Did you know that the news in the WSJ about China banning the use of iPhones within government officials does not have a clear and reliable source? The WSJ couldn't even include the source. Even the news was only excited in the western media and not in the Chinese media. There was not even an official statement from the Chinese government.
@@weltsiebenhundertThe future isn't just built on the cutting edge, it's built on how we reproduce and use slightly older technologies for the future. Optical Mice was great, yet it took years for a company to create the device in the way we know it.
@@MytroTech pretty sure you're using a lot of this fragile chinese goods. dude shits on the manufacturing hub of the world and at the same time still uses it.
Look at what Huawei developed during the past 4 years of sanction: Harmony OS (for smartphone and IoT), Guass DB (proprietary full stack software and hardware), EDA (14nm 100% certified, advanced process under testing), Meta ERP (to replace SAP), Kirin 5G SOC, Lithography related technology, 5.5G technology, Kun Peng AI Processor, Pangu AI Models 3.0, Euler OS (for servers). Now you know what a tech giant Huawei is.
It is really impressive, 7nm is a big leap for China and only 2 years behind competition while India is stuggling to find a partner to help build them a 28nm foundry in India.
China growing in wealth is not good, 90% of china's neighbours hate it, and that's for a good reason it is incredibly aggressive, and that's without talking about the genocide happening there
@@NopWorks the scary thing is they don't even call them 5G which means they are also decoupling on common standard. They can put some of the in-house 5.5 or 6G stuff to wash away sanctions on 7nm and below. Can iphones can make cheap satellite call? Cheaper can be better too.
Almost 10 years now since I had my first Huawei phone mate7. Back then it was a nobody brand here in Canada, bought it for fun, it served its purpose. Fast forward to present, would never imagine Huawei is a now super tech company that it is today. I am seriously looking to see their smart car in the near future. What a story.
It appears that China's desire for self-reliance in chip manufacturing may have been accelerated by sanctions, pushing them to develop chips on par with Western technology. They might have achieved this goal through their own innovation or potentially by acquiring Western technology. This development suggests that the Western nations need to expedite the establishment of chip manufacturing facilities outside of Taiwan, as China seems to be showing a keen interest in the island. There is a possibility that they may attempt to take control of it in the near future, possibly as early as next year.
Such a sad state of affairs when one country works hard and achieves something difficult, and all we can do is try to shoot them down and find some way to sanction them even more. Tells a lot about the what a pathetic nation we have become. We can't even get along with ourselves anymore, how can we get along with anyone else?
When all forms of criminal tactics used at their disposal to contain China's progress failed, the US will use Taiwan as their sacrificial pawn to provoke a war with China, like what they are doing with Russia
It's just politicians making sure they get re-elected. Being seen as "tough on foreign bad guys" is a guaranteed vote-getter, even if you can't name phones other than iPhone and you don't know what TikTok is.
What Huawei done is very impressive. Qualcomm just got greedy about how they are pricing their processors like some pro premium. And also mediatek kicking their ass in mid range and low budget range.
Wrong on every level. Qualcomm is coming out with oryon this year and will beat literally everyone. Nr2: they're absolutely destroying mediatek with gen 7, it's so bad mediatek has had to cancel orders for their midrange chips.
@@fanban2926 Oryon got nothing to do with mobile chips. They'll be sided to compete with m series chips of apple. I'm talking about smartphones. Sure Qualcomm rules the premium segment but that doesn't represent the majority volume of Android mobile sales. And also they got a case with arm to justify the acquisition of nuvia. Mediatek already replaced Qualcomm as No.1 in sales. This is alarming bells for Qualcomm on how they place themselves in the market in future which tells that they should diversify more into new markets. But guess what? The competitors are doing it to.
Huawei did not celebrate as far as my observation... I think they are dead focused on 3 nm it seems ..any victory for china is victory for middle clas and poor ...best wishes from India
@@Hitamjoy - I wonder, if you look around your home, your car, your office and in shops - where do you think over 90% of everything is manufactured? And one thing's for sure, it ain't made in America.
@@hadi96100 Huawei is the biggest threat to human security in the world and the US is doing the right thing to take it down. It’s the same way how they took down Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan to save the world.
@@hadi96100 It's assembled in China. All of the ingredients, parts, and know-how come from other countries. My iPhone was "made" in China. But "The blueprint, crystal, specialized parts and processors from the US, display panels, chipsets and memory from Japan, Korea and Taiwan, gyroscope from Europe and rare earth minerals from Mongolia all come together in China, the world's factory." As is the nature of Global supply chains (defended by the US Navy). China just take the parts from different places and assembles them. That is most likely what is happening with this Huawei phone. left over processors from a previous generation of tech being retrofitted into a phone. If Huawei managed to create their own chips, hooray. Happy for them. But I'm very skeptical. The circumstances around this are very suspicious. I'm going to wait to see better evidence before I celebrate their victory.
US: we are going to hurt huawei just like we hurt Japanese companies in the 80s China: ok here's our latest Kirin 9000 to compete with Qualcomm US: *surprised pikachu face
@@言必果 I think Japan wrecked their economy on purpose to not overtake the US as the largest economy in the world. Just to avoid what they are doing against China now.
Congratulations to China and Chinese people for this achievement and congratulations to the western decision makers for your historically catastrophic policies and decisions in the past few years!
They achieved nothing even with CCP support... this phone uses a chip from Taiwan that's nearly a half decade old (outdated by today's standards) and a shifty watered down knockoff version of Android as their OS without Google services. This phone is bunk.... try using one... instead of just buying the marketing hype / propaganda.
Huawei will get more business as well. The US sanction is a double edged sword, countries will consider Huawei over US to get around sanctions or mitigate the US sanctions.
If the sanctions are double edge sword then the US has just put it between their legs🤣😂The impact on China gets less and less s they develop their on tech.
Ironically sanctioning Huawei not only improved china's position in the soc industry, but also icreased competition and consumers are about to get a big win because of it. First time sanctions actually did something good and useful.
@@trillium_music It could be worse. There are currently three parties vying for the president's chair in Taiwan, and while the current ruling party is in the lead, the other two parties closely follow it - and both those parties want a closer relationship with China. If Taiwan reunites peacefully with China, not only will China get its hands on TSMC, but also on all the advanced military gear Washington has been sending to Taipei - and you can bet the PLA will get copies of all the specs and manuals, and perhaps even he chance to reverse-engineer some of it.
Most importantly for me regarding the EU regulations is that it'll hopefully stop BIOS lock-ing, preventing users from installing other operating systems I may be crazy but I would like if I didn't have to thing whether a laptop will let me install any OS I want or not, regardless of how well it would work
This is basically impossible. Although companies like Huawei and DJI are excellent, their product technologies are only used in the civilian market. Most of China's top scientific and technological talents are in the military technology industry, and they have developed things on another level.The US military industry may not need Apple, but the Chinese military industry definitely does not need Huawei
Haha.. u mentioned sd888 performance and effiency.. I am not sure if there is a low blow.. sd888 is a flop with bad battery efficiency and heat issues . From the reports in china, the heat generated is even lower than that of 8gen2...
They're way bigger..... you can't compare arm cpus to x86 ones + a larger die means that when we would the theoritical transistor limit (around 1nm) intel and amd cpus will be way stronger.
@@blueboy3990 no, huawei cpu is not arm , huawei architecture is way more advanced than old arm structure and huaweri has more cores too , also intel 10nm means it is 28nm, because of its rough crafts
Oh I am so glad that the EU is cracking down on companies more. With China developing it's own chips, I see this as an absolute win, the more pressure companies are under to compete, the more progress is being made.
China is viewing the US and any US technology as untrustworthy after the tech war and this is helping to move money away from housing to tech innovation in China. Whenever you hear about housing bubble and crisis in China, remember it's because money is being invested in more productice sectors. And you know what Chinese tech companies fear the most at the moment? That the US might drop its sanctions, like how NVIDIA and Intel are lobbying the US government do. They fear that if the sanctions are dropped, the days of their easy money comes to an end.
actually there's something every one miss, Huawei invest on a company which is specialize on nanoimprint lithography, in theory, they can fabric 5nm chip. their next chip will probably use this method.
They're not developing their own chips. They're importing old non-sanctioned chips and acid-washing the serial numbers off and putting new ones on them.
I love, that you actually explained the business behind the nebula lifetime subscriptions. That's pretty cool, and I never thought about the business model behind these lifetime subscriptions. Only the question,. what you do with the operational costs is missing, but I think the actual operating costs per user must be low, since the monthly plans are also very low in comparison to other streaming services.
Lifetime subscriptions are ALWAYS dodgy, regardless of the service provided. Down the line the provider always wants you to opt out of this option and move back to regular subscriptions where you generate more income. In SW licensing, this usually happens by not allowing the SW upgrades or not offering the new features to lifetime subscribers. In the case of Nebula, I would expect that they will hide certain content behind the curtain of "regular" subscribers but not to lifetime subscribers. So, be very careful!
With regards to cost here are my 2 cents: Nebula probably spends way less on content than other streaming platforms, is very new, and is relatively small.
@@RecklessTurtle This is just straight up nonsense lol. The business usually takes into account of the lifetime value of the average subscriber to determine an optimal price for the lifetime subscription. Since they get all of the money upfront, that's VERY beneficial for a business's cashflow. If anything, platforms like these PREFER you to get a lifetime subscription so they can roll that money for advertising and growth.
and i think the important part is that it's a limited time offer, ngl i would not exactly be mad if in like 15 years (if it lasted that long, i hope so anyway), the "lifetime subscription" is asked to pay again, by that point they already saved money
China joins the game of free market, and it plays well. even you don't want to buy Chinese products, this certainly will lower the price of Qualcomm, Apple, Intel or AMD's products, so why not? it's how free market works, put aside your prejudices and be a sensible consumer.
It's the China Space Station all over again. Except this time, it took only three years. Huawei invests 25% of its profit in R&D every year, including the last three years. It's an unfallen tech machine.
Thank you for your video; it was excellent and very professional :) I'd like to add a few words here: What does not destroy us will ultimately make us stronger--- Just like Huawei.
They also released Mate60Pro+ and Mate X5, and yea this is fun.... also China is banning Tesla from fear of esepionage (BYD and Xpeng and NION does of course), yea I kinda knew and I'm sticking to my trusty analogue car
The dividends of technological advancement should benefit the masses and not become a means for large corporations to suppress competitors by exploiting high-profit margins and depriving the public of their right to use high-tech products. Supporting Huawei requires having such pioneers in the field.
thank the US goverment, we have huawei. thank the US goverment, we have BeiDou navigation system. thank the US goverment, we have our own space station. thank the US goverment, ............
Anyone saying that this is a Taiwanese chip is spreading propaganda. TechInside already did a deep dive into the components and the only non internally sourced components were memory chips from SK. The US is already looking into Hynix due to this. The CPU was SMIC. Is it cope or ignorance?
one thing cool about the kirin 9000s is that its the first mobile phone & arm chip with hyperthreading which is why we initially thought it was 12 cores not 8
All upright Americans will be ashamed of the dirty methods of the US government. It is better to work hard ourselves than to prevent others from progressing.
I’ve made many videos teaching Chinese language vividly and in a humorous way. I hope somebody can recommend my videos to those who want to learn Chinese. For beginners, Chinese characters may look complicated. But once you learn about 100 basic radicals, most characters become easy. I hope more people can learn Chinese to get comprehensive firsthand information about China and most likely seek more job opportunities. Chinese is 30% faster than English in conveying the same information.
the mobile chipset market is looking very exciting now! maybe this is the time we consumers benifit from the competetion and lower prices since qualcomm's chipsets have been very pricey for the last couple of years
@@billinsf88as far as I'm concerned. The west isn't the rest of the world according to the rest of the world. Sea, india, Africa, middle east, south emerica
The lifetime option tells me that there are some major problems at Nebula - either with cashflow or worse, management. It looks good here and now, but isn't remotely good for the long term. Besides, why do you want to grow faster if the platform does not even have a comment section? Who needs more content if we can't have discussion after watching it? Makes no sense to me and I'm a subscriber, with actually getting no real value out of the platform. YT is somewhat boring but at least the comment section usually enhances the content. Nebula isn't even close in terms of user engagement. I bet not enough people subscribe to Nebula, because it's just passive watching, a boring TV platform, so Nebula's management devised a plan to fleece its users using the lifetime membership option. If Nebula survives 10 years, those users will become a net cost to the platform - no matter its size, and if it doesn't then users lose money. Either way, it's a bad deal for everyone except short term thinkers at Nebula's management. If Nebula will carry on without optimizing for more social features on the platform I will not be renewing my yearly subscription - enough is enough.
Intel has tried 7nm for years with DUV technology and failed. Then it started adopting EUV like TSMC and Samsung. On this point, SMIC's manufacturing technology has surpassed Intel, despite still lacking behind TSMC and Samsung.
I'm sure it's lifetime until they make the service free, or stop operating the service, or some other big event happens 5+ years from now. That's the cost of a full decade at the prices they've been making available and getting it all up front is very beneficial, you wouldn't price it so high if the idea is to scam.
There are many interesting things I learned about Huawei as it has become the chief tech target of the US government. The most interesting thing is, they have a policy where the stock shares of Huawei are strictly owned by the Huawei employees and retirees only. It’s a great idea for protection as well as rewarding the hard work done by employees.
Finally, we all can talk freely and in peace over this latest Huawei Mate 60 Pro without worrying that CIA might be listening to our private conversation.
I'd still buy Huawei and Kirim 9x based phones even though it's more expensive than Samsung/Apple due to it's proven reliability, solid privacy and two way satellite communication
@@1ndragunawanFor people live outside China and her TianTong-1 (天通-1) Satellite coverage. Let's wait for Apple's 2 way satellite communication. Wait a minute, they don't have one 😂
Solid privacy? What are you smoking? It's a 7nm chip, based on ARM architecture! What's innovative about that? iPhone currently has 3 nm tech, and hasnt used 7 nm since 2017. Also- The front and rear camera are ON 100% of the time. Just hold a PICTURE of a bar code scanner in front (or rear) of it, and the QR code pops up. No i/r light detection, just a paper picture. Also- The Mate 60 and Mate 60 Pro can be plugged into by any Chinese police station, and they can access all pictures, texts, emails, even the ones that have been deleted. Real solid privacy there! And being 7nm, it gets pretty hot. And you can't download anything from the Google PlayStore. And the satellite connection sucks. Just sayin'...
It is not about Huawei beating US sanctions. The scary part is that the Chinese suppliers, design houses, including design software makers, materials and equipment supplies, chip manufacturing, and end product integrators are united under the pressure from the west, Japan, Korea and Taiwan. It is similar to the US semiconductor industry in the 80s, forming a technology sharing consortium Sematech fighting for survival against the Japanese chip supremacy and eventually beat Japan.
Also, for those that support US sanctions, an already sanctioned Chinese company managing to make a 7nm chip means that company can essentially sell 7nm chips to all the enemies of the US, with the US having little to no way of preventing that. I mean, what will the US do, sanction them?
@@JameBlack Russia is one of the biggest manufacturers of military equipment in the world. Iran punches far beyond its weight when it comes to military tech, as does North Korea. Having reliable access to custom 7nm chips could allow them to close the gap to US military tech by years, perhaps even a decade or more, making military action against them far riskier for US forces and its allies. Just as an example, look no further than the Huawei Mate 60 Pro satellite communication capabilities; it can directly connect to Chinese satellites, in a similar way to Starlink but without the need for cumbersome satellite dishes. That, by itself, is a huge capability in the hands of any military. (Of course, no military unaligned with the Chinese would ever dare using the Mate 60 Pro for that; all that data is going through Chinese-owned satellites. But access to those chips would allow them to make their own system.)
@@FabioCapelai appreciate your thoughtful answer and i learned very much, unfortunately (or fortunately?) The caveman you are replying to is willfully ignorant and racist and isnt actually looking for such an answer, he just likes talking to the youtube comments to make himself feel better
the $300 lifetime subscription I think made sense, as long as you keep the time value of money at 10%. CLTV should be at around $300 if the annual billing is $30 and the perpetual growth is 10% pa 😄 Sorry, my finance geek came out.
autodesk did the same for their product years ago and now they removed the lifetime subscription who give us the garantee that nebula will not do that in the future also ?
I saw the news today, a US congressman said SMIC must acquire a license to ship chip to huawei. SMIC is violating US rule😅 Does the congressman think SMIC is a US company in that case?
I hate people with such arrogance...imagine this situation was just a normal situation between 2 people and not politics, can you just imagine that type of person? Thats the type of person the US is, super egotistical, just disgusting and unlikable people....
For national security reason. US lawmaker should also ban iphone export to China. Because the Chinese can tear the phone down, retrieve the chips for their military hardware.
Yes exactly, they're definitely resorting to these types of ideas so we should definitely be trying to counter ideas such as this...i definitely agree that the threats they pose are no greater than this and again we should only be preparing for this level of threat 😊
Day 1: China is 30 generations behind Day 2: New microchip breakthrough! Yes, but China is 2 or 3 generations behind Day 3: Yeah, they got this, but Huawei 7nm chip pretty unimpressive. Day 4: Ok, Huawei's new chip is impressive, but Samsung blabla... Your tears are tasty. 🙃
Viable alternatives and greater competition is always welcome. We, the consumers will ultimately benefit when companies don’t treat us like cash cows, but as valuable customers who deserve the best they can viably make at a reasonable price.
lol bring huawei back to life? bro huawei is already prospering like never before thanks to the US, I for one never even heard of Huawei until Trump made it popular, and I now am a supporter of Huawei products, irony lol.
@@SalamHerbs-db5nt No, Taiwan should be grateful to China for its ACEFA economic policy, otherwise Taiwan would not even be able to supply eggs and milk on its own
its funny how we live in the Europe, are part of nato and eu yet still we dont have official apple store but only premium resellers but he have a Huawei official store here.
In 2019, my friend gave me a Huawei mobile phone. At that time, there was a 5G network, but my area didn't support 5G, but it was super charged at 66W. It only took one hour for the mobile phone to be fully charged. I immediately switched to Huawei for the one who used Apple at that time, and the mobile phone is still smooth now, which is not as bad as people say. I am surprised. Commodities really need competition, not a monopoly market.❤
It makes sense China is improving and moving fast. China graduates and produces way more engineers than the USA. While colleges in the USA are still trying to figure out what is a woman.
@@foodparadise5792 Their production is less efficient if I'm not mistaken. That combined with possible further sanctions, and the fact that we don't know just how much further SMIC's tech can go Doubt it
@@joaquimbarbosa896 We will see. I don't know how much sanction the US still can impose on China or Russia. It seems just making them stronger. And how can the US sanction a Country with the industrial might of US, Europe and Japan combined? China is responsible almost all the construction projects in Southeast Asia, Africa, Middle East, Central Asia or even South America soon. And China is the only country ever has the capacity to build large ships in the category of aircraft carrier, cruise ships, LNG Carrier. China has her own satellites, GPS, space stations, building meglev trains can go 600kph. I don't know how you can sanction a country like that. Oh, China also has the largest consumer market which itself can attract a lot of foreign capitals. Despite the day and night US media smearing job of China, the Chinese government have long long vision, everything had been prepared years ago....unlike the US politicians who just focus on the next election cycle.
there is no "further santions", US is running out of tricks to up the sanction against China. China has built its entire semiconductor industry with domestic suppliers and technology. The more they are sanctioned, the more buyers (don't remember China is also the largest chip buyer) will pivot away from US and western suppliers and buy from Chinese suppliers. @@joaquimbarbosa896
Will the US arrest the Samsung CEO for violating the US sanctions on Huawei and let Huawei have some of its memory on Mate 60 Pro? The US arrested Meng Wanzhou accusing her of violating the US sanctions on Iran.
Ive worked at a car company before and Ive seen demos of machine learning algorithms that they use to estimate up to 95% accuracy where you will be at a given time on a given day. Its mainly used for collections, but its very concerning that cars are tracking all this with very little disclaimers. ANY car you buy manufacturerd afrer 2019 or even 2015 is very likely built in with an internal SIM card that sends all your data to the company