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In general, the amount of tax revenues collected by a country will constrain the budgetary size for the armed forces. As China's fiscal revenues start to match U.S. federal government tax receipts, the two countries' military budgets should become roughly equal on a sustainable basis in the next few years.

China's 2011 tax revenues: $1.55 trillion (72% of U.S. tax receipts)
U.S. 2010 tax revenues: $2.16 trillion

References:

China

"China’s 30% Gain in Tax Revenue Counters Risks from Local-Government Debt
By Bloomberg News - Jul 19, 2011 2:04 AM ET

China’s tax revenue rose 29.6 percent to 5 trillion yuan ($773 billion) in the first half of the year, giving officials more room to maneuver as they grapple with swelling local-government debt.

The gain, reported by the Ministry of Finance on its website today, compared with a 32.4 percent increase in the first quarter from a year earlier. (article continues)"

United States federal budget - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Right-hand-side chart shows "U.S. Federal Tax Receipts - Fiscal Year 2010" of $2,162 billion.

[Note: To estimate China's 2011 tax revenues, double the half-year tax revenue of $773 billion.]
 
China's total GDP is like less than half of US, but tax revenue is 75% of it```how is that? it is very easy to evade tax in China...
maybe most of the revenue comes from state owned companies?
 
In general, the amount of tax revenues collected by a country will constrain the budgetary size for the armed forces. As China's fiscal revenues start to match U.S. federal government tax receipts, the two countries' military budgets should become roughly equal on a sustainable basis in the next few years.

China's 2011 tax revenues: $1.55 trillion (72% of U.S. tax receipts)
U.S. 2010 tax revenues: $2.16 trillion

References:

China

"China’s 30% Gain in Tax Revenue Counters Risks from Local-Government Debt
By Bloomberg News - Jul 19, 2011 2:04 AM ET

China’s tax revenue rose 29.6 percent to 5 trillion yuan ($773 billion) in the first half of the year, giving officials more room to maneuver as they grapple with swelling local-government debt.

The gain, reported by the Ministry of Finance on its website today, compared with a 32.4 percent increase in the first quarter from a year earlier. (article continues)"

United States federal budget - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Right-hand-side chart shows "U.S. Federal Tax Receipts - Fiscal Year 2010" of $2,162 billion.

[Note: To estimate China's 2011 tax revenues, double the half-year tax revenue of $773 billion.]

where does china stand in the nation with the largest tax revenues?

im assuming US is 1st, is china 2nd?
 
where does china stand in the nation with the largest tax revenues?

im assuming US is 1st, is china 2nd?

Your assumption is correct. Japan is a distant third.

1. U.S. tax revenues: $2.16 trillion (does not include -$200 billion penalty for interest payment on debt)
2. China: $1.55 trillion
3. Japan: $0.48 trillion

Reference:

Japan govt: 2011/12 tax revenues at some Y40 trln | Reuters

"Japan govt: 2011/12 tax revenues at some Y40 trln
Thu Dec 16, 2010 4:25am EST

Dec 16 (Reuters) - Japan's tax revenues are likely to reach slightly above 40 trillion yen ($475 billion) for the financial year starting in April, undershooting new government bond issuance for a third straight year, a senior Japanese government official said on Thursday.

"We cannot tolerate such an abnormal situation where tax revenues continue to undershoot new bond issuance," Tatsuo Hirano, deputy national strategy minister, told reporters.

He was speaking after cabinet ministers agreed to cap new government bond issuance in the next fiscal year's budget at or below the 44.3 trillion yen planned for the current year's initial budget.

The government is aiming to compile the 2011/12 budget by Dec. 24. (Reporting by Rie Ishiguro, Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Chris Gallagher)"

[Note: $1 = 81 Yens at the beginning of the year and $1 = 77 Yens now]

----------

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703883504576186163767307644.html

"As Budget Battle Rages On, a Quiet Cancer Grows
MARCH 8, 2011
...
This year the U.S. will spend more than $200 billion—roughly the gross domestic product of Chile—merely paying off that interest. That's nearly as much as it will spend to provide health care to poor citizens through the Medicaid program. (article continues)"
 
It is almost a dead-heat in international patent applications for the world's three-largest economies.

1. Japan: 337,497 World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) patent applications
2. United States: 326,945
3. China: 313,854

Reference:

Analysis: China's telecom patent boom heralds innovation era | Reuters

"Analysis: China's telecom patent boom heralds innovation era
By Rachel Armstrong
SINGAPORE | Wed Aug 24, 2011 10:32pm EDT

uk1iJ.jpg

Two new cloud-based smartphones called "Vision" made by Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, the world's No. 2 network equipment maker, can be seen during an official launch ceremony in Beijing August 3, 2011. (Credit: Reuters/David Gray)

(Reuters) - China's telecom giants are building up a war-chest of patents to help give them an edge in the legal battles raging between the world's smartphone makers, aided by Beijing's push to transform the country from workshop to innovator.

Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and ZTE Corp, China's top two telecommunications equipment makers, are stealing a march on rivals both in traditional network gear and, increasingly, high-end phones.

ZTE was the second highest filer of international patent applications in the world last year according to the World Intellectual Property Organization, making 1,863 different filings. Huawei was the fourth most active filer with 1,528 applications, having been in the top spot in 2009.

Patent filings are soaring across most sectors in China -- last year there were 313,854 patents registered in the country according to the Thomson Reuters Derwent World Patents Index, a 12 percent rise from 2009.

China was the third highest filer of patents in 2010, just behind the U.S., which registered 326,945 and Japan with 337,497. Japan has been the leading patent filer in the world for the past decade but its lead is narrowing, with its filings volume down 12 percent since 2006. China is up 83 percent.


The China telecom space in particular is seeing a lot of action as the likes of ZTE and Huawei, along with Taiwan's HTC move from being contract manufacturers for big foreign firms to making smart phones and tablets under their own brands.

"A lot of know-how flows through the contract manufacturer. The next logical step for these contract manufacturers is to climb up the value chain," said Elliot Papageorgiou a partner at intellectual property law firm Rouse in Shanghai.

And as they move up the value chain, they use patents to protect some of the knowledge and ideas they've picked up as contract manufacturers in order to give them room to manoeuvre in the increasingly competitive market.

"The more this market matures the more you are searching for the margins and China is now probably the biggest mobile phone market in the world," said Papageorgiou.

IP LAWYERS IN DEMAND

The flow of China filings means big business for patent lawyers in a country where trying to enforce intellectual property (IP) rights was seen by many companies as a largely pointless exercise until recently.

"In the last year and especially this year, demand for IP work is growing very fast," said Anthony Chen, a patent lawyer for Jones Day in Shanghai.

Douglas Clark, a barrister specialising in intellectual property cases who has worked in China since 1993 says the size of the industry has surged in recent years.

"The last 10 years have seen a huge growth in the number of IP lawyers employed in firms and in-house," he said.

"At the very top level for partners there's very strong competition for talent and strong salaries."

He estimates an IP partner in an international law firm in China can now expect to earn around $1 million to $2 million depending on how well their firm does that year. Partners in some Chinese firms are likely to earn even more.

COURTROOM BATTLES

The surge in the size of patent portfolios is causing a corresponding rise in litigation.

ZTE filed a lawsuit in China in April saying Huawei infringed on its fourth generation technology. The move came a day after Huawei sued ZTE in several European countries saying its rival had infringed on a series of its patents.

"Huawei and ZTE have sued each other in Europe and now are taking action in China because they both made good progress in selling their mobile communication products and now they're using patents as a competition tool," said Jones Day's Chen.

These lawsuits are hardly surprising given that their foreign counterparts such as Apple, Google and Samsung are all trying to use an armory of patents to stifle competition in the global smartphone industry.

Google Inc's biggest deal ever, the agreement to buy Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc this month for $12.5 billion, is an attempt to buy insurance against increasingly aggressive legal attacks from rivals such as Apple Inc.

So far though the likes of Apple and Samsung have stayed out of legal battles in China, wary of finding themselves at the wrong-end of a court order in a country they rely on for their manufacturing.

But for Chinese firms being sued in Europe or the United States, many are now using their home turf for retaliation.

ZTE has filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Ericsson's China unit after the Swedish telecoms giant filed patent lawsuits against ZTE in Britain, Italy and Germany.

"I expect more and more Chinese firms that may have 'lost face' by finding themselves as losing defendants in foreign jurisdictions to strengthen their position in China and take retaliatory action," said Rouse's Papageorgiou.

CHINA'S INNOVATION PUSH

The influx of patents not only underscores China's growing strength in the telecom sector, it also reveals a change afoot in the country's attitude toward intellectual property.

While the change is hardly air-tight, China is moving more toward recognising ideas and their origins, rather than copying and proliferating.

Intellectual property civil litigation cases filed in China rose by 37 percent to 41,718 last year according to the country's Supreme People's Court.

This is driven in part by China's plan to become a high-tech power house, with a target for 2.5 percent of its gross domestic product to come from research and development by 2020. It's trying to reach this goal by subsidising the cost of patents for Chinese companies and stricter enforcement of intellectual property rights.

"While traditionally in China you are supposed to share knowledge, the government is also aware that if you don't protect IP rights you don't attract investors and the nation can't develop the high-tech industries it wants," said Isabella Liu, a partner at Baker & McKenzie in Hong Kong.

(Editing by Lincoln Feast and Michael Flaherty)"
 
Your assumption is correct. Japan is a distant third.

1. U.S. tax revenues: $2.16 trillion (does not include -$200 billion penalty for interest payment on debt)
2. China: $1.55 trillion
3. Japan: $0.48 trillion

Reference:

Japan govt: 2011/12 tax revenues at some Y40 trln | Reuters

"Japan govt: 2011/12 tax revenues at some Y40 trln
Thu Dec 16, 2010 4:25am EST

Dec 16 (Reuters) - Japan's tax revenues are likely to reach slightly above 40 trillion yen ($475 billion) for the financial year starting in April, undershooting new government bond issuance for a third straight year, a senior Japanese government official said on Thursday.

"We cannot tolerate such an abnormal situation where tax revenues continue to undershoot new bond issuance," Tatsuo Hirano, deputy national strategy minister, told reporters.

He was speaking after cabinet ministers agreed to cap new government bond issuance in the next fiscal year's budget at or below the 44.3 trillion yen planned for the current year's initial budget.

The government is aiming to compile the 2011/12 budget by Dec. 24. (Reporting by Rie Ishiguro, Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Chris Gallagher)"

[Note: $1 = 81 Yens at the beginning of the year and $1 = 77 Yens now]

----------

The Most Insidious Budget Problem: The National Debt - WSJ.com

"As Budget Battle Rages On, a Quiet Cancer Grows
MARCH 8, 2011
...
This year the U.S. will spend more than $200 billion—roughly the gross domestic product of Chile—merely paying off that interest. That's nearly as much as it will spend to provide health care to poor citizens through the Medicaid program. (article continues)"


Government budget by country - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
on this website china has the 5th largest revenues as of 2009.
japan has quite a big lead.

are u sure china is 2nd as of 2011?
 
Government budget by country - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
on this website china has the 5th largest revenues as of 2009.
japan has quite a big lead.

are u sure china is 2nd as of 2011?

China

"China’s 30% Gain in Tax Revenue Counters Risks from Local-Government Debt
By Bloomberg News - Jul 19, 2011 2:04 AM ET

China’s tax revenue rose 29.6 percent to 5 trillion yuan ($773 billion) in the first half of the year, giving officials more room to maneuver as they grapple with swelling local-government debt.

The gain, reported by the Ministry of Finance on its website today, compared with a 32.4 percent increase in the first quarter from a year earlier. (article continues)"

[Note: To estimate China's 2011 tax revenues, double the half-year tax revenue of $773 billion.]

----------

Your Wikipedia source citation is flawed. Their list includes state/provincial and local governments. You have to compare apples to apples.

From your Wikipedia link:

"Note: For federation like the USA, Mexico, Germany, etc., only the federal budget is shown. For most other countries the total budget is shown."
 
QuYjB.jpg

China Mobile is the world's-largest and most-profitable mobile operator with "half-year profits topping $9.6 billion."

China Mobile becomes world's biggest mobile operator. The Register

"China Mobile becomes world's biggest mobile operator
By Bill Ray
Posted in Business, 25th August 2011 13:18 GMT

China Mobile's half-year profits topped $9.6bn, making it the largest mobile operator in the world by customers and profits, and six times bigger than the nearest local competition.

That $9.6bn profit is based on revenue of almost $40bn, stomping all over the local competition and topping Vodafone's annual figure of $18.82bn. The local competition is compared with this pretty graph at Penn Olson, which shows that China Telecom only managed one-sixth of its rival's takings, while China Unicom lagged well behind with a profit of only $406m despite (or because of) having an exclusive on Apple's iPhone.

That exclusive is costing China Unicom a huge amount in handset subsidies. Unicom is the only company of the three Chinese operators to see a decline in profits in the first half of 2011, and that's despite increasing revenues more than 22 per cent. It seems much of the cash, $478m to be precise, went on subsidising 3G handsets – most of which will have been iPhones.

China Mobile makes about £6.68 in revenue from each user each month (ARPU), which compares badly to Vodafone UK, which rakes in an average of £21.70 from every prepaid customer (£37.10 from those with contracts). But if you compare this with Vodafone India's ARPU of £2.34, it looks far more healthy.

China's mobile industry is still expanding as penetration is still some way off saturation. Around 900 million mobile subscriptions serve a population around 1.3 billion, so there's still room for expansion within China.

Not that the operators are limiting their horizons to their home country. China Telecom has been talking about launching a UK MVNO aimed at Chinese people living abroad (400,000 of them in the UK, according to the company) and recently expanded its European operations to look specifically at acquiring Western companies.

China Mobile is state-owned, so its profits go to the Chinese government. And its profits are unlikely to fall any time soon, especially with Tim Cook (now Apple's CEO) seen dropping by for a visit to lend weight to the rumours that Unicom's exclusive won't last long and that China Mobile will be getting the next iPhone for its 4G network.

Competition has certainly driven the Chinese mobile industry, but it is not clear how, or if, that competition can be maintained with one player dominating the market to such a large extent."
 
Bank of America Sells Stake in China Construction Bank

Bank of America announced on Monday that it would offload about half of its China Construction Bank holdings to a group of unidentified investors, in a deal expected to raise $8.3 billion.

The deal, which came just days after Warren E. Buffett agreed to invest $5 billion into the bank, is the latest asset sale for the beleaguered financial firm. Over the last month, Bank of America has sold its Canadian credit card division and has put its European card operation on the block, as it continues to clear noncore assets from its books.

The moves come amid recent fears that Bank of America lacks sufficient capital, concerns that its chief executive, Brian T. Moynihan, has tried to allay.

On Monday, Bank of America highlighted the deal’s effect on capital levels.

“This sale of approximately half of our shares of C.C.B. stock is expected to generate about $3.5 billion in additional Tier 1 common capital and reduce our risk-weighted assets by $7.3 billion under Basel I,” Bruce R. Thompson, the bank’s chief financial officer, said in the statement.

Under the terms of the deal, Bank of America will sell 13.1 billion common shares of the China Construction Bank Corporation to a group of unidentified investors. The bank on Friday was in negotiations with a collection of sovereign wealth funds in Asia and the Middle East, The New York Times reported. The deal is expected to close later in the quarter.

Even after the sale, Bank of America will still hold about 5 percent of China Construction Bank. According to its statement, Bank of America is in talks to expand a separate existing “strategic assistance agreement” between the two banks.

“Our partnership with China Construction Bank has been mutually beneficial,” Mr. Moynihan said in the statement.

Shares of Bank of America were up more than 5 percent in late morning trading on Monday.


Bank of America Sells Stake in China Construction Bank - NYTimes.com


Who is buying? - china buying back the stake or the shares are being sold to foreigners.....

And is China happy to buyback or no?
 
YUP5H.jpg

Chinese tech factory looks to replace humans with robots. Foxconn Technology Group, a contract manufacturer headquartered in Taiwan, will use the robots for simple tasks on production lines at its mainland China plants. (Source: Chinese company Foxconn Technology Group to replace human workers with robots at mainland factory)

Thomas Freidman Spews Nonsense With Hurricane Force

"Thomas Freidman Spews Nonsense With Hurricane Force
Dean Baker, CEPR | Aug. 28, 2011, 1:18 PM
...
Finally, Friedman shows a stunning ignorance of arithmetic when he tells readers:

“China also has to get rich before it gets old. It has to move from two parents saving for one kid, to one kid paying for the retirement of two parents. To do that, it has to move from an assembly-copying-manufacturing economy to a knowledge-services-innovation economy. This requires more freedom and rule of law, and you can already see mounting demands for it. Something has to give there.”

Using somewhat more realistic numbers (China is not seeing its population cut in half), let’s say that it is moving from having 5 workers per retiree to 2 workers per retiree over 30 years, a far faster decline than it is actually seeing. China’s output per worker has been increasing a rate of more than 8 percent a year. This means that over a 30 year period, output per worker will increase more than 10 fold.

Suppose our 5 workers are taxed at a 12 percent rate at the start of the period to give retirees an income equal to 70 percent of the typical worker’s after tax income. If we want to maintain this 70 percent ratio, when 2 workers support each retiree, it would take a tax rate of just under 24 percent to maintain this ratio.

Okay, so output per worker has increased by 1000 percent. We have to increase the tax rate from 12 percent to 24 percent. This means that with the higher worker to retiree ratio, the average worker will have a bit less than 9 times the after-tax income (76% of 1000 percent, as opposed to 88 percent of 100 percent) of her predecessor thirty years earlier who only had to support one-fifth of a retiree. If there is a problem here, it is very hard to see it.

So there we have it, Thomas Friedman once again letting his poor grasp of economics and arithmetic invent grand problems where there are none. What would be do without him?"

HEARD ON THE STREET: Robots March Into Emerging Markets - WSJ.com

"Robots March Into Emerging Markets
AUGUST 14, 2011, 1:30 P.M. ET
By MATTHEW CURTIN

Has the robot finally come of age? Foxconn Technology Group said this month that it plans to install a million robots in its Chinese factories by 2013, up from 10,000 today, to make Apple iPhones and iPads. That will be one of the first times industrial-automation technologies have been deployed in large scale to substitute for low-cost emerging-market labor. It may signal the start of a prolonged boom for the robotics industry.

Although many contract manufacturers face pressure from rising wages and skilled-labor shortages in emerging markets, this only tells part of the story. Original-equipment manufacturers designing technologically complex products care increasingly about fast delivery times and customization as well as quality. Soon, only a robot may have the dexterity and endurance for the job. (article continues)"
 
As machines replace human labor for repetitive tasks, the existing Chinese workers will transition to jobs that require higher education or into services (e.g. real estate broker, insurance agent, marketing, legal services, robot maintenance and/or repair, auto mechanic, etc.). The Chinese government will have to allocate budgetary resources for retraining and re-education for service-based jobs.

I admit there is a certain irony here. In the long-run, the Chinese economy will look an awful lot like the U.S. economy. However, there is an important distinction. The Chinese economy will be underpinned by a strong and retained manufacturing base, which is sustained by robotics.

The American economy never made the adjustment to a robot-based manufacturing economy, because robotics were less-developed thirty years ago. Also, Americans incorrectly thought manufacturing was a "sunset" industry and intentionally off-shored as much of the polluting manufacturing plants as possible. For proof, read the old BusinessWeek articles from the 1980s and the opinions of free traders, such as Alan Blinder, in the editorial pages.

The really interesting question is whether robotics will allow China to hold on to semiconductor-based and electronics-based industries indefinitely. There has been a false assumption among some countries that since manufacturing jobs migrated from the U.S. to China, it will eventually migrate to lower labor-cost countries.

Firstly, labor costs in India are already substantially lower than in China and there has been no significant loss of Chinese manufacturing jobs. Secondly, the Chinese government has expressed no interest in divesting itself of manufacturing jobs. This is similar to the attitude of Taiwan's government. Though Taiwan is the world's largest purchaser and operator of semiconductor equipment, it is also one of the world's largest bicycle manufacturers (e.g. "Giant Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (捷安特) is a Taiwanese bicycle manufacturer which bills itself as the world's largest bicycle manufacturer.").

Thirdly, the implementation of robotics by Foxconn may herald a new wave of automation across all labor-intensive industries. In my other thread, "China's Advanced Sciences," I profiled Chinese automation equipment in textiles and production of yarns (e.g. $1 billion Fountain manufacturing facility).

The Chinese government has intentionally rid itself of most shoe-making factories and a few other low-value-added industries. However, I believe it may decide to hold onto the more valuable manufacturing industries indefinitely.

We are living in a new world and I have no idea how other developing countries are supposed to industrialize. China has a massive internal market; possesses most of the manufacturing plants and know-how; can subsidize whichever industry it desires; has a massive and increasing research and development budget; and is transitioning to a virtually endless-supply of mechanized or robotics-based labor.

How in the world do you beat that?

Fountain Relocates $1 billion dollar Manufacturing Plant to Yangtze River Delta

chinafountainset4861630.jpg

Fountain Set is the world’s-largest circular-knitted fabric manufacturer.

Zhuji Fuwei computerized embroidering machines

It appears that embroidery machines are no longer strictly mechanical devices. The modern versions are also highly computerized. That is a surprise. Semiconductor chips have spread to the textile industry.

chinazhujiembroiderymac.jpg

Zhuji Fuwei computerized embroidering machines
 
China calls for futher cooperation between western Chinese regions and Asian, European nations
China calls for futher cooperation between western Chinese regions and Asian, European nations
English.news.cn 2011-08-31 22:56:33 FeedbackPrintRSS

131087240_11n.jpg


Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang (R) meets with Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, who is here to attend the first China-Eurasia Expo, in Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Aug. 31, 2011. (Xinhua/Ding Lin)


URUMQI, Aug. 31 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang called for the further boosting of exchanges and cooperation between western Chinese provinces, autonomous regions and Asian and European nations here on Wednesday.

The opportunities offered by the first China-Eurasia Expo can be seized to promote trade and investment to a higher level between western Chinese regions, particularly the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, and Asian and European nations, Li said when meeting with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari in the capital city of Xinjiang.

Li applauded the all-weather friendship between China and Pakistan, pledging that China always values its relations with Pakistan from a strategic and long-term perspective.

China will work with Pakistan to heighten their mutually beneficial cooperation in various sectors, including trade, investment, energy and resources, infrastructure and finance, Li said.

Zardari said Pakistan will continue to consolidate its cooperation with China on political, economic as well as regional and international issues to push forward the Pakistan-China friendship.

In his meeting with Kazakhstan's Deputy Prime Minister Aset Isekeshev, Li recalled the successful mutual visits made by the two heads of state this year, noting that the China-Kazakhstan strategic partnership is at a new starting point.

China will remain committed to working with Kazakhstan to increase mutual political trust, strengthen international coordination and foster bilateral cooperation on energy, resources, high technology, infrastructure construction and humanitarian exchanges, Li said.

Isekeshev said Kazakhstan and China are good neighbors with a mutual trust and that Kazakhstan is willing to further its cooperation with China in various trade and technological fields to bring bilateral relations to a new level.

Zardari and Isekeshev are both in Urumqi to attend the first China-Eurasia Expo, which will be held from Sept. 1-5.

The expo is expected to attract over 10,000 foreign participants. It is an upgrade and update of the China Urumqi Foreign Economic Relations and Trade Fair, which had been held annually since 1992.
 
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/921...SB_thumb_drive_

"Is Transcend planning a 2TB USB thumb drive?
No word as to when it'll be available (See video below)
By Lucas Mearian
August 31, 2011 04:01 PM ET

Computerworld - According to a video posted on YouTube, memory card maker Transcend and Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) have teamed up to produce a USB 3.0 flash drive with up to 2TB of capacity.

The drive, described as being as long as a human thumb and slightly thicker than a penny, was videotaped at the Display Taiwan 2011 technology show. The model on display had only 16GB, but the display states that it's capable of scaling to 2TB.

"If you're wondering who exactly is ITRI and why have they created an ultrathin 2TB USB, they are Taiwan's government-sponsored innovation lab, whose sole purpose is to help Taiwanese companies innovate. And since Taiwan is the home of hardware, it stands to reason they'd have some cool gadgets lying around," the YouTube poster states.

Neither Taiwan-based Transcend nor the ITRI immediately responded to Computerworld's requests for information about the drive technology."

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Walking shovel at China-Eurasia Expo - China.org.cn

Walking shovel at China-Eurasia Expo
Xinhua, September 3, 2011

dvO1W.jpg

A gait-model shovel is seen during the ongoing China-Eurasia Expo in Urumqi, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Sept. 2, 2011. The all-terrain shovel, designed and made by China's leading heavy machinery maker XCMG, is equipped with "walking wheels" which enable it to work under unfavorable circumstances like swamp and steep slope. [Xinhua/Jiang Wenyao]

eKMaK.jpg


n2PHH.jpg


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[Note: Thank you to Grey Boy 2 for the post.]
 
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