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China Is Winning the Trillion-Dollar 5G War

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China Is Winning the Trillion-Dollar 5G War

Anjani Trivedi
BloombergJuly 13, 2020

-- China is building tens of thousands of 5G base stations every week. Whether it wins technological dominance or not, domestic supply chains may be revived and allow the country to maintain – and advance — its position as the factory floor of the world, even as Covid-19 forces a rethink in how globalization is done.

By the end of this year, China will have more than half a million of these towers on its way to a goal of 5 million, a fast climb from around 200,000 already in use, enabling faster communication for hundreds of millions of smartphone users. By comparison, South Korea has a nearly 10% penetration rate for 5G usage, the highest globally. The much-smaller country had 115,000 such stations operating as of April.

The towers are part of a raft of projects that the State Council announced last week to boost industrial innovation under the “New Infrastructure” campaign aimed at furthering “the deep integration of the Internet of Things” and the real economy. With an aim of spending $1.4 trillion by 2025, the aggressive buildup toward a more automated industrial landscape will give China a renewed advantage where it already dominates: manufacturing.

The coronavirus shut down factories and industrial sectors, triggering a rethink of supply chains – away from China. What analysts are calling “peak” globalization and the rise of factory automation could shift production to higher-cost countries in North America and Southeast Asia. It will take a while, but the global dependence on China will come down, the thinking goes. Still, with trade ravaged by Covid-19, other countries and telecom operators will struggle to match China’s spending.For China, there’s an opportunity to clear the way to forcefully implement its industrial policy agenda, without interference from criticism over subsidies and unfair competition. The so-called Central Comprehensively Deepening Reforms Commission, headed by President Xi Jinping, has approved a three-year plan to give state-owned enterprises yet more sway in the economy.

Beijing’s ambitious programs are still in the construction phase. Macro base stations are the nuts and bolts of building out 5G networks, and will exceed their 4G predecessors by almost 1.5 times. Capital expenditure could peak at $30 billion this year, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts, up from $5 billion last year. Beijing wants more local governments and companies to get involved. Each station costs around 500,000 yuan ($71,361) and has a long value chain that includes electrical components, semiconductors, antenna units and circuit boards. The vast number of companies spawned by the project are all contributing to China’s push to get ahead.

For the industrial complex, the onset of 5G will enable greater connectivity between machines and much more data transfer and collection. Fifth-generation technology is expected to have a big impact through increasingly efficient and automated factory equipment, and tracking the movement of inventory and progress of production lines and assets. Manufacturing is expected to account for almost 40% of 5G-enabled industry output, according to Bernstein Research analysts.

From sensors and data clouds, to chips and collaborative robots and computer-controlled machinery, a whole universe of little-known Chinese companies is coming to the fore. Memory chip maker Gigadevice Semiconductor (Beijing) Inc. has ridden the trend, as has Yonyou Network Technology Co., China’s version of Salesforce.com Inc. For some of these companies, government subsidies are a significant part of earnings, as my colleague Shuli Ren has noted. Stock prices have surged in recent months for firms like Shennan Circuits Co., which makes printed circuit boards, and Maxscend Microelectronics Co., a manufacturer of radio frequency chips. Some are seeing their market capitalization values balloon by billions of dollars as Beijing has upped the ante on new infrastructure.


To be sure, it isn’t hard to imagine a hinterland speckled with ghost towers and base stations in coming years as China's propensity to overbuild beyond any reasonable capacity kicks in. The past shows that questions of quality will arise when too many sub-par manufacturers crop up, incentivized by the state’s largesse. Nonetheless, this is the technology of the not-so-distant future, and building up the basic infrastructure isn’t misguided.

As Covid-19 absorbs the world’s attention, Beijing’s steady focus on implementing this industrial policy may make China the manufacturer of parts that most countries will need – soon. In other words, it will yet again become the factory floor, mastering the production of all things 5G.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/china-winning-trillion-dollar-5g-220017348.html
 
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-Firstly, China will produce but will produce for the good of its own 1.4 Billion people. This is a huge market.
-Secondly, China produces quality goods at a fraction of the cost compared to the same production in Western Countries. Are Western citizens willing to pay more for products produced in the West?
-China controls raw material including "Rare Earth" metals for a lot of critical product. China will simply not provide these raw materials to other countries.
-Declining population in the Western countries is a huge issue. Hence automation will become important.
 
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Some of the biggest achievement of Huawei....... 5G Champions

1. Huawei Steals Motorola’s Wireless Technology.

2. Huawei Hacks Cisco’s Source Code.
3. Huwaei Violates PanOptis Patents, Ordered to Pay $10 Million in Damages.
4. Huawei Tries to Use MPEG Technology Without Licensing It, Gets Caught.
5. Huawei Infringes on SolarEdge Patents.



https://www.prosperousamerica.org/t...et,Cisco's Versatile Routing Platform routers.
 
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Western countries will have trouble to get 5G programs even off the ground without Chinese technology support

5g-patents.jpg
 
.
Some of the biggest achievement of Huawei....... 5G Champions

1. Huawei Steals Motorola’s Wireless Technology.
2. Huawei Hacks Cisco’s Source Code.
3. Huwaei Violates PanOptis Patents, Ordered to Pay $10 Million in Damages.
4. Huawei Tries to Use MPEG Technology Without Licensing It, Gets Caught.
5. Huawei Infringes on SolarEdge Patents.



https://www.prosperousamerica.org/top_five_cases_of_huawei_ip_theft_and_patent_infringement#:~:text=In 2003, Internet equipment market,Cisco's Versatile Routing Platform routers.

There is NO PROOF of what you are saying; this is all based on the fake media reports. So stop making things out of your arse indian. Let me give you some basics on how Telecom/Comms standards and protocols are made. They are dictated by the Leader of the Technology, and then these standards and protocols flow down to organisations like international telecommunication union, IEEE, EU Telecom Union and so forth. Because China dominates 5G via its patents, it is the one which dictates 5G standards. And that is why US wants to work China and Huawei to ensure it has some say in the new standards being set-up by China.
 
. . .
How is somebody building infrastructure a "war" ? alarmist headlines by indian author to make it look bad,

Cyber-war-fare war will come when China will take advantage of his Huawei networks deployed around the world to steal industrial secrets and blackmail states with sabotages.

:lol:

After covid, anything can come from China.
 
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Huawei Admits Copying Code From Cisco in Router Software
But Chinese Company Says It Is Removing The 2% of Its Code That Belongs to Cisco
By Scott ThurmStaff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Updated March 24, 2003 9:12 pm ET

  • PRINT

  • TEXT


Huawei Technologies Co. said a small portion of its router software apparently was copied from Cisco Systems Inc., but the Chinese company said it is removing the tainted software from its routers globally.

In papers filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Texas, Huawei acknowledged the apparent copying for the first time. But Huawei said the copying involved only a small portion of its VRP router software, less than 2% of the 1.5 million lines of code. Huawei said the copying was confined to one module of the software, which...



https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10485560675556000

There is NO PROOF of what you are saying; this is all based on the fake media reports. So stop making things out of your arse indian. Let me give you some basics on how Telecom/Comms standards and protocols are made. They are dictated by the Leader of the Technology, and then these standards and protocols flow down to organisations like international telecommunication union, IEEE, EU Telecom Union and so forth. Because China dominates 5G via its patents, it is the one which dictates 5G standards. And that is why US wants to work China and Huawei to ensure it has some say in the new standards being set-up by China.
 
Last edited:
.
Huawei Admits Copying Code From Cisco in Router Software
But Chinese Company Says It Is Removing The 2% of Its Code That Belongs to Cisco
By Scott ThurmStaff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Updated March 24, 2003 9:12 pm ET

  • PRINT

  • TEXT


Huawei Technologies Co. said a small portion of its router software apparently was copied from Cisco Systems Inc., but the Chinese company said it is removing the tainted software from its routers globally.

In papers filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Texas, Huawei acknowledged the apparent copying for the first time. But Huawei said the copying involved only a small portion of its VRP router software, less than 2% of the 1.5 million lines of code. Huawei said the copying was confined to one module of the software, which...



https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10485560675556000

From 2003, so it does not involve even 3G.
 
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