China’s AI Core Industry Surpasses 77 Billion Yuan in H1 – Key Tech News Highlights
The article reports that China’s AI core industry reached 770 billion yuan in the first half of the year, while also covering BOSS recruitment abuse actions, a Tesla sunroof incident, Huawei’s investment in Quanzhi Microelectronics, Alibaba Cloud’s optimistic view on autonomous driving, and links to deeper technical pieces on Linux, command‑line tools, and database caching.
According to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, China’s artificial‑intelligence core industry generated 770 billion yuan in the first half of the year, with more than 260 AI companies, positioning the country as a major hub for global unicorns.
BOSS直聘 responded to media reports of companies misusing its recruitment platform by banning the offending firms and removing all related job postings, while pledging stricter future inspections.
Tesla addressed a viral video showing a sunroof allegedly falling off a vehicle, stating the car had previously undergone a third‑party glass replacement and that the incident is under further investigation.
Huawei’s subsidiary Hubble Technology Investment, a wholly‑owned arm of Huawei Investment Holdings, became a new shareholder of Ningbo Runhua Quanzhi Microelectronics Equipment Co., as shown by Tianyancha records.
Alibaba Cloud’s vice‑president Wang Gang expressed strong optimism about China’s autonomous‑driving development, claiming it is progressing faster than in the United States due to practical application, market demand, and a tolerant regulatory environment.
Additional technical articles are linked for readers interested in deeper topics: a discussion on why Linux requires copy_from_user, a collection of over 20 command‑line tools that boost development efficiency, and a comparison of four database‑caching consistency approaches.
ITPUB
Official ITPUB account sharing technical insights, community news, and exciting events.
How this landed with the community
Was this worth your time?
0 Comments
Thoughtful readers leave field notes, pushback, and hard-won operational detail here.
