China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Alibaba coasts on Singles Day to tech pinnacle

- By MENGJING and OUYANG SHIJIA inWuzhen, Zhejiang Contact the writers at mengjing@chinadaily.com.cn

The Singles Day (Nov 11, 11-11 or Double 11) shopping festival has not set just a new single-day sales record (120.7 billion yuan or $17.57 billion for Alibaba Group alone) but a new standard for global e-commerce.

Most people see it as a reflection of China’s booming consumptio­n power. But a group of internet experts see 11-11 as a triumph of worldclass e-commerce technology.

Alibaba had developed its own e-commerce transactio­n processing platform using a cloud computing system, and can handle a peak 175,000 transactio­ns and 120,000 payments per second, unparalell­ed on the planet.

So it was only fitting that the third World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province, should single out Alibaba for praise.

The conference recognized on Wednesday Alibaba’s system as one of the world’s top 15 “leading internet scientific and technologi­cal achievemen­ts”. It hailed the creative contributi­on by internet practition­ers toward setting up an innovative platform for allround communicat­ion.

It is the first time that the Wuzhen summit has released such a list.

Fifteen tech companies and research institutes across the world have made it to the list with their incredible technologi­es and breakthrou­ghs. Among them are driver assistance, artificial intelligen­ce, chips and computing.

US tech major Tesla Motors Inc was selected for its newly launched Autopilot 2.0, an advanced driver assistance system that takes fully autonomous driving closer to people’s life than ever before.

China’s online search major Baidu Inc was recognized for its developmen­t of Baidu Brain, an artificial intelligen­ce-project that seeks to vastly improve computing tasks by mimicking the way the human brain operates.

A committee comprising 33 Chinese and foreign luminaries drew up the list. Among them are Wan Gang, minister of science and technology, Wu Hequan, academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, and Robert Kahn, winner of the 2004 Turing Award.

Wu, the Chinese director of the committee, said: “The world needs more technologi­cal achievemen­ts people’s lives.”

With over 700 million users, China is a big player in the global internet economy. The to improve internet has also spawned an enormous domestic market.

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? A representa­tive of Qualcomm Inc explains 5G technology to the conference audience on Wednesday.
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY A representa­tive of Qualcomm Inc explains 5G technology to the conference audience on Wednesday.

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