For decades, China’s government has reshaped the country with dramatic displays of state power, from vast infrastructure projects that have remade entire provinces to nationwide campaigns that attempt ...
The National Interest on MSNOpinion
Did China Break an ASML Lithography Machine While Trying to Reverse-Engineer It?
Reverse-engineering lithography machines—the equipment on which advanced computer chips are manufactured—is not as ...
In this conversation, the FT’s John Thornhill and MIT Technology Review’s Caiwei Chen consider the battle between Silicon Valley and Beijing for technological supremacy.
The engineering feat is the first step in the construction of power projects expected to reduce annual emissions by 9 million ...
An unnamed Chinese entity attempted to study the inner workings of some older ASML Deep Ultraviolet (DUV) lithography ...
China has successfully achieved the first-ever thorium to uranium nuclear fuel conversion in a Thorium Molten Salt Reactor (TMSR), and obtained valid experimental data following thorium fuel loading, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
How China built a humanoid robot that's cheaper than your phone
Noetix Robotics’ new humanoid Bumi sells for just $1,380, making it one of the most affordable robots in China.
New record bridge over the Yangtze River includes an unusual, asymmetrical deck design that called for some engineering ingenuity.
The Shanghai Declaration has brought together this scattered practical force into a global consensus, and has outlined four ...
Scientists have uncovered clues to a 4,000-year-old mystery — the hidden logic behind where ancient Chinese built their tombs.
CrowdStrike’s new Global Threat Report finds voice phishing is up, China and North Korea are finding their way into the cloud ...
Tombs scattered across China, built between the 4,000-year old Xia Dynasty and the modern era, reflect the political and ...
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