What's new

China ends Japanese and South Korean Monopoly!!!!!!!!

Well, Americans don't buy Chinese brand electronics costing more than $500. So good luck trying to sell this at Walmart on weekly special.

That's right. They only buy multimillion dollar telecom mainframes and cell towers from Huawei, as Japan just did.

I understand that you are obsessed with white Americans though. I would be too if they were occupying my country, humiliating my women and the only way I could ever get revenge is through rampages by illegal immigrants.
 
.
Good progress but there is nothing to be surprised for.

Move follows 25 billion yuan investment in Shenzhen business drive

China will not need to rely on Japan and South Korea for its supply of large flat screens after the Chinese TV giant TCL Corp introduced the world's largest 110-inch high-definition 3-D screen on March 9, industry experts said.

Shenzhen China Star Optoelectronics Technology Co Ltd, a subsidiary company of TCL, announced the successful development of China Star, the screen's model name, marking a historical step in the Chinese development of display technology.

The 3,500-employee company started to research LED display technology in 2009 and invested about 25 billion yuan ($4 billion), which is the biggest investment in China's display industry and Shenzhen city, Guangdong province, in the last 30 years. The company has an advanced 8.5-generation liquid crystal display panel production line that can produce 20 million screens annually.

"China Star is a breakthrough in display technology in China," said Li Dongsheng, chief executive officer of TCL. He said the new product makes China the third nation to develop high-end display technology after Japan and South Korea.

"China has ended the technological monopoly of overseas companies in this industry," said Qi Chengyuan, general director of the High-Tech Industry Department of the National Development and Reform Commission. "China has a huge market for flat LCD TVs. The new flat-screen product is a step forward in high-tech development, which is a focus in the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015)."

According to Qi, China produced about 120 million TVs in 2011, of which 84.4 percent were liquid crystal display models. About 42 million LCD TVs were sold in China last year. He called for China to utilize domestic and overseas resources for more technological innovation in the industry.

Last year, 6 million 3-D TV sets were sold in the Chinese market. The number is predicted to grow to 20 million this year, said Lu Renbo, general secretary of the China Electronic Chamber of Commerce.

According to the domestic research company All View Consulting, 3-D TVs accounted for only 2.6 percent of the market in China in the first quarter of last year. However, the share increased to 15.7 percent in August and 3-D capability is expected to be a "must have" for TV shoppers in 2012.

Beijing's Great Hall of the People will be the first place to install the new product, since TCL will donate the first two China Star models to the building, where the latest sessions of the National People's Congress and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference National Committee were held in March.

Gu Zhihua, director of the flat-panel display center at Fudan University, told China Daily that the new product line plays a crucial strategic role in China's high-end technology industry. He explained that because the world has entered the information era, it is necessary for the nation to possess its own display technology.

"The market is still dominated by South Korean and Japanese companies, such as Samsung Electronics Co and Sharp Corp, but now they should watch their backs. Within five years, China will replace Japan and South Korea to become the world leader in the manufacturing and research and development of display screens," said Gu.

He mentioned that China's first 3-D channel will propel the growth of home-grown 3-D TV. Earlier this year, six TV stations including China Central Television and stations in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Tianjin and Jiangsu province, began broadcasting 3-D programs every day.

More than 45 percent of people have expressed an interest in 3-D programs and 35 percent said they would buy a 3-D TV set, according to a survey by China 3-D Industry Academy in March in six cities, including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

Shenzhen China Star Optoelectronics Technology has already received orders for the 110-inch display from domestic and overseas companies.

However, the company's CEO, He Chengming, said most of the orders came from Chinese companies, such as its parent company TCL, Chinese TV maker Hisense Group and Haier Co Ltd.


Flat screen market impetus|Business|chinadaily.com.cn
 
.
Actually the foreign manufacturers are leaving China, so less is being made in China over time. For example, the ice cubicle I bought the other day had "Made In India" print on it, instead of "Made In China". "Made In Vietnam" and "Made In Sri Lanka" labels are showing on clothing too. It won't be long before "Made In Vietnam" and "Made In India" replaces "Made In China" in the US markets.

It's natural for companies to take advantage of nations willing to work for pennies an hour. I would not be surprised if Foxconn moves abroad to continue their abuse.
 
. .
LOL at self-delusion. South Korea was never technologically advanced enough to resist competition from China. Samsung's getting eaten up by Huawei. Hyundai will get eaten up by Great Wall soon too.

SinoChallenger this guy is NOT Korean - it's jayatl's alter ego, recently banned.
 
.
SinoChallenger this guy is NOT Korean - it's jayatl's alter ego, recently banned.


This gentleman Korean has a deep and profound knowledge of China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan and Vietnam and perhaps some understandings on all their languages and customs. It's hard to think of him as a member of any country other than the above mentioned. If he is indeed jayatl, an India national, then our man must be very studious and talented, a genius perhaps.

Even though there are similarities in their write style and temperament, I really don't believe they are the same guy. An Indian national or any non Oriental person simply can't learn as much in short period of time unless he already possessed the said cultures. But if they are the same guy then he is wasting his time and talent here. And he is also a dangerous man and a lunatic too for spending so much time on the hatred of China.
 
.
Actually the foreign manufacturers are leaving China, so less is being made in China over time. For example, the ice cubicle I bought the other day had "Made In India" print on it, instead of "Made In China". "Made In Vietnam" and "Made In Sri Lanka" labels are showing on clothing too. It won't be long before "Made In Vietnam" and "Made In India" replaces "Made In China" in the US markets.


Fortunately for Chinese, Japanese nationalists are blaming Korea for Japan's misery, not China.

Anyhow, Chinese OP don't seem to get the fact that the high-end TV market trend is shifting to large screen OLED TVs, in which Koreans claim 99% market share. It's meaningless to release a product 6 months after your competitor, Japanese fell into that trap and this is why they are struggling, and Chinese aren't 6 months behind; they are 3 years behind in product release cycle.

China should be happy to see the cheaper product like a ice cubicle is no longer made in China.
OLED is just one of many choices of next generation LED. I don't see its advantage over white ray LED tech of Japan and Germany. After all, Korean technology is incomparable to Japanese or German especially in the field of optical.

And you, sir, lost all your credit since your "South Korea gains US military OPCON in 2015 " thread.
 
.
China should be happy to see the cheaper product like a ice cubicle is no longer made in China.
OLED is just one of many choices of next generation LED. I don't see its advantage over white ray LED tech of Japan and Germany. After all, Korean technology is incomparable to Japanese or German especially in the field of optical.

And you, sir, lost all your credit since your "South Korea gains US military OPCON in 2015 " thread.

OLED still has many problems. I still think that eventually, quantum dots will become the dominant display technology as they're thermally stable and can be created with self assembly. Their color properties depend only on size and vastly decrease chemical complexity as well.
 
. .
15+ years ago, the high-tech chasm between China and SK/Japan was so big that it wasn't even worth any discussion.

10 Years ago, China finally starting to develop some low-tech items and SK/Japan (mostly just online trolls) laughed at China low-tech development.

5 Years ago, China was nibbling on the heel of some high-tech industries of SK/Japan and SK/Japan finally taking noticed of China and started release high-tech gap charts between the 3 countries.

Today, China have already caught up to many high-tech industries of SK/Japan, and some cases even surpassed SK/Japan; Like Aerospace(civilian, military, deep space flight/communications), Telecommunications, High Speed trains, Green Energy development(solar, wind, hydro, nuclear/thorium, fusion development,..etc) and many others.

Yes, SK and Japan still have many high-tech industries that are ahead of China, like automobiles and flat panel displays. But with hard working and perseverance, China is catching up fast in those industries too.

However, No country can be the best of everything; Not USA, not Japan, not Germany and not China.
 
.
15+ years ago, the high-tech chasm between China and SK/Japan was so big that it wasn't even worth any discussion.

10 Years ago, China finally starting to develop some low-tech items and SK/Japan (mostly just online trolls) laughed at China low-tech development.

5 Years ago, China was nibbling on the heel of some high-tech industries of SK/Japan and SK/Japan finally taking noticed of China and started release high-tech gap charts between the 3 countries.

Today, China have already caught up to many high-tech industries of SK/Japan, and some cases even surpassed SK/Japan; Like Aerospace(civilian, military, deep space flight/communications), Telecommunications, High Speed trains, Green Energy development(solar, wind, hydro, nuclear/thorium, fusion development,..etc) and many others.

Yes, SK and Japan still have many high-tech industries that are ahead of China, like automobiles and flat panel displays. But with hard working and perseverance, China is catching up fast in those industries too.

However, No country can be the best of everything; Not USA, not Japan, not Germany and not China.

SK and Japan are not on the same level though. People think they are because they think "Samsung makes TVs, Panasonic makes TVs, SK = Japan". No.

Just as an example: Japan recently launched an interplanetary space probe called IKAROS. It was revolutionary in that it was powered by a solar sail. South Korea cannot even launch a prefabricated Russian rocket right. Its not the rocket - Russian rocket failure rates are low enough to be used by NASA.
 
.
Actually the foreign manufacturers are leaving China, so less is being made in China over time. For example, the ice cubicle I bought the other day had "Made In India" print on it, instead of "Made In China". "Made In Vietnam" and "Made In Sri Lanka" labels are showing on clothing too. It won't be long before "Made In Vietnam" and "Made In India" replaces "Made In China" in the US markets.


Fortunately for Chinese, Japanese nationalists are blaming Korea for Japan's misery, not China.

Anyhow, Chinese OP don't seem to get the fact that the high-end TV market trend is shifting to large screen OLED TVs, in which Koreans claim 99% market share. It's meaningless to release a product 6 months after your competitor, Japanese fell into that trap and this is why they are struggling, and Chinese aren't 6 months behind; they are 3 years behind in product release cycle.
you are saying manufactures are leaving China, yet China's exports increase every single year with big margin, I guess your kimchee (or should i say curry) 'theory' will have better explaination about this?
 
.
15+ years ago, the high-tech chasm between China and SK/Japan was so big that it wasn't even worth any discussion.
OK

10 Years ago, China finally starting to develop some low-tech items and SK/Japan (mostly just online trolls) laughed at China low-tech development.
Still do.

Today, China have already caught up to many high-tech industries of SK/Japan
Such as?

and some cases even surpassed SK/Japan; Like Aerospace(civilian, military, deep space flight/communications)
I will give you military and deep space flight, civilian no.

Telecommunications
Nope. Koreans own the fundamental core technology patents, Chinese just assemble parts.

High Speed trains
Chinese are roughly 10 years behind Koreans in high speed rail technology. Speeding up Japanese Shinkansen beyond Japanese design speed limit is not an innovation, but recklessness. Do you still not understand why Russia excluded Chinese bidders from bidding on high speed railway equipment(Only French, German, and Korean bidders allowed to bid) and Texas didn't even bother to invite China to bid?

Green Energy development(solar
Chinese solar panels are ancient obsolete types whose production requires pollution emission and is banned in western countries.

Nope

???

China is a nuclear power plant importing nation.
Korea is a nuclear power plant exporting nation.

Good luck with thorium for the next 30 years. Thorium won't get you anywhere.

fusion development
China has no advantage over others in this field, and Chinese are actually behind Koreans. How do I know? International ITER tokamack reactor is based on the KSTAR reactor and uses the KSTAR's superconducting core design.

Update on KSTAR, a pilot device for ITER
Nuclear Engineering International

The 2008 discharge was also significant because it was the first-ever successful operation of a tokamak using Nb3Sn magnets, the same superconducting material that will be used for the ITER project.

So 2008’s engineering feat is expected to translate into big business for the supply chain. South Korea is one of the seven parties involved in ITER. After having spent $310 million in the period from 1996-2008, the Korean government is expected to award $280 million in private-sector contracts for ITER. In particular, this will include 20% of ITER superconductors ($71 million) and vacuum vessel and ports ($210 million). (Other ITER project members will take the remaining share of superconductor contracts: in addition to Korea’s 20%, Japan will get a 25% stake, Russia 20%, the EU 20%, China 7% and the USA 8%.)

Yes, SK and Japan still have many high-tech industries that are ahead of China, like automobiles and flat panel displays. But with hard working and perseverance, China is catching up fast in those industries too.
China is overrun by foreign automakers with a 70% market share of Chinese domestic market. Try to take back China's domestic market from foreigners before going overseas.
 
.
OK


Still do.


Such as?


I will give you military and deep space flight, civilian no.


Nope. Koreans own the fundamental core technology patents, Chinese just assemble parts.


Chinese are roughly 10 years behind Koreans in high speed rail technology. Speeding up Japanese Shinkansen beyond Japanese design speed limit is not an innovation, but recklessness. Do you still not understand why Russia excluded Chinese bidders from bidding on high speed railway equipment(Only French, German, and Korean bidders allowed to bid) and Texas didn't even bother to invite China to bid?


Chinese solar panels are ancient obsolete types whose production requires pollution emission and is banned in western countries.


Nope


???


China is a nuclear power plant importing nation.
Korea is a nuclear power plant exporting nation.


Good luck with thorium for the next 30 years. Thorium won't get you anywhere.


China has no advantage over others in this field, and Chinese are actually behind Koreans. How do I know? International ITER tokamack reactor is based on the KSTAR reactor and uses the KSTAR's superconducting core design.

Update on KSTAR, a pilot device for ITER
Nuclear Engineering International




China is overrun by foreign automakers with a 70% market share of Chinese domestic market. Try to take back China's domestic market from foreigners before going overseas.
lord of the universe=kimchee power``all hail`!!
 
.
ITER cost contribution

EU : 45%
Japan : 9%
Korea : 9%
China : 9%
Russia : 9%
US : 9%
India : 9%

ITER engineering and component contribution

Japan : 25%
Korea : 20%
Russia : 20%
EU : 20%
US : 8%
China : 7%
India : ???

Do you still not get it? China has little to contribute in an international Fusion Reactor project like this. That's the true competitiveness of China's fusion research.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom