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China in talks for sale of jet engine technology to Germany

Germany does not need China. it can produce everything including complete jet engines. take MTU engine, the company produces lots of components for Airbus, GE and PW. from civil to military aircraft such as A400M.
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I believe you are over-estimating Germany, as usual. Germany may have some strong industries, but in some industries, they are very average or even poor quality. The same with Japan, some of their industries are far behind that of China, Korea or Singapore and just a little above Vietnam

Vietnam have had to pay heavy prices because putting too much trust on the Japanese on some projects, thanks to stupidity of high-level cadres like ĐLT. His hatred towards Chinese is well-known. He did not approve the Chinese contractors or suppliers, even if they were more experienced and offered better price. Now he is serving his term in jail.
 
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I believe you are over-estimating Germany, as usual. Germany may have some strong industries, but in some industries, they are very average or even poor quality. The same with Japan, some of their industries are far behind that of China, Korea or Singapore and just a little above Vietnam

Vietnam have had to pay heavy prices because putting too much trust on the Japanese on some projects, thanks to stupidity of high-level cadres like ĐLT. His hatred towards Chinese is well-known. He did not approve the Chinese contractors or suppliers, even if they were more experienced and offered better price. Now he is serving his term in jail.
Germany is one of the most advanced countries on the planet. I travel from north to south, from east to west, working for numerous companies. The strength of Germany lies on the shoulders of one million small and medium enterprises, not only on the 30 biggest cooperations.

Haven’t you read what number of planes Germany produced in WW II? Close to 100,000 including fighter jets.

You may know Vietnam government wants to have one million companies too by 2020. Vinfast buys technology from BMW and Bosch. Thanks to the Germans, for the first time ever in history we will have own car brand. It is great or not? Japan is as technically advanced as Germany, but they won’t sell technology to Vietnam, lesser the Chinese.
 
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Germany is one of the most advanced countries on the planet. I travel from north to south, from east to west, working for numerous companies. The strength of Germany lies on the shoulders of one million small and medium enterprises, not only on the 30 biggest cooperations.

Haven’t you read what number of planes Germany produced in WW II? Close to 100,000 including fighter jets.

You may know Vietnam government wants to have one million companies too by 2020. Vinfast buys technology from BMW and Bosch. Thanks to the Germans, for the first time ever in history we will have own car brand. It is great or not? Japan is as technically advanced as Germany, but they won’t sell technology to Vietnam, lesser the Chinese.
Bro, carmaking technology is so yesterday. I dare say our cars are as good as the Germans or the Japanese if you are willing to pay, it's not complex technology at all. The only problem lies in branding and marketing. China can produce all the parts required to make a car, this is the strength of our industrial base.
 
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Bro, carmaking technology is so yesterday. I dare say our cars are as good as the Germans or the Japanese if you are willing to pay, it's not complex technology at all. The only problem lies in branding and marketing. China can produce all the parts required to make a car, this is the strength of our industrial base.
The chance we can buy any technology from China is below freezing point. Last time when VN communist chief visits China since a decade seeking friendship and cooperation the best thing you offer is cooperation with China Red Cross.

I hope as next step we buy HSR technology from Germany.
 
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A laser in Shanghai, China, has set power records yet fits on tabletops.
KAN ZHAN
Physicists are planning to build lasers so powerful they could rip apart empty space
By Edwin Cartlidge
Jan. 24, 2018 , 9:00 AM

Inside a cramped laboratory in Shanghai, China, physicist Ruxin Li and colleagues are breaking records with the most powerful pulses of light the world has ever seen. At the heart of their laser, called the Shanghai Superintense Ultrafast Laser Facility (SULF), is a single cylinder of titanium-doped sapphire about the width of a Frisbee. After kindling light in the crystal and shunting it through a system of lenses and mirrors, the SULF distills it into pulses of mind-boggling power. In 2016, it achieved an unprecedented 5.3 million billion watts, or petawatts (PW). The lights in Shanghai do not dim each time the laser fires, however. Although the pulses are extraordinarily powerful, they are also infinitesimally brief, lasting less than a trillionth of a second. The researchers are now upgrading their laser and hope to beat their own record by the end of this year with a 10-PW shot, which would pack more than 1000 times the power of all the world's electrical grids combined.

The group's ambitions don't end there. This year, Li and colleagues intend to start building a 100-PW laser known as the Station of Extreme Light (SEL). By 2023, it could be flinging pulses into a chamber 20 meters underground, subjecting targets to extremes of temperature and pressure not normally found on Earth, a boon to astrophysicists and materials scientists alike. The laser could also power demonstrations of a new way to accelerate particles for use in medicine and high-energy physics. But most alluring, Li says, would be showing that light could tear electrons and their antimatter counterparts, positrons, from empty space—a phenomenon known as "breaking the vacuum." It would be a striking illustration that matter and energy are interchangeable, as Albert Einstein's famous E=mc2 equation states. Although nuclear weapons attest to the conversion of matter into immense amounts of heat and light, doing the reverse is not so easy. But Li says the SEL is up to the task. "That would be very exciting," he says. "It would mean you could generate something from nothing."

The Chinese group is "definitely leading the way" to 100 PW, says Philip Bucksbaum, an atomic physicist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. But there is plenty of competition. In the next few years, 10-PW devices should switch on in Romania and the Czech Republic as part of Europe's Extreme Light Infrastructure, although the project recently put off its goal of building a 100-PW-scale device. Physicists in Russia have drawn up a design for a 180-PW laser known as the Exawatt Center for Extreme Light Studies (XCELS), while Japanese researchers have put forward proposals for a 30-PW device.


Continue -> Physicists are planning to build lasers so powerful they could rip apart empty space | Science | AAAS
 
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