tmay
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US spokesman behind on the news pours gas on seemingly settled China iPhone ban
waveparticle said:tmay said:waveparticle said:maltz said:waveparticle said:Another US push for democracy! LOL One should keep in mind the National Security Council always has an ax to grind toward China. The better trustable source is the US State Department.
Well, the state department also strongly advises against travel to China, and many companies and universities have policies that if you must go, don't bring any electronic devices into or out of China, or if you do, wipe or even discard them upon your return. Nearly everyone is diversifying manufacturing out of China as fast as they can, even Apple. The cat's been out of the bag for a few years now (even before COVID) that China is NOT friendly to the West - everyone is pretty much on the same page about that now.
https://cset.georgetown.edu/article/even-on-u-s-campuses-china-cracks-down-on-students-who-speak-out/On the bucolic campus of Purdue University in Indiana, deep in America’s heartland and 7,000 miles from his home in China, Zhihao Kong thought he could finally express himself.
In a rush of adrenaline last year, the graduate student posted an open letter on a dissident website praising the heroism of the students killed in the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989.
The blowback, he said, was fast and frightening. His parents called from China, crying. Officers of the Ministry of State Security, the feared civilian spy agency, had warned them about his activism in the United States.
“They told us to make you stop or we are all in trouble,” his parents said.
Then other Chinese students at Purdue began hounding him, calling him a CIA agent and threatening to report him to the embassy and the MSS.
Kong, who goes by the nickname Moody, had already accepted an invitation from an international group of dissidents to speak at a coming online commemoration of the Tiananmen massacre anniversary. Uncertain if he should go through with it, he joined in rehearsals for the event on Zoom.
Within days, MSS officers were at his family’s door again. His parents implored him: No public speaking. No rallies.
Moody realized it didn’t matter where he was. The Chinese government was still watching, and it was still in charge. Just before the anniversary event, he reluctantly decided not to give his speech.
“I think that the Zoom rehearsals were known by the Chinese Communist Party,” he said. “I think some of the Chinese students in my school are CCP members. I can tell they are not simply students. They could be spies or informants.”
Remind me again how China values academic freedom.
There are stories like this in academic institutions throughout the Western world. The long arm of the CCP never sleeps.
BTW, since you talked about academic freedom, I knew several Chinese American in US universities who try to work with colleagues in China were prosecuted by DOJ.
Others were indeed found guilty;
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/25/politics/chinese-engineer-sentence-spying-intl-hnk/index.html
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US spokesman behind on the news pours gas on seemingly settled China iPhone ban
waveparticle said:maltz said:waveparticle said:Another US push for democracy! LOL One should keep in mind the National Security Council always has an ax to grind toward China. The better trustable source is the US State Department.
Well, the state department also strongly advises against travel to China, and many companies and universities have policies that if you must go, don't bring any electronic devices into or out of China, or if you do, wipe or even discard them upon your return. Nearly everyone is diversifying manufacturing out of China as fast as they can, even Apple. The cat's been out of the bag for a few years now (even before COVID) that China is NOT friendly to the West - everyone is pretty much on the same page about that now.
https://cset.georgetown.edu/article/even-on-u-s-campuses-china-cracks-down-on-students-who-speak-out/On the bucolic campus of Purdue University in Indiana, deep in America’s heartland and 7,000 miles from his home in China, Zhihao Kong thought he could finally express himself.
In a rush of adrenaline last year, the graduate student posted an open letter on a dissident website praising the heroism of the students killed in the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989.
The blowback, he said, was fast and frightening. His parents called from China, crying. Officers of the Ministry of State Security, the feared civilian spy agency, had warned them about his activism in the United States.
“They told us to make you stop or we are all in trouble,” his parents said.
Then other Chinese students at Purdue began hounding him, calling him a CIA agent and threatening to report him to the embassy and the MSS.
Kong, who goes by the nickname Moody, had already accepted an invitation from an international group of dissidents to speak at a coming online commemoration of the Tiananmen massacre anniversary. Uncertain if he should go through with it, he joined in rehearsals for the event on Zoom.
Within days, MSS officers were at his family’s door again. His parents implored him: No public speaking. No rallies.
Moody realized it didn’t matter where he was. The Chinese government was still watching, and it was still in charge. Just before the anniversary event, he reluctantly decided not to give his speech.
“I think that the Zoom rehearsals were known by the Chinese Communist Party,” he said. “I think some of the Chinese students in my school are CCP members. I can tell they are not simply students. They could be spies or informants.”
Remind me again how China values academic freedom.
There are stories like this in academic institutions throughout the Western world. The long arm of the CCP never sleeps. -
iPhone 15 Pro gets direct record to external storage, but iPhone 15 has Lightning speeds
damien81 said:Well, shoot. This changes things. I was dead set on the 15 in Blue, but now I'm wondering if it might be better to go Pro again this year. One of the biggest drawbacks to my 12 Pro Max was trying to use it for YouTube and Instagram videos, and suffering through the insanely slow transfer speeds and constant transfer failures. Glad I checked AI first...you've given me some food for thought.
You probably could save some money by buying an iPhone 15 Pro Max with lesser storage and an external storage solution. YMMV
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M3 MacBook Air models may not arrive in October after all
9secondkox2 said:One thing that puzzles me…
tsmc has been producing 90,000 - 100,000 wafers per month for a while now, so that’s going to be around 50,000,000 or more 3nm SOCs per month.And somehow that’s not enough? Even if you factor in let’s say a 50% failure rate, that’s still 25 million SOCs every month. This capacity has been increasing since this time a year ago and the phones have been being assembled for a year already with an estimate of 85-90 million iPhones shipped. That’s a ton of SOCs. Way more than a hit iPhone year plus iPad run Would need.And if it’s much less than 50% failure rate since things have improved, that’s quite a surplus of capacity - even with 10% of each wafer going to competitors.So where is the constraint? Or is it due to Apple switching from N3b tech to N3E? But isn’t that supposed to increase yield further?
https://www.theregister.com/2023/09/08/tsmc_ai_chip_crunch/?utm_source=daily&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_content=article
I don't think that this is having any effect on Apple M2/M3 production, which requires interconnects to scale up, or we would have heard about it.According to Liu, TSMC is only able to meet about 80 percent of demand for its chip on wafer on substrate (CoWoS) packaging technology. This is used in some of the most advanced chips on the market today – particularly those that rely on high-bandwidth memory (HBM) which is ideal for AI workloads.
Liu expects this is a temporary bottleneck in the production of machine-learning accelerators and that additional CoWoS capacity should come online within a year and a half. Incidentally, TSMC recently announced plans to expand its advanced packaging capacity in Taiwan with a $3 billion facility at the Tongluo Science Park in Miaoli County.
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Apple accessories set for rapid Lighting to USB-C shift
The day the gauge changed;
the history guy the day they changed the rail gage
Some 11,000 miles of southern railway was changed to STandard Gage in the span of about 36 hours.
Needles to state, the railroads pocketed the efficiencies rather than passing them on to customers.