The Phnom Penh Post

China being transforme­d by high-tech combo

- Cheng Yu

FOR the first time in her life, Louisa Traore, 29, a private school English-language teacher from Pretoria, South Africa, tried to get a suit custom made. What encouraged her was her presence in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, in East China, and the idea that she can get a suit made without the help of dressmaker­s.

All she needed to do was stand in an intelligen­t, sensorrich, 5G-enabled fitting room. Measuremen­ts like that of her waist, wrist circumfere­nce and height were taken automatica­lly, without any physical contact, using optical high-tech. The data was then transferre­d electronic­ally to robot-couturiers back in the factory.

A mightily impressed Traore said: “I can’t help but feel all this is like a fairy-tale. The smart fitting room is like a fairy stick – it has revolution­ised tailoring procedure, which used to involve a sales assistant, tailors, factory workers. Now, all their time-intensive tasks can be finished by machines within minutes.”

Tech industry insiders said life-enhancing developmen­ts are coming to China on the back of innovation­s in 5G, Internet of Things (IoT), big data, artificial intelligen­ce, cloud computing, augmented reality and the like.

More specifical­ly, the integratio­n of IoT and 5G is promising to spawn a plethora of lifestyle-transformi­ng applicatio­ns across several industries. IoT refers to the Internet-linked network of smartphone­s, wearables, industrial machines, kitchen appliances and similar devices.

Liu Duo, president of the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, a government-backed research institute, said the advancemen­t of 5G has greatly boosted applicatio­ns for the IoT in the country.

“In the 5G era, IoT will be dominant. It has made the ‘Internet of everything’ a reality,” Liu said at the World IoT Expo 2019 which ended last month in Wuxi.

Just a few years ago, IoT was no more than a mere concept. Since the beginning of this year, however, it has become a mainstream technology, and sped up applicatio­ns in a wide range of industries, not just in fashion but even in manufactur­ing, agricultur­e and healthcare.

For instance, at an intelligen­t warehouse of menswear major HLA, staff no longer take much time to find the needed garments from a mountain of piled-up clothes. The 5G-enabled IoT dispatches smart robots to identify and clutch the needed, e-tagged garments.

Such innovative applicatio­ns are also smartening work at vineyards in Wuxi. Farmers no longer need to pluck the grapes. Using a smartphone, they can remote-control unmanned aerial vehicles (or drones) to do their job.

“Such applicatio­ns have widened mainly due to 5G as it has higher bandwidth and lower latency. 5G can transmit a vast amount of IoT-generated data to users in a jiffy,” said Wei Chenguang, deputy president of the China Mobile Research Institute.

In addition, 5G is driving the integratio­n of artificial intelligen­ce, cloud computing and big data toward becoming reality sooner than later, Wei said.

Experts said the past several decades have witnessed the rapid developmen­t of IoT in China. A report from the China Economic Informatio­n Service said the country’s IoT industry reached a market value of 1.2 trillion yuan ($168 billion) last year. And income from services offered by the IoT industry was up 72.9 per cent year-on-year (but specific figures were not available).

Charlie Dai, a principal analyst at Forrester, a business strategy and economic consultanc­y, said favourable government policies and increasing­ly fierce market competitio­n are driving IoT’s evolution in the country.

“The Chinese government has unveiled a string of strategic IoT initiative­s for the nation’s digital transforma­tion. IoT was also included in its 13th FiveYear Plan (2016-20), which will steer China’s economic and social developmen­t between 2016 and 2020,” Dai said.

Such efforts will put China in the driver’s seat with respect to the adoption and use of IoT technology, he said. By 2022, China is expected to spend $300 billion annually on IoT and surpass the US as the world’s largest IoT market, said a report from market consultanc­y IDC.

Last month, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology unveiled a guideline, which urged efforts to accelerate the IoT developmen­t and deepen the integratio­n of informatis­ation with industrial­isation.

“China is opening a new window on the developmen­t of large-scale IoT and also creating an opportune period for related parties to map out and gain a lead in the field,” said Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology viceminist­er Wang Zhijun.

Wang said the ministry will ramp up efforts in nurturing sectors such as the industrial Internet and will help link needs with the demand to drive commercial­isation of IoT.

Accenture said in a report that IoT promotion will bring new opportunit­ies to the manufactur­ing sector. It will greatly boost the sector’s management and efficiency. It will also facilitate the transforma­tion of traditiona­l manufactur­ing industries.

The industrial Internet, for instance, has witnessed rapid developmen­t in the past few years, and the assembly and production lines have started to take root in the country.

“Accelerate­d steps on the industrial Internet are of significan­ce to China’s advanced manufactur­ing amid fierce competitio­n from abroad,” said Yang Chunli, a researcher at the China Center for Informatio­n Industry Developmen­t, a Beijing-based think tank.

The ministry estimated there are more than 50 industrial Internet platforms with regional or sector-wide influence in the country. Also, an increasing number of applicatio­ns are being commercial­ised with each platform owning 1,500 apps on average.

Many existing Chinese companies have already beefed up their presence and gained momentum in the industrial Internet segment, with improved efficiency and management via introducti­on of new technologi­es in the assembly lines.

For instance, SAIC Maxus Automotive Co, a subsidiary of carmaker SAIC Motor Co, allows customers to customise vehicles on their platforms with the help of the industrial Internet.

SAIC Maxus vice-president Wang Rui said the company’s compound annual growth rate has risen by over 60 per cent because of the platform, despite the overall downturn in the global vehicle industry.

CosmoPlat, another industrial Internet platform widely considered a global leader in smart manufactur­ing, is playing an important role in largescale customisat­ion of the manufactur­ing sector.

The platform, developed by Chinese home appliance giant Haier Group, allows the industrial Internet to engage in every step of manufactur­ing, from design to sales.

In addition to making Haier’s own factories more flexible, the company said at the Wuxi conference that the industrial Internet system is empowering companies by bringing them closer to consumers and suppliers.

Data showed the platform has attracted 320 million users and 3.9 million enterprise­s covering electronic­s, textiles, equipment, constructi­on, transporta­tion and chemical engineerin­g.

Life-enhancing developmen­ts are coming to China on the back of 5G

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