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Submission + - China Starts Operating First 4th-generation Reactor, Readying Giant Nuclear Ship (reuters.com)

hackingbear writes: China has started commercial operations at a new generation nuclear reactor that is the first of its kind in the world, state media said on Dec 5. Compared with previous reactors, the fourth generation Shidaowan plant, a modular 200 megawatt (MW) high-temperature, gas-cooled reactor (HTGCR) plant developed jointly by state-run utility Huaneng, Tsinghua University and China National Nuclear Corporation, is designed to use fuel more efficiently and improve its economics, safety and environmental footprint as China turns to nuclear power to try to meet carbon emissions goals. In a related development, Shanghai-based Jiangnan Shipyard has unveiled a design for an innovative new giant container ship — with a load capacity starting at 24,000 standard containers — powered by a thorium molten-salt nuclear reactor, an alternative 4th gen design. “The new ship model uses nuclear energy as a clean energy source and adopts an internationally advanced fourth-generation molten salt reactor solution. The proposed design of super-large nuclear container ships will truly achieve ‘zero emissions’ during the operation cycle of this type of ship,” the journal Marine Time China said in its official WeChat account. Shipbuilders from Japan, the United States, South Korea, and Europe have come up with similar designs but none of these countries has a modern and reliable operating reactor to make the design a reality. But China has carried on and, earlier this year, got the first thorium-based molten salt reactor, which needs little amount of water to cool down, making it safer and more efficient, up and running in the Gobi desert.

Submission + - Canadian Jailed in China Blames Fellow Prisoner over Spying (theglobeandmail.com)

hackingbear writes: Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail reported that Michael Spavor, one of the two Canadians jailed by China for nearly three years in a case that was at the heart of a diplomatic crisis, is alleging he was detained because he unwittingly provided intelligence on North Korea to Canada and allied spy services. Michael Spavor alleges that the deception was conducted by fellow Canadian prisoner Michael Kovrig, and it was intelligence work by the latter that led to both men’s incarceration by Chinese authorities, according to the sources. China arrested Mr. Spavor and Mr. Kovrig in December, 2018, on allegations of espionage in the aftermath of Canada’s detention of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou on a U.S. extradition warrant. Canada flatly denied at the time that the two Michaels were involved in espionage, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, cabinet officials and then-ambassador to China Dominic Barton saying that Beijing had arbitrarily incarcerated the two Canadians on trumped-up charges in retaliation for the arrest of Ms. Meng. After three years of legal proceeding shows across the Pacific and diplomatic bargaining that ended in an apparent closed-door deal (with none of the party acknowledging to,) Meng was freed without pleading to any crime in exchange for the release of Spavor and Korvig. Mr. Spavor was charged by Chinese prosecutors with spying for a foreign entity and illegally procuring state secrets and sentenced to 11 years in prison. Mr. Kovrig was charged with illegally receiving state secrets and intelligence in collaboration with Mr. Spavor and was awaiting sentencing at the time of his release. The sources, which the Globe and Mail declines to reveal, said [Spavor] was arrested by China because of information that he shared with Mr. Kovrig. That information, he alleges, was later passed on, unbeknownst to Mr. Spavor, to the Canadian government and its Five Eyes spy-service partners in the course of Mr. Kovrig’s duties as a diplomat with the Foreign Affairs department’s Global Security Reporting Program. Spavor is seeking a multimillion-dollar settlement from Ottawa which continues to deny the two Michaels are Canadian spies. In a statement to CTV News, Global Affairs Canada (GAC) spokesperson Pierre Cuguen insisted, "Perpetuating the notion that either Michael was involved in espionage is only perpetuating a false narrative under which they were detained by China."

Submission + - Chinese Quantum Computer Shatters World Record (yicaiglobal.com)

hackingbear writes: The latest version of China’s 255-qubit quantum computer Jiuzhang 3, named after an ancient Chinese mathematics book, has broken the world record for quantum computing in a scientific test, further cementing the country’s status as a global leader in the field of photonics quantum computing. The Jiuzhang 3 prototype achieved a speed that is 1 million times faster at solving Gaussian Boson Sampling problems compared with its predecessor and about 10,000 trillion times faster than US-developed Frontier supercomputer, according to an article published in Physical Review Letters yesterday. The article notes that Frontier, which is currently the fastest conventional computer in the world, would need about 600 years to generate a single ideal sample in the problem of Gaussian Boson Sampling, while Jiuzhang 3, developed by University of Science and Technology of China, can do it in just 1.27 microseconds.

Submission + - Samsung, Hynix Get Indefinite Waiver on US Chip Gear Supplies to China (reuters.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix will be allowed to supply U.S. chip equipment to their China factories indefinitely without separate U.S. approvals, South Korea's presidential office and the companies said on Monday. This approval comes at the heel of Huawei releasing the Mate 60 Pro smartphone with locally manufactured new 5G Kirin 9000s processor, as a slap on the face of the US, on the same day US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo arriving in China for official visit. Similar to what the Great Britain had done to the U.S. in the 19th century, the U.S. placed Huawei and a long list of Chinese hi-tech companies under heavy sanctions in an attempt to stop China's technology progress. "Uncertainties about South Korean semiconductor firms' operations and investments in China have been greatly eased; they will be able to calmly seek long-term global management strategies," said Choi Sang-mok, senior presidential secretary for economic affairs.

Comment This is what you get when ... (Score 0, Offtopic) 13

... you make fabricated, exaggerated, hypocritical (*) accusations, and perpetually double-standard around the world. History keeps repeating because the US is trying hard to imitate the Qing Dynasty ("shut itself out of the world") and embarking on a path of the American Cultural Revolution (== populism) that will never-end (unlike the one in China which ended promptly when a leader died.)

(*) and this too.

Comment Re:The original photo is a scam (Score 1) 59

The difference of course is you can point that out in the US without being sent to prison.

I'm sure that you can keep drinking the Kool-Aid in the USA without being sent to the prison too.

But yeah, other than that, we're totally just as bad as Winnie-the-Pooh's China. ;-)

Likely worse.

Comment Re:If there is ONE thing I still donâ(TM)t ge (Score 1) 112

While what you said are mostly true, you're still biased toward the western stance. Taiwanese were from Fujian and other southeastern China area, has been governed by Chinese government since at least 1171, and rescued by the mainland government many times. If that doesn't proved it is part of China, what would? How does that history compared to that of Hawaii, Guam, Texas, California, and, ooops, the whole USA?

And you are totally wrong here:

Nixon had championed that as a condition of normalizing relations with China.

He didn't and couldn't because Taiwan is just a pawn of the USA in its world dominance game rivaling the Soviet Union and China. In short, the USA betrayed Taiwan by absent from the important UN vote to kick out Taiwan, by cutting diplomatic tie with Taiwan ROC (*), and established relation with China. If you don't tell these obvious facts, you either fail at history or you try to mislead.

(*) Oh yeah, what about that Taiwan Relation Act? I call it "alimony" of the ROC-US relation.

Comment The original photo is a scam (Score 2, Informative) 59

Sort of.

Why? The photo, which has been constantly promoted by western media as evidence of wrongdoing or "evilness" of the PLA and the Chinese government, was a screenshot taken out of a video clip showing the tank trying hard to maneuver away from the man without harming him and that the man eventually walked away safely.

As the lead tank maneuvered to pass by the man, he repeatedly shifted his position in order to obstruct the tank's attempted path around him.

If it can prove anything, it is that the PLA was acting gracefully, professionally and humanely. Yet, the media has succeeded in turning it into a weapon against China. (*)

What would happen to this man if he were acting that way in a protest in the US? No need to guess. History has shown us the answers. (**)

Think Different.

(*) It is claimed that hundreds of protesters were killed in Tiananmen Square, but there were actually no death occurred in Tiananmen Square and there were no photos or video footages showing how protesters were killed on the way leading to the Square. Perhaps, they were obstructing and attacking the PLA soldiers in the first place, like those protesters -- hmm... rioters -- in the US?

(**) Oh, we don't call them protesters. We call them rioters, unlike those in Hong Kong where none was killed by the HK police.

Comment DISCLAIMER (Score 4, Interesting) 67

I'm hackingbear. The summary of this piece is NOT written by me. What I wrote, as shown below, is totally different:

TITLE: Chinese Netizens Mock U.S. Sanctions Following Huawei Chip Breakthrough

Chinese social media users are having fun teasing the U.S. government and the (in)effectiveness of its technology sanctions on chipmaking equipment. U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo has been a particular target, as the Huawei Mate 60 Pro launched on the same day Raimondo arriving in China for official visit. Huawei Mate 60 Pro is a smartphone packing new cutting-edge Chinese technology including a new 5G Kirin 9000s processor, despite sweeping and fanatic efforts by the United States to restrict China’s access to foreign chip technology. The exact manufacturing source remains a mystery with speculations ranging from China's Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), which itself is under U.S. sanctions, to Huawei's own semiconductor plant. The U.S is scrambling to investigate how its sanctions got broken. US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said during a White House press briefing Tuesday that the US needs “more information about precisely its character and composition” to determine if parties bypassed American restrictions on semiconductor exports to create the new chip. The processor suggests the Chinese government is making some headway in attempts to build a domestic chip ecosystem capable of producing advanced 7nm chips. In addition to 5G, the Mate 60 Pro might also be capable of satellite voice calls for subscribers on China Telecom’s network, making it the first device in a smartphone form factor with such capability, while Apple's iPhone 14 can only send emergency text messages via satellite. The company said only, “Without a ground network, you can also make and receive satellite calls. You can also freely edit satellite messages, select multiple pieces of location information to generate a trajectory, and travel with more peace of mind.” The U.S. placed Huawei and a long list of Chinese hi-tech companies under heavy sanctions in an attempt to stop China's technology progress, similar to what the Great Britain had done to the U.S. in the 19th century — apparently the British had failed.

The slashdot has totally removed anything that looks inconvenient to the U.S. public and chose to publish this on Saturday.

Comment Look at the mirror (Score 2) 50

You can see it in the mirror:

Americans have been understandably outraged and alarmed about foreign electoral interference. But the practice is not new; in fact, the United States was for a long time its leading exponent. As Dov Levin shows in his book, Meddling in the Ballot Box, the US and the Soviet Union (and subsequently Russia) engaged in 117 covert or overt foreign electoral interventions to help or hinder candidates or parties between 1946 and 2000, with the US accounting for 81 of these cases (or 69% of the total).

Other people on this planet doing the same are criminal, because the US monopolizes the whole planet and define who are allowed!

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