Global Times

Firms seek to break restraint

Tech companies expect coordinati­on for ecosystem

- By GT staff reporters

In 2020, innovation and technology become the main battlegrou­nd for the world’s two largest economies. The Trump administra­tion has constantly launched chip sales restrictio­ns against Chinese companies, and has put over 100 Chinese tech firms on its Entity List, aiming to contain China’s informatio­n technology industry developmen­t.

Rather than beat China’s tech firms, the US’ bullying reinforced the need to be self- sustaining and resilient, leading them to accelerate domestic replacemen­ts in both hardware and software.

Liu Wenhuan, general manager of Beijing- based UnionTech

S o f t w a r e Technology

Co, told the Global Times that he saw almost no hope when he engaged in research and developmen­t ( R& D) of operating systems ( OS) in 2008, but nowadays the domestic OS segment has made notable progress and products are increasing­ly mature.

Currently, the company has released six versions of Linux- based Unity Operating System it developed, accommodat­ing many mainstream input methods, browser and other smart software products. The oneyear- old OS has quickly become a major in- house OS as the nation strives for breakthrou­ghs in key technologi­es to wean itself off dependence on foreign suppliers.

Driven up by the developmen­t of China- made OS, shipment of domestical­ly- developed CPU chips skyrockete­d in 2020. North China’s Tianjin Municipali­ty- based Chinese chip designer Phytium Technology Co announced on Tuesday that the number of chips it delivered this year rising 650 percent year- on- year to 1.5 million units, while revenue growing to 1.3 billion yuan ($ 199 million) from 210 million yuan, according to media reports.

Zhang Ge, vice president of domestic chipmaker Loongson Technology, said that the company’s CPU products are meeting demand in key industries including government administra­tion, energy, finance and education. “Following the stage of being usable, Loongson is seeking excellence,” Zhang said.

He said that the company plans to release a new generation CPU, whose performanc­e will be greatly improved following an extended period of research and developmen­t.

Loongson faces difficulti­es similar to Huawei in manufactur­ing, materials and processes, which is a common shortcomin­g, Zhang said, noting that the company hopes to solve the problem of chip performanc­e by improving its own design capability. He said the company is also considerin­g enhancing its self- sustainabi­lity throughout in links including CPU manufactur­ing, packaging and testing.

Uniontech launched an ecosystem alliance revolving around the major domestic operating system that’s envisioned to become the Chinese equivalent of Microsoft Windows, with initial membership covering 30 companies including Huawei Cloud and Loongson.

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