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‘Pathetic’ performance has left U.S. ‘well behind’ China in 5G race, ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt says

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‘Pathetic’ performance has left U.S. ‘well behind’ China in 5G race, ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt says​

PUBLISHED THU, FEB 17 20224:38 AM EST

KEY POINTS
  • The U.S. government’s “dithering” has left the country “well behind” China in the race to build out 5G technology, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.
  • Schmidt and co-author Graham Allison, a Harvard professor, urged the Biden administration to make 5G a “national priority”, otherwise, “China will own the 5G future.”
  • The authors said 5G development is key as applications could “advantage a country’s intelligence agencies and enhance its military capabilities.”
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Eric Schmidt, former chairman and CEO at Google.
John Lamparski | Getty Images

The U.S. government’s “dithering” has left the country “well behind” China in the race to build out 5G technology, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said, as he urged Washington to step up investment in the next-generation internet technology.

Writing in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, Schmidt and Graham Allison, a professor of government at Harvard, said that America is “far behind in almost every dimension of 5G while other nations—including China — race ahead.”

The authors urged the Biden administration to make 5G a “national priority.” Otherwise, they said, “China will own the 5G future.”

5G refers to next-generation wireless internet that promises super-fast download speeds. But it could also form the basis for industrial and military applications and form a way for devices to communicate with each other. That’s why it’s seen as a critical technology and one of the reasons China is moving quickly with its own 5G rollout and future applications.

“The step up to real 5G speeds will lead to analogous breakthroughs in autonomous vehicles, virtual-reality applications like the metaverse, and other areas that have yet to be invented,” Schmidt and Allison wrote. “Applications abound that could advantage a country’s intelligence agencies and enhance its military capabilities.”

The pair also accused the U.S. of falling behind in a number of areas. They said that China’s average 5G download speed is significantly faster than the U.S.’s.

China’s median download speed was just over 299 megabits per second in the third quarter of 2021 versus 93.73 megabits per second in the U.S., according to Speedtest, a company which measures internet speeds.

“Mobile internet speed is a central advancement of 5G, which enables a new domain of breakthrough applications with potent economic and national-security implications,” Allison and Schmidt said.

The authors also said that Huawei, China’s biggest telecommunications equipment maker, still dominates the market “although American sanctions have hurt Huawei.

Meanwhile, China has been “rapidly allocating the most efficient part” of the wireless spectrum, called midband, to telecommunications companies. The authors claimed that AT&T and Verizon are using the same spectrum band for both their 4G and 5G networks in the U.S.

Allison and Schmidt also said that China is outspending the U.S. when it comes to 5G.

“The pathetic U.S. performance in the 5G race is a sign of America’s larger failure to keep up with China on strategically important technologies. China is also ahead of America in high-tech manufacturing, green energy and many applications of artificial intelligence,” they said.

“On current trajectories, by 2030 it will likely lead the U.S. in the number of semiconductor chips it produces and in applications of biotechnology to defeat diseases like cancer.”

Schmidt has been critical of the U.S. government’s approach to technologies he views as key to the future and has warned on several occasions about the threat of China overtaking.

Last year, a report by the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, which Schmidt chairs, said China could soon replace the U.S. as the world’s “AI superpower” and that could have serious military implications to consider.

 
... “The step up to real 5G speeds will lead to analogous breakthroughs in autonomous vehicles, virtual-reality applications like the metaverse, and other areas that have yet to be invented,” Schmidt and Allison wrote. ...
This explains why @F-22Raptor and @Hamartia Antidote are always more excited about Tesla cars in China than in the US.
 
Must have your you real bad when truth for US, is reveal by some. :enjoy:

What? There are tons of Tesla threads in the Americas forum..trying opening your eyes. There's two right under this one.

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Their proud US Tesla is made in China. :enjoy:
When it comes to corporations, there is no such thing as "US" Tesla...there is only profits and executives compensations.

Too bad, the wanna be billionaire class, the sheep grinding away as corporate slaves in the US have been brain washed to believe that when billionaires and executives grow their wealth exponentially, the sheeps should just be happy they are allowed to be the billionaires' slaves.
 
When it comes to corporations, there is no such thing as "US" Tesla...there is only profits and executives compensations.

Too bad, the wanna be billionaire class, the sheep grinding away as corporate slaves in the US have been brain washed to believe that when billionaires and executives grow their wealth exponentially, the sheeps should just be happy they are allowed to be the billionaires' slaves.

So how is this different in China...are all your Billionaires one man companies?

Or do you think they simply don't exist?

:cuckoo:
 
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This explains why @Pakistan Space Agency roots for China more than his own country.

Can you try not being a lapdog all your life? Constantly tagging us looking to have your "head" rubbed by the Chinese members here like a good little doggie.

The Chinese members here can type...they don't need you to type for them.

There are plenty of Tesla threads here..open your eyes.




Yes, it gets past your auto import tariffs (remember how you guys like to say you believe in fair competition :rolleyes1:). Besides the Chinese love to work for Tesla instead of a Chinese EV company.
tesla-shanghai-gigafactory-gf3-team-employees-made-in-china-model-3-TESLA-OFFICIAL.png
He roots for China, because the Chinese have never betrayed Pakistan.

USA has betrayed Pakistan, on quite a few occasions. Thats why many Pakistanis say fvck USA!
 
USA has betrayed Pakistan, on quite a few occasions. Thats why many Pakistanis say fvck USA!

Apparently there are more Pakistanis here with US flags next to their names than those here with Chinese flags....in fact the US flags probably top all the other flags other than the dual Pakistani ones.

There are Pakistani CEOs of big US companies...ever see that in China? :whistle:
He roots for China, because the Chinese have never betrayed Pakistan.
Sure we have pulled the plug a few times...but it just wasn't random.
 
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Apparently there are more Pakistanis here with US flags next to their names than those here with Chinese flags....in fact the US flags probably top all the other flags other than the dual Pakistani ones.

There are Pakistani CEOs of big US companies...ever see that in China?

But sure we have pulled the plug a few times.
China does not claim to be an immigrant country. USA is a country of immigrants.
Pakistanis only go to the western countries for economic reasons, not because they like western societies.

China has been much better to Pakistan than say USA.
 
China does not claim to be an immigrant country.

That's not a good answer at all. In fact that's just a cop-out answer.

Sabir Sami is the CEO of KFC and he is not a US citizen. He may not even reside in the US. He is a happy Pakistani citizen.


Pakistanis only go to the western countries for economic reasons, not because they like western societies.
I suppose all the Pakistani's in China right now are not there for the money or educational purposes.
 
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That's not a good answer at all. In fact that's just a cop-out answer.

Sabir Sami is the CEO of KFC and he is not a US citizen. He may not even reside in the US. He is a happy Pakistani citizen.



I suppose all the Pakistani's in China right now are not there for the money or educational purposes.
Well that is your opinion. China does not claim to be a land of immigrants. China is a very old country.
China is a different society altogether when compared to USA.

Difference between China and USA is that China invests in the Pakistani homeland and does trade with Pakistan.

USA just tries to suck Pakistan dry.
 
Well that is your opinion. China does not claim to be a land of immigrants.

Again what relevance is immigration if some guy who lives in Pakistan is the CEO of KFC...a MAJOR US company? I'm sure there are other Pakistani nationals in high positions in Western companies.

Why are you evading this fact by pulling some immigration smokescreen?

Why do we not hear about Pakistani's in higher up positions in Chinese companies?

Ever think it might be because they don't think Pakistani's are worth giving such a position...throwing red envelopes of money at you is sufficient to keep people still smiling...but recognition and decision making...apparently no way.
 
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Apparently there are more Pakistanis here with US flags next to their names than those here with Chinese flags....in fact the US flags probably top all the other flags other than the dual Pakistani ones.

There are Pakistani CEOs of big US companies...ever see that in China? :whistle:

Sure we have pulled the plug a few times...but it just wasn't random.
US is an immirgration country, China isn't, so what's surprised you? not only Pakistan, every country has more people living in US than China except for China herself, including yours.
 
US is an immirgration country, China isn't, so what's surprised you? not only Pakistan, every country has more people living in US than China except for China herself, including yours.

Well I'm glad you clarified that apparently stories like this are bunk because nobody is interested in working for a Chinese company since you are not an "immigration country".


Oh wait you mean people can work in China...oh but just academics from countries like the UK...certainly not top Pakistani national academics who want higher up jobs in Chinese companies. That's just out of the question because well um you are not an "immigration country" so it's impossible for them. Yeah that's the convenient answer.
 
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