• Gammelfisch@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    The biggest obstacles to China’s successful future, the CCP and PLA. If Taipei took over Peking, then watch out.

    • freagle@lemmy.ml
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      51 minutes ago

      LoL. 80% of literally all poverty alleviation in the entire world over the last 70 years was done by the CPC. The CPC 5-year planning process led to the establishment of Chinese university dominance in at least 36 of the tracked 48 high tech fields in the world and it’s not even close - in some high tech field China holds all of the top spots. The CPC presided over literally the largest and fastest industrialization process the world has ever seen.

  • ImmersiveMatthew@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    Despite some seeing my doubts as anti China, I am more feeling cautious as there has been a history of over promising and under delivering. I hope this changes as the world really does need a serious competitor as the USA is in a capitalist death spiral at the moment and it would be nice to have other options. I hope Europe too can step it up too as it will suck if we end up in a situation where China or any single nation is once again the sole provider of anything required for the modern age. Competition is healthy or we end up with too much power on one place and that never ends well even for those with the power.

  • flamiera@kbin.melroy.org
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    20 hours ago

    Yeah, okay, China.

    How about produce the thing and don’t pull any marketing tricks, hm? We’ll find out one way or another whether these are the real deals.

    • a9249@lemmy.ca
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      9 hours ago

      They likely are; china surpassed us technologically about 5 years ago. They just don’t export the good stuff. Source: I travel to china a LOT for work… its like going to the future.

      • COASTER1921@lemmy.ml
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        4 hours ago

        There’s huge investment in domestic semiconductor manufacturing in China, but they’re certainly not ahead of the West yet. Or even on par. If they were we’d see them exporting semiconductors and not buying from foreign companies, yet they still do. I work as an electrical engineer in the semiconductor industry and also visit China for work. We all know that our jobs are doomed in 5-10yr, but for now their domestic semiconductor industry simply isn’t able to compete.

      • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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        7 hours ago

        Depending on where you are in China, I agree. But the benefits are very unevenly distributed.

  • Pycorax@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    I’ll believe it when I see it. Lots of news of supposed breakthroughs in China all the time but hardly any of it actually leads to anything concrete so far.

      • Pycorax@sh.itjust.works
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        18 hours ago

        DeepSeek was frankly oversold (people were making a big fuss about how it’s better than others in every way but it was only more efficient and while I think that’s notable, it was a far cry from what was being reported) and I personally don’t think we should be investing that much time and energy in LLMs anyways. I’ll give them that for EVs but they easily cost 2x of a standard ICE Japanese car here since China companies seem to be targeting the luxury car market so it didn’t occur to me at all.

        Not sure why you even brought up American cars to be honest.

        That said, I was thinking more of semiconductors and there’s been so much news of Huawei doing all sorts of things that have went nowhere so far.

        • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          their luxury EVs are twice as expensive as lower end ICE cars, is such a statement. i hope I just need to point it out for people to notice how logically flawed it is.

            • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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              10 hours ago

              aren’t they taking over the EU?

              also, their amazing cities that came out nowhere in the last few decades, their high speed rail… I have lots of issues with China. but it is a good thing when the State invest in public infrastructure and it’s people rather than the State being a tool for the wealthy to rob the public.

              • Pycorax@sh.itjust.works
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                8 hours ago

                I’m in Asia lol. While China is fairly high profile being the largest Asian country here, plenty of other Asian countries do the same with investment in public infrastructure whole being a democratic nation.

                • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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                  8 hours ago

                  that’s good too.

                  it’s ok to agree that one state you disagree with is doing something good. Just because the worst person you know likes pizza, doesn’t mean that pizza is bad.

                  I can’t personally criticise China’s democracy because I’m in the US now, and I would argue the US isn’t more democratic than China

  • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    On the one hand not fond of the CCP, and this is a step toward making Taiwan more “safely” invadeable.

    On the other hand not fond of the United States throwing its weight around like it’s in charge of the world and not fond of monopolies in general.

    So hard to settle on a reaction for this.

    • WanderingThoughts@europe.pub
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      1 day ago

      of the United States throwing its weight around like it’s in charge of the world

      After telling everyone they’re not the police of the world

    • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Detach from the geopolitics - another way to make memory has been announced at a time when much of the technology and product has been tied up by massive global investments. This could help ease the current memory drought. Will it still be around after the AI bubble pops? This fabrication process could be like fracking - an expense only justified by the current high cost of supply. Is it worth investing in if the bubble pops and kills any gains, evaporating the money sunk into it? Does China and the 1% want to take the risk that this new fab process works and scales? That’s the real stakes.

      • just_an_average_joe@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        9 hours ago

        Its memory we are talking about, literally everyone in the world already uses it. Its not like crypto or other tech that might become obsolete any time soon.

        The profit margins might shrink but there will be emough uses for it for sure. Think of personal clouds, archives, maybe cheaper gpus etc etc.

        Maybe we will discover/implement algorithms that exploit memory trade offs once it becomes cheap.

    • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      The RoC doesn’t make much RAM, to my knowledge. It’s the RoK that does that. Samsung, Micron, and SK Hynix all have their own fabs.

  • A_A@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Might be surprising for USA’s self- centric nationalists, yet, unsurprising considering china has become the rising tech power since about 10 years now.

    • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 hours ago

      The US hasn’t been competitive in RAM (edit: manufacturing, though there is one plant in Virginia) in something like 40 years. The PRC is working on catching up to the RoK. I hope they manage to export good RAM soon, because the Korean companies are all both cutting back on production (edit: expansion) to increase prices.

      Also, the lone American company in the mix, which still manufactures most of its supply abroad, just killed off its consumer division entirely to focus on selling RAM to datacenters.

    • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 hours ago

      China has been doing more for you and I as American consumers than the USA for the past like 60 years. China is the manufacturing superpower of the world.

    • yucandu@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Exploitative sweatshop labour pays dividends for us westerners, doesn’t it?

      • just_an_average_joe@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        9 hours ago

        Lmao when china does it, its sweatshop labour and when western companies pay their labour pennies its the fault of the workers for being lazy.

        I get the feeling if this was a us company, people like you would have been chanting this as a success of capitalism that will increase competition and decrease prices.

      • √𝛂𝛋𝛆@piefed.world
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        1 day ago

        Better than a million feral humans sent back to live as animals in urban nature and corrupt wage slavery for pirate banker commodity housing, not to mention the Flock-You surveillance state that is stealing citizenship and democracy right now. When Citizen is functionally equivalent to Slave, China looks far better. “You will own nothing and be happy about it.” -because slaves that speak up find themselves dead. I’ll take a sweatshop over this corruption any day.

        • Eldritch@piefed.world
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          1 day ago

          Nearly everything you mentioned there could be said about China as well though. So, how? In what way does it make China look better? Serious question. And not a defense of the west out the US.

          • freagle@lemmy.ml
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            46 minutes ago

            Homeownership rate in China are 150% of homeownership rate in the US.

          • ragica@lemmy.ml
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            22 hours ago

            There is a general perception now with many in the US and even more among the US’s partners that the US government is now actively regressive, making life more difficult for most of its citizens and partners, and indeed the world. China, despite its shortcomings, is mostly seen as making progress at raising living standards, moving more towards being environmentally responsible, and as a stable and predictable partner.

            Whatever the complicated on the ground realities, these are some of the ways that make China currently seem to look better too many. Since you ask.

            • Eldritch@piefed.world
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              20 hours ago

              In tank space sure. But not in any non-hypocrical space. Again everything you implied about China could be said about the US.

              However, it was industrialization brought up living standards. Not any particular party or ideology. In every different government and economic system industrialization has been pushed, it has benefited the population. And industrialization doesn’t make up for the oppression and abuses that said parties or ideologies commit while industrializing.

              The fact that industrialization raised the standard of living in the US doesn’t justify their theft of my ancestors land or culture. Or the enslavement of blacks. It certainly doesn’t excuse or justify China’s oppression or cultural erasure of the uhygers. Tibetans or Hong Kongers as well. If you think it does or deny their abuse you’re just a hypocrite. 🤷

              • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                7 hours ago

                If industrialization raises up a population, financialization plunges them.

                Corporations in the US are seeing the highest profits they’ve ever seen in history. Wage theft has never been worse. Income disparity is widening more and more every year without any prospect of redistribution in sight.

                Corporations in China, however, are folded into the state as soon as they get too large. Corporate profits are collected by the state and redistributed to the population. China has many more protections to prevent it from choosing greed and sacrificing the working people than the US.

                I want what’s happening in China to happen to us in America.

                • Eldritch@piefed.world
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                  3 hours ago

                  If industrialization raises up a population, financialization plunges them.

                  Exactly, that’s why China’s economy is slowing.

                  Corporations in the US are seeing the highest profits they’ve ever seen in history. Wage theft has never been worse. Income disparity is widening more and more every year without any prospect of redistribution in sight.

                  Definitely, similar is happening in China as well. It’s why larger chunks of their youth aren’t participating and feel they have no place.

                  Corporations in China, however, are folded into the state as soon as they get too large. Corporate profits are collected by the state and redistributed to the population. China has many more protections to prevent it from choosing greed and sacrificing the working people than the US.

                  Which is largely meaningless as they exploit workers as hard or harder.

                  I want what’s happening in China to happen to us in America.

                  It did and is. The good bits happened over 60 years ago in the US. But we’re rapidly approaching the lack of press freedom and social surveillance China pioneered. Even as they’re approaching our inequality.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Not on Alibaba today. Even if they need to bin many at slower speed, it could help with memory market. Needs actual production instead of press releases.