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It's started: Robot Uprising Begins as China Turns to Machines to Fill in Gaps in the Workforce

Supa powa 2012 with 1.5billion Jobless people gonna die soon

They're lack a sense of crisis. They think that everything will be okay until they all f*cked.

Even Lee Kun Hee of Samsung, always tells his fellows that Samsung may lose the market just like Nokia or Blackberry if they're lack a sense of crisis.
 
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Chinese scientists create new type of magnetic nanorobot:D

2017-11-03 16:31

chinadaily.com.cn Editor: Gu Liping

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Recently, Professor Zhang Guangyu and Professor Li Longqiu from School of Mechatronics Engineering, Harbin Institute of Technology, achieved important progress in the research of magnetic nanorobot with the cooperation of Joseph Wang from University of California, San Diego.

Their research result is a new type of magnetic nanorobot, a symmetric multilinked two-arm nanoswimmer, capable of efficient "freestyle" swimming in human blood vessels and sending drug to the nidus.

It can even distinguish between cancer cells and normal red blood cells, which opens new possibilities in designing remotely actuated nanorobots for biomedical operation at the nanoscale.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/11-03/279598.shtml
 
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China's Gree Electric Appliances uses industrial robots to manufacture air conditioners.

China's Gree Electric Appliances is the world's largest manufacturer of residential air conditioners. Gree has annual sales of US$15.27 billion (see Forbes citation below).

In the video, you can see that many of the jobs involved in the production of Gree air conditioners have been taken over by industrial robots.

There are very few humans working in the Gree manufacturing facilities.


"Gree Intelligent Equipments Co., Ltd. Industrial Park
Published on Mar 25, 2016

First-innovated in Air Conditioning Industry:
- Automation Production Line of Sheet Metal Chassis Subassembly
- Milling Machine for Meral Air Louver
- Automation Production Line for Heat Exchanger
- Full-automation welding System by Robot"
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Gree Electric Appliances | Forbes Global 2000: Top Regarded Companies (2017 Ranking)

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China's Midea replaced 24,000 humans with 800 robots (see video).

China's Midea is a manufacturer of electric appliances.
Midea has annual sales of US$24 billion (Midea Group | Forbes).

At one manufacturing plant, Midea replaced 24,000 workers with 800 robots.
By the end of 2018, Midea said it will automate the other five large manufacturing plants in China.

Midea is also known for spending US$5 billion to buy Germany's Kuka robotics.


"Midea GZ Smart factory
Published on Oct 29, 2015"
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Midea says the installation of 800 robots increased productivity by 70% (see video below at 3:15).

 
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China's GAC Motor increased production from 200 to 400 cars per shift after automation.

At 1:45 in the video, the reporter said China's GAC Motor increased production by 100% per shift (from 200 to 400 cars).

Industrial robots are increasing China's productivity by 100% in the car sector.

 
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China's Midea replaced 24,000 humans with 800 robots (see video).

China's Midea is a manufacturer of electric appliances.
Midea has annual sales of US$24 billion (Midea Group | Forbes).

At one manufacturing plant, Midea replaced 24,000 workers with 800 robots.
By the end of 2018, Midea said it will automate the other five large manufacturing plants in China.

Midea is also known for spending US$5 billion to buy Germany's Kuka robotics.


"Midea GZ Smart factory
Published on Oct 29, 2015"
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Midea says the installation of 800 robots increased productivity by 70% (see video below at 3:15).




Do you have any idea what Midea spends in R&D? I have been trying to find the figures, but couldn't.
 
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Do you have any idea what Midea spends in R&D? I have been trying to find the figures, but couldn't.
Midea spent an average of US$600 million per year on R&D.

20 billion Yuans (in five year period) / 5 years = 4 billion Yuans per year in R&D

4 billion Yuans / 6.6 Yuans per US dollar = US$600 million annual R&D budget for Midea

Midea launched its European R&D and Innovation Center in Austria | Tass (June 13, 2017)

"Statistics show that in the past five years, Midea has invested more than 20 billion yuan in research and development, ranking first in the field of home appliances innovation in Thomson Reuters' report. In 2016, the overseas revenue of Midea exceeded 64.01 billion yuan, accounting for 43.5% of its total revenue, an increase of 29.53% year on year." (second paragraph from the bottom of the article)
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China's Haier spent US$467 million in annual R&D for 2015. Home appliances and electronics goods manufacturers (like Midea and Haier) have comparable R&D budgets.

Chinese white goods makers eye global brands for market share and premium cache | Reuters (May 18, 2016)

"Its full acquisition three years later not only helped keep Fisher & Paykel afloat, but also put privately-owned Haier in control of one-fifth of Australia’s markets for fridges, washing machines and dishwashers, up from less than 5 percent in 2010. Rivals such as Electrolux AB (ELUXb.ST) and LG Electronics Inc (066570.KS) lost market share in various kinds of products during the period, according to data from Euromonitor. Haier’s advance in Australia, largely fueled by its own deep pockets, may be an indication of how it could stir up the U.S. market after its deal to buy General Electric Co’s (GE.N) appliance business for $5.4 billion in January. Under Haier control, Fisher & Paykel has been able to do large product launches and its research and development budget has increased, Carnegie Investment Bank said in a recent note. Carnegie said it expected Haier will use the same strategy in the U.S. market. The group’s global R&D spending jumped to 3.05 billion yuan (467 million) in 2015, a rise of 53 percent since 2012. Qingdao Haier Co Ltd (600690.SS), the publicly traded core subsidiary of the Chinese group, has spent 9.7 billion yuan since 2011 in acquiring home appliance assets, according to its annual report." (second paragraph from the top of the article)
 
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Midea spent an average of US$600 million per year on R&D.

20 billion Yuans (in five year period) / 5 years = 4 billion Yuans per year in R&D

4 billion Yuans / 6.6 Yuans per US dollar = US$600 million annual R&D budget for Midea

Midea launched its European R&D and Innovation Center in Austria | Tass (June 13, 2017)

"Statistics show that in the past five years, Midea has invested more than 20 billion yuan in research and development, ranking first in the field of home appliances innovation in Thomson Reuters' report. In 2016, the overseas revenue of Midea exceeded 64.01 billion yuan, accounting for 43.5% of its total revenue, an increase of 29.53% year on year." (second paragraph from the bottom of the article)
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China's Haier spent US$467 million in annual R&D for 2015. Home appliances and electronics goods manufacturers (like Midea and Haier) have comparable R&D budgets.

Chinese white goods makers eye global brands for market share and premium cache | Reuters (May 18, 2016)

"Its full acquisition three years later not only helped keep Fisher & Paykel afloat, but also put privately-owned Haier in control of one-fifth of Australia’s markets for fridges, washing machines and dishwashers, up from less than 5 percent in 2010. Rivals such as Electrolux AB (ELUXb.ST) and LG Electronics Inc (066570.KS) lost market share in various kinds of products during the period, according to data from Euromonitor. Haier’s advance in Australia, largely fueled by its own deep pockets, may be an indication of how it could stir up the U.S. market after its deal to buy General Electric Co’s (GE.N) appliance business for $5.4 billion in January. Under Haier control, Fisher & Paykel has been able to do large product launches and its research and development budget has increased, Carnegie Investment Bank said in a recent note. Carnegie said it expected Haier will use the same strategy in the U.S. market. The group’s global R&D spending jumped to 3.05 billion yuan (467 million) in 2015, a rise of 53 percent since 2012. Qingdao Haier Co Ltd (600690.SS), the publicly traded core subsidiary of the Chinese group, has spent 9.7 billion yuan since 2011 in acquiring home appliance assets, according to its annual report." (second paragraph from the top of the article)


Wow! Man. You are a star at finding China related data. I am impressed.

Any chance if you will know the R&D spend of Gree Electric?

PS- I would propose to start a new thread for gathering data on R&D budgets of China's top spending companies.
 
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Wow! Man. You are a star at finding China related data. I am impressed.

Any chance if you will know the R&D spend of Gree Electric?

PS- I would propose to start a new thread for gathering data on R&D budgets of China's top spending companies.
Gree's website says its average annual R&D budget is 4 billion Yuans.

4 billion Yuans / 6.6 Yuans per US dollar = US$600 million average annual R&D budget for Gree

However, in 2014, the actual R&D budget was higher than the annual average with US$758 million (or five billion Yuans) spent.

R&D Strength | Gree

"Gree has more than 8,000 technicians, 2 national technical research centers, 1 provincial enterprise key lab, 6 institutes (Air Conditioning Institute, Motor Technology Institute, Home Appliances Technology Institute, Intelligent Equipment Technology Institute, New Energy and Environment Technology Institute, Health Technology Institute), and 52 research centers and over 570 labs. Gree has applied for more than 15,600 technology patents, including about 5,000 innovation patents. In 2014 alone, Gree has applied over 4,100 patents, which means 11 patents were born in every day. The average annual investment for technology research is more than 4 billion RMB. In 2014, the investment exceeded 5 billion RMB." (second paragraph from top)
 
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Chinese robot becomes world's first machine to pass medical exam
By Ma Si and Cheng Yu | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-11-10 15:32
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iFlytek's AI-enabled robot sits the test of China's national medical licensing examination. [Photo provided to China Daily]



A robot has passed the written test of China's national medical licensing examination, an essential entrance exam for doctors, making it the first robot in the world to pass such an exam.

Its developer iFlytek Co Ltd, a leading Chinese artificial intelligence company, said on Thursday that the robot scored 456 points, 96 points higher than the required marks.

The artificial-intelligence-enabled robot can automatically capture and analyze patient information and make initial diagnosis. It will be used to assist doctors to improve efficiency in future treatments, iFlytek said.

This is part of broader efforts by China to accelerate the application of AI in healthcare, consumer electronics, and other industries.

Liu Qingfeng, chairman of iFlytek, said, "We will officially launch the robot in March 2018. It is not meant to replace doctors. Instead, it is to promote better people-machine cooperation so as to boost efficiency."

The Hefei, Anhui province-based company is conducting a pilot project with the Anhui Provincial Hospital to see how the AI robot can assist doctors in real medical cases.

Unlike the United States tech company IBM's AI-enabled Watson system, which only focuses on the treatment of cancer and major diseases, iFlytek is stepping up push to explore how to use AI to both cure cancer and train general practitioners.

"General practitioners are in severe shortage in China's rural areas. We hope AI can help more people access quality medical resources."

iFlytek is a leading player in China's AI industry. Its AI-enabled user interface platform has accumulated 460,000 third-party developer teams in the past seven years.

On Wednesday, the company became a member of the AI alliance set up by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which aims to promote the research of basic sciences and the application of the cutting-edge technology.

In October, iFlytek said it will set up a 1.02 billion yuan ($150 million) fund to support software and hardware developers.

Hu Yu, executive president of iFlytek, said the fund will be used to finance startups that have core technologies but lack business know-how, or companies that excel in commercializing products but are unable to integrate AI into their devices.

"As a company born out of the University of Science and Technology of China, we have been focusing on voice recognition technologies for 18 years. We know what problems technology-oriented startups will face and how to help traditional companies upgrade themselves through AI," Hu said.

The company's efforts are in line with the central government's call to turn China into a country of innovators and to reach the frontiers of science and technology.

In July, China unveiled a national plan to build a 1 trillion yuan ($152.5 billion) AI core industry by 2030.
 
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China's JD.com is using robots (automated rovers) to deliver packages at one hundred Beijing university campuses. Robots are starting to take-over delivery jobs.
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JD to replace humans with robots in on-campus parcel delivery | China Daily (November 7, 2017)

"China's B2C e-commerce giant JD.com plans to hand over its parcel delivery in more than 100 universities in Beijing 'all to robots' starting next month, said its founder Liu Qiangdong on Monday.
...
He added that the earliest trials of using such delivery robots within campuses of Tsinghua University and Renmin University dated back to as early as almost one year ago.

The robot Liu referred to is a small 'driverless vehicle' that delivers parcels from a JD-pai, an on-campus logistics and experience center, to a location where a student could pick up his or her parcel after receiving a text message, a public relation employee surnamed Yang told chinadaily.com.cn on Tuesday."

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Made in China, by robots

2017-11-16 10:20 CGTN Editor: Mo Hong'e

U470P886T1D281179F12DT20171116102044.jpg

(Photo/CGTN)

‍For decades since China opened up its economy, factories in the country's prosperous south powered its growth. They produced goods that reached different parts of the world, making China a manufacturing powerhouse on the back of cheap manual labor.

Amid slowing growth, however, the world's second-largest economy has begun to transition to high-end manufacturing and use robots in workshops that once teemed with workers.

In places like Dongguan, a city that made a name for itself as factory to the world, machines have been replacing humans on the assembly line.

Electronics manufacturer Janus Intelligent Group Corp. Ltd. began automating its factory operations in 2015, encouraged by the local government.

On its production line for smartphone cases, unmanned carts transport metal sheets for cutting and molding by machines, and robotic arms sort the finished pieces.

"Traditionally, workers operated the machines. There was one person for one or two machines," Zhang Geliang, the company's production chief, told CGTN's Assignment Asia.

"After we implemented intelligent manufacturing, we reduced our workforce by 80 percent, while daily output rose by 60 percent and product quality improved."

For many years, Dongguan built its fortunes producing low-end goods like toys and garments for export. But demand for its products plummeted during the 2008 global financial crisis.

Businesses either closed down or moved their production facilities to places with lower wages, as labor costs soared and losses mounted. The city knew its manufacturing sector needed an upgrade.

Reeling from the crisis, Dongguan began to push for high-end manufacturing and the use of industrial robots. In 2014 the city launched a program with an annual budget of 200 million yuan (30 million US dollars) to encourage businesses to automate their assembly lines.

Between September 2014 and January 2017, some 2,600 enterprises received financial support under Dongguan's robot replacement program, according to the city government.

"In the past three years, machine substitution has led to a rapid growth of investments in industrial innovation. The industrial growth potential of our city is obviously enhanced," said Zhang Yuqing, chief economist at the city's economy and information technology bureau.

Aside from reducing the workforce in many companies, automation has changed the nature of the remaining jobs for humans.

Unlike workers from previous generations, Zhang Wen does not perform manual tasks. The 21-year-old from northwest China operates the computers that run machines on the production line of RBD Technology Co. Ltd., a maker of mobile phone parts, including screens.

"In the past, we had to place the glass on the machine manually for polishing, but now the machine hands can do that. So workers can move to new positions and learn new skills," he said.

RBD Technology's officials said the company's production capacity rose five times since it started using robots in 2016. And it's just the beginning, said Bao Zhongwen, the company's human resources manager.

"There will be no one in the workshops, and the only people inside will be the ones who perform maintenance tasks," he said.

Automation is also yielding higher profits for companies, despite the high cost of acquiring robots.

"We recover the cost of robots in just one year. The initial investment is huge, but the company can get better benefits from it, as production costs are decreasing sharply," said Liu Chanjun, factory director of Marco Polo Group, a ceramics manufacturer.

Dongguan's government wants the city to be a trailblazer in the use of industrial robots in China. It is playing an active part in the so-called "Made in China 2025" plan, a blueprint for upgrading Chinese industry using advanced technology.

"We are greatly stimulating the power of our enterprises through transformation and upgrading," said the economist Zhang.

China is the world's largest market for industrial robots followed by South Korea, Japan, the US and Germany, according to the International Federation of Robotics. China accounted for 30 percent of the total supply of industrial robots in 2016.

By 2020, the country aims to manufacture at least 100,000 robots for industrial use domestically. For workshops in cities like Dongguan, that means more and more machines taking charge.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/11-16/281179.shtml
 
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Supa powa 2012 with 1.5billion Jobless people gonna die soon
i have a query, if china continues to replace people with robots in industry..where will these people go?? I mean china also has a population over billion people...how china is gonna ensure their livelihood?
 
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i have a query, if china continues to replace people with robots in industry..where will these people go?? I mean china also has a population over billion people...how china is gonna ensure their livelihood?


There will be other job booming - that robot and AI can't do yet, such as: milions small enterpreneurship, R&D, social service, mid level managerial, etc; including new jobs that we may not be able to think of now.
 
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There will be other job booming - that robot and AI can't do yet, such as: milions small enterpreneurship, R&D, social service, mid level managerial, etc; including new jobs that we may not be able to think of now.
So it will be mostly service sector and managerial jobs..but don't you think...given the size of population of china..these jobs won't be enough???
I mean the whole world will eventually move to automation and replacing robots with men...but e.g EU countries have very less population they can manage it..but asian countries have huge population..n let's face the facts that not everyone is able to become an entrepreneur due to numerous reasons.
R&D will belong to only educated people..but the majority of people in aia live under poverty line..e.g the laborers..they will be simply out of job
As china is leading the world in automation, i think china should start focusing on finding an alternative for these low level workers.
 
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