Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China Businesses The Internet

China Internet Report 2018 (abacusnews.com) 78

At Rise Conference in Hong Kong on Tuesday, Abacus executive producer Ravi Hiranand, South China Morning Post technology editor Chua Kong Ho, and 500 Startups partner Edith Yeung presented China Internet Report 2018, highlighting the big names and wider trends shaping China's technology. The takeaway: China has nearly 3 times the number of internet users as the United States, and the gap will only widen: China has 772 million internet users, vastly more than the 292 million in the US. And there's still plenty of room to grow -- internet penetration is only at 55% in China, while in the US, it's 89%.

Beijing is China's unicorn capital: Some of China's biggest tech giants may have started in Shenzhen, but Beijing leads the way with 31 tech unicorns. (Shenzhen has just 11!)

China's internet giants are doing everything: From streaming video to self-driving cars, the big three (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) are present in almost every tech sector, either by investing in startups or by building it themselves.

Government policy continue to actively shape China's tech industry.

China's online shopping giants are going offline.

China loves short videos.

WeChat's mini-programs are cementing its place as China's virtual mobile operating system: Mini-programs, which are no bigger than 10 megabytes and running in the WeChat app are gaining ground -- WeChat now hosts 1 million mini-apps, and the number of people who use them daily is expected to reach 400 million.

China lags behind the US in AI, but the government wants to catch up -- soon.

China is making smart speakers but Chinese users aren't buying them: There are now over 100 smart speaker developers in the country (including all of the tech giants), but demand isn't there yet -- in 2017, only 350,000 smart speakers were sold in China, compared to 25 million in the US.

China is now the world's biggest gaming market: It accounts for more than aquarter of the world's total gaming revenue (the US is close behind in second). And it's dominated by two players: Tencent and NetEase, who jointly have over 60% market share in China.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

China Internet Report 2018

Comments Filter:
  • by CanEHdian ( 1098955 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @05:23AM (#56921914)

    China is making smart speakers but Chinese users aren't buying them: There are now over 100 smart speaker developers in the country (including all of the tech giants), but demand isn't there yet -- in 2017, only 350,000 smart speakers were sold in China, compared to 25 million in the US.

    Maybe the Chinese term is Listens-all-the-time? We-hear-all-you-say? Or smart microphones? That is what we should start calling them, they will sell a lot less in North America too.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's quite well known that Asians are smarter. No surprise they didn't fall for it like Americans clearly have.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @06:10AM (#56921990) Journal
      Tbh I don't understand why Americans buy them. When I've seen them in use, the use cases are narrow and the implementation frustrating.
      • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
        I got a free Amazon Echo Dot a couple years ago, it sat around collecting dust until 3 months ago. Now we have it in the kitchen and use it mostly as a radio. I have a small bluetooth speaker that we can move around the house that is paired with the device. A few other uses is to check the weather forecast for the day and also set timers while cooking. My wife and I sometimes fight for control of the next song, she's big into Abba while I prefer something along the lines of Dave Matthew's Band...

        I do
      • Mine works great, wouldn't be without it (several of them, actually).
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @05:35AM (#56921942)

    That makes sense. If you live in a country where you have known that everyone and their dog is eavesdropping on you 24/7, you are wary of such trojan horses.

    Only in countries where the population isn't used to a government that makes it their business to spy on you the people could possibly be gullible enough to buy such crap.

    • From my observation, these 'smart speakers' are not very good yet for Chinese. There are so many different dialects and accents. Standard Mandarin is mostly spoken everywhere, but to varying degrees and certain sounds vary quite a bit from region to region. I know a couple people who tried them, with poor results.
    • Only in countries where the population isn't used to a government that makes it their business to spy on you the people could possibly be gullible enough to buy such crap.

      Arguably, Americans are more used to their government spying on them. They're so used to it, they don't even notice.

  • Well, off course, everyone in China is game to freely hunt upon. Especially if you are a privacy-invading tech giant.
  • by dwater ( 72834 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @08:20AM (#56922424)

    > WeChat's mini-programs are cementing its place as China's virtual mobile operating system: Mini-programs, which are no bigger than 10 megabytes and running in the WeChat app are gaining ground -- WeChat now hosts 1 million mini-apps, and the number of people who use them daily is expected to reach 400 million.

    The penetration of WeChat is quite worrying when considering the future of internet/web (in China, at least), but also these mini-programs seem to be a direct threat to PWAs (as well as native apps). Any entity that wants to get value from the internet in China needs to master these technologies. I see Tesla have already realised this:

    "Tesla has a mini-program enabling users to locate charging stations, schedule a test-drive and share their experiences about driving a Tesla car"
    https://walkthechat.com/wechat... [walkthechat.com]

    • by hnjjz ( 696917 )

      Part of the popularity of WeChat mini-programs is likely due to the fact that you can develop a single program and have it work on anything that WeChat works on, whether it be iPhone, Android, or some other platform. Since pretty much every smart phone in China has WeChat installed, this allows developers to reach all smart phone users without having to develop iPhone and Android specific apps.

      • by dwater ( 72834 )

        Yes, that is surely true.

        There also a similar issue with having to use multiple 'app stores' to gain access to the user-base, and the varying rules they enforce.

        Perhaps it'll be a 'good thing' since it'll tend to move people away from app stores, particularly Apple's but also the multitude of Android ones (Google's is irrelevant, of course, but there are other Android ones), but it's a little worrying that it moves to a single platform independent one controlled by a single company. I can't see TenCent givi

        • It used to be that to write software, your really needed decent English. How could anyone write a line of code without Stack Overflow?

          But it occurs to me that to write a WeChat miniprogram you need to read Mandarin. And well.

          The educated Chinese already read English but we do not read Mandarin.

          (Indians all speak English for tech work anyway among themselves -- there is often no other common language. The Russians are not so important.)

          • by dwater ( 72834 )

            interesting...do you have any references? I had a quick look for dev guides, but I didn't come up with anything.

  • How can you all be so stupid? Listening "speakers" are so not the issue.

    Chinese companies with direct access to the largest market behind the moat of language and xenophobia will have 3-5 times the resources of any western company.

    Plus, they're already buying or stealing the best of our technology -- x86 courtesy AMD, jets courtesy Boeing, etc. - i.e., courtesy our business and technical leaders who are selling out for their own advancement.

    We will have no control over our economy or our lives. We will be

  • a lot of magazines and newspapers too. They all got censored just like the internet is now in Communist China.
  • Mini-programs, which are no bigger than 10 megabytes

    *Angrily boots up Tandy 1000*
    *Me, an embedded engineer*: Tng n zhège xio péngkè!

  • Beijing is the unicorn capital of the world?

    Moving the wife to Beijing with me to pick up some of the hot Asian ladies interested in being unicorns.

    • What do you mean? Twilight Sparkle or Rarity?

      • A unicorn is a woman who wants to be in a relationship with an established man/wife couple. ... so yes, Twilight Sparkle. She's kinky like that.

        • A unicorn is a woman who wants to be in a relationship with an established man/wife couple.

          Since when?

          • A unicorn is a woman who wants to be in a relationship with an established man/wife couple.

            Since when?

            I don't know when, but the term has been around at least a couple of decades.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    china does not have "772 million internet users". they have 772 million intranet users who happen to be able to access some internet sites that the government allows.

The Tao is like a glob pattern: used but never used up. It is like the extern void: filled with infinite possibilities.

Working...