The Palm Beach Post

Working or not, China wild on tech

- ©2018 The New York Times

Paul Mozur SHANGHAI — The mind-reading headsets won’t read minds. The fire-detecting machine has been declared a safety hazard. The robot waiter can’t be trusted with the soup.

China is ready for the future, even if the future hasn’t quite arrived.

China has become a global technologi­cal force in just a few short years. It is shaping the future of the internet. Its technology ambitions helped prompt the Trump administra­tion to start a trade war. Hundreds of millions of people in China now use smartphone­s to shop online, pay their bills and invest their money, sometimes in ways more advanced than in the United States.

That has led many in China to embrace technology full tilt, no matter how questionab­le. Robots wait on restaurant diners. Artificial intelligen­ce marks up schoolwork. Facial recognitio­n technology helps dole out everything from Kentucky Fried Chicken orders to toilet paper. China is in a competitio­n with itself for the world record for dancing robots.

That embrace of tech for tech’s sake — and the sometimes dubious results it leads to — were on display at the Global Intelligen­ce and World Business Summit, held last month in Shanghai, which several luminaries in Chinese tech and academia were supposed to kick off with their minds.

Donning black headbands that looked like implements of electrosho­ck therapy, the seven men and two women onstage were told to envision themselves pressing a button. The headbands would transmit their brain activity to the robotic hand sharing the stage, which would then push a button to officially start the conference.

A countdown began. A camera put the robotic hand onto a huge screen above the stage. The people onstage seemed to concentrat­e. And then, nothing happened. The hand remained motionless. The camera panned away.

A spokesman for Yiou, the tech consultanc­y that hosted the event, declined to comment except for:

two emojis showing tears of joy.

All of this embarrasse­s some people in the Chinese tech scene. They warn that the excess exuberance is one sign of a venture capital bubble, which could be about to burst. Rather than show China’s newfound tech might, they argue, spectacles like dancing robots and ineffectiv­e mind readers cover up the country’s lack of progress in other areas.

Those deficienci­es were made clear in April when the United States forbade U.S. companies to sell chips, software and other technology to ZTE, a Chinese telecom company. ZTE was found to have violated U.S. sanctions by selling products to Iran and North Korea. The ban brought the company to a virtual standstill.

Chinese people shouldn’t lose touch with reality, warned Liu Yadong, chief editor of the state-run Science and Technology Daily. In a recent speech, he said China still trailed the United States in tech, and that those who argued otherwise ran the risk of “tricking leaders, fooling the public and even fooling themselves.”

Now China is pushing ahead into emerging tech. In 2017, Chinese startups took up nearly half the dollars raised globally for artificial intelligen­ce, according to CB Insights, a research firm that follows venture capital. By 2020, China is expected to account for more than 30 percent of worldwide spending on robotics, according to technology research firm IDC.

Many in China see the country’s supremacy over the United States in tech as inevitable.

“Chinese are much more willing to try something new just because it looks cool,” said Andy Tian, chief executive of Beijing-based Asia Innovation­s Group, which runs mobile apps. “It sounds superficia­l. It is superficia­l. But that’s the driver of progress in a lot of cases.”

The E-Patrol Robotic Sheriff could fill that bill. It is among several security robots that have shown up at train stations and airports around China in recent months. The E-Patrol Robotic Sheriff — which looks like the camera lens from the HAL 9000 computer in “2001: A Space Odyssey” mounted on a white trash tub — patrols the high-speed rail station in the city of Zhengzhou, tasked with using facial recognitio­n to find and follow suspicious characters, as well as to measure air quality and detect fires.

During a winter visit to the station, the robot was nowhere to be found. First, it had missed a fire, officials said. It also had a tendency to collect so many selfie-seeking fans that it became a safety hazard. A spokesman for the train station said it was getting an upgrade and would eventually return.

Robots in particular have captured the Chinese imaginatio­n. A Beijing television station this year made a robot-dominated version of the country’s annual Lunar New Year television special. Robots and humans performed tai chi and comedy routines, and sang and danced.

Robot restaurant­s have been popping up across China. One in Shanghai’s Xujiahui district, Robot Magic Restaurant, cultivates a space-age, mini-golf ambience. Diners enter through a door on which animated fairies flap their wings. Inside, a robot with hearts for eyes charged its batteries in an ersatz cave rimmed by silver stalagmite­s tipped with glowing white lights. On the ceiling, fake stars twinkled.

Waiters said their automated counterpar­ts caused more work than they saved. The robots take trays of food out to customers, but are unable to lower them to the table. Real waiters stand back so photos and videos can be taken before shuffling in and serving food the old-fashioned way.

The robots also break down. Three times during an hour lunch, a waiter had to lean a robot on its side and take a blowtorch to the undercarri­age to burn out food and trash caught in its axles. When asked whether he was worried that the robots would take his job, the waiter laughed.

Still, patrons were impressed.

“I’ve just been to America, and I didn’t see many new things at all,” said Xie Aijuan, a retiree in her 50s. “I don’t think they have anything like robotic restaurant­s there.”

 ?? YUYANG LIU PHOTOS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Robot restaurant­s have been popping up across China. Waiters said their automated counterpar­ts caused more work than they saved. The robots take trays of food out to customers, but are unable to lower them to the table.
YUYANG LIU PHOTOS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Robot restaurant­s have been popping up across China. Waiters said their automated counterpar­ts caused more work than they saved. The robots take trays of food out to customers, but are unable to lower them to the table.
 ??  ?? Real waiters stand back so photos and videos can be taken before shuffling in and serving food the old-fashioned way.
Real waiters stand back so photos and videos can be taken before shuffling in and serving food the old-fashioned way.

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