cauldron · 7 years ago
Maybe make LCD laptop screens decent first?

Hard to buy an affordable laptop with decent screen, bascially all crap with garbage gamut, literally hurt eyes.

It's a shame laptop makers are willing to add those useless entry level discrete GPUs yet are too stingy to spend 20 to 30 bucks more on the display.

cauldron commented on Microsoft confirms Bing is down in China   techcrunch.com/2019/01/23... · Posted by u/obahareth
jamp897 · 7 years ago
My AT&T iPhone wasn’t blocked when roaming in China, it seems they make exceptions for foreign phones. They’re censors are very clever at knowing where the limits are.
cauldron · 7 years ago
Coz your roaming data are literally in an AT&T VPN all the way back to America.
cauldron commented on For now at least, China's citizens are embracing social-credit systems   bloomberg.com/opinion/art... · Posted by u/petethomas
droithomme · 7 years ago
In the US we have all this as well, we just are secretive about it and people don't know the rules. China is more transparent and open about it.

Both systems are dystopian big brother to some, yet utopian to many others.

cauldron · 7 years ago
Oh, not again, this narative seems to be very popular, but it's based on ignorance.
cauldron commented on Sears has another chance to avoid closing down   cnbc.com/2019/01/06/sears... · Posted by u/craigferg501
cauldron · 7 years ago
That's not a good thing, e-commerce only pushes garbage quality with top tier marketing goods.
cauldron commented on A Tiny Austrian Town Has the Coolest Bus Shelters (2014)   citylab.com/design/2014/0... · Posted by u/CaliforniaKarl
cauldron · 7 years ago
Looks good, but I'm afraid it's generally uncomfortable to sit on.
cauldron commented on Chinese Crankshafts (2012)   flycorvair.net/2012/01/15... · Posted by u/beerlord
inferiorhuman · 7 years ago
Camera-wise the Japanese and the Soviets got a bunch of tech from the Germans after WW2. I'm sure the Chinese can (and probably will) eventually get to the point where their manufacturing is highly regarded. To some extent that's already happened as the lowest quality tier manufacturing is being shifted to India and Vietnam.

But precision manufacturing is extremely difficult. There were a couple comments musing about aviation stuff. Let's put it this way. Russia is very good at certain types of manufacturing (e.g. rockets) to the point that NASA uses Russian rockets to launch its satellites. Russia (and Ukraine) have a ton of experience manufacturing airplanes (military and airliners). More recently, Sukhoi even managed to churn out a highly competitive, well received regional jet (the Superjet 100). Yet sales are lagging while Bombardier and Embraer dominate that market. Reliability is almost there, but there's next to no support. Without a support network you're dead in the water. To that end it appears that the Russians are taking this far more seriously than I'd expect the Chinese to. So beyond just manufacturing the part, there are cultural issues to overcome.

The Japanese are another example. Most people in this thread probably hold Japanese manufacturing in high regard (and for good reason). However, take a look at Mitsubishi. They're attempting to get in on the regional jet market as well. However, they're basically dead in the water and may end up scrapping the whole project. While there is a Japanese aviation industry, and Boeing partners heavily with some Japanese companies, the Japanese have never built a jet airliner and airliners are simply that complex.

So, sure, we'll eventually see more Chinese cars and higher quality Chinese consumer electronics. Sooner than later even. Aviation stuff? Maybe, but potentially not in my lifetime.

cauldron · 7 years ago
Passenger jet is not only a matter of wether you can produce it, what's most important is wether it's cheap to fly, otherwise no one other than Chinese state airliners would buy it.

Dead Comment

cauldron commented on Chinese Crankshafts (2012)   flycorvair.net/2012/01/15... · Posted by u/beerlord
sct202 · 7 years ago
With or without the robots, it still comes down to process control which isn't a real concern by a lot of the fly-by-night suppliers in China.
cauldron · 7 years ago
They want to make money, and make it fast, when you ask them whether they can produce it, they are not gonna let the business slip away.

Don't know it? Hire someone. No equipment? Borrow or lease. No plant? Find one. Still can't make it? Place an order to someone who can.

u/cauldron

KarmaCake day89October 30, 2018View Original