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Tuesday, 19 March 2019

Terrifying hours



An article in Tablet by David P. Goldman is interesting. As we know the world is changing rapidly and Chinese technology, money and ambitions are driving much of the change.

Huawei is employee-owned and its highly-incentivized employees put in terrifying hours. Its founder, Ren Zhengfei, owns a reported 1.4 percent of the company, valued at $450 million. His executives and workers own the rest. The Huawei campus covers 500 acres and makes Stanford University look dowdy. The executive dining center features an enormous artificial waterfall, young women in traditional costume playing ancient Chinese instruments, and three-star quality Cantonese food (or so I’m told; I eat kosher). We dined in a small private room with a Huawei executive, whence a guide escorted us to the exhibition hall. We passed thousands of Huawei workers returning from lunch. “They all have a futon under their desks,” said our guide. “They take a nap after lunch because they work until 10 o’clock.”

The Huawei tour took three hours. It might be the largest technology museum in the world, bigger than the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan, or the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, except it shows only new things. One exhibit consisted of a 4-by-6-yard wall map of Guangdong City, glistening tens of thousands of small lights. “Every one of the lights is a smartphone,” said our guide. “We can track the location of every phone and correlate position to online purchases and social media posts.”

And what do you use this information for, I inquired? “Well, if you want to open a new Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise, this will help you to find the best location,” said the guide. Yeah, right, I thought. The Ministry of State Security knows where everyone is at all times and whom they are with; if the phones of two Chinese who posted something critical about the government are in proximity, the State Security computers will detect a conspiracy. That was before China installed high-definition video cameras with facial recognition software powered by Huawei chips at 100-meter intervals in major cities.


There is much more context than Huawei - the whole piece is well worth reading.

6 comments:

Sam Vega said...

Interesting article. It looks like the future is going to be Chinese, if current trends continue. That's presumably what our political class should be assuming, and I wonder if much of the current Europhile tendencies to federalism are driven by that.

Things rarely turn out as predicted, though. I wonder how much hard work, repression, and surveillance the ordinary Chinese can take?

James Higham said...

“Every one of the lights is a smartphone,” said our guide. “We can track the location of every phone and correlate position to online purchases and social media posts.”

And they say it with such pride.

Scrobs. said...

That's your second post on Chinese affairs in as many days...

You're not seeking numbers 12, 14, 17 and 56 with extra fried rice and a free cracker are you?

Actually, I'd spend most of the evening trying to pronounce the name, let alone understand how to use it all!

A K Haart said...

Sam - yes, hard work, repression, and surveillance must take their toll. Will the next generation put up with it? There are demographic problems in the pipeline too as a result of the one child policy.

James - which suggests a very different outlook to ours.

Scrobs - no it was sweet and sour chicken with just the standard fried rice. It's a fascinating place and certainly part of our collective future.

Penseivat said...

"Huawei is employee owned....". In China? Yeah, right!

A K Haart said...

pen seive - that raised my eyebrows too. I'm not in a position to know, but I'd be surprised if this notion of ownership matches mine.