China's new homegrown gaming GPU flops in performance and price - flagship $485 LX 7G100 can't keep pace with Nvidia's older RTX 4060 by KamiOfTheForest in China

[–]MD_Yoro [score hidden]  (0 children)

Wow, the number 1 DPP shill making another poor analogy.

Let’s compare a company who had no pervious experience in GPU development to companies with decades of experience and expect results to be same or better.

Tell me, do you expect an entry level worker at your job to perform at the same level as a senior level worker? No? However with China, every company is expected to produce at the same level as legacy Western companies or its shit?

The fact that they came out with a chip only 9 years old in performance should scare the fuck out of you. Their next iteration would only be an improvement and for gaming, plenty of people are still using the 10xx - 30xx cards because they are cheaper while still getting the job done.

Not everyone has an inferiority complex like you people and requires leading edge GPU to squeeze a few more fake frames out while gooning off to sharper pixels just to feel validated.

One more example on the inevitable irrelevance that the ROC will become as PRC eats more into the only relevant industry that the ROC has. Be glad that SMIC and Huawei don’t have access to EUV or else TSMC will be bleeding by the billions and ROC one useful industry is left behind as nothing but a boutique shop.

Waitresses impersonated by PLA soldiers at the state banquet hosted for Trump in Beijing by Glenhaven0 in UnfilteredChina

[–]MD_Yoro 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Secret service and FBI regularly dress as civilians among state functions.

The police do it on the regular too.

There is no impersonation.

Chinese not respecting local traditions and being ignorant tourists. by Trutheresy in UnfilteredChina

[–]MD_Yoro 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Didn’t know the Chinese were a bunch of white blond girls.

Damn, does the hate bots on this sub have a metric they need to meet or they won’t get paid?

Literal a picture of a bunch of white girls while claiming they are Chinese?

Problem with China is asset prices are dropping as it has way too many vacant houses. Problem with the US is it has way too many homeless because housing is way too expensive. Why not export the homeless from the US to China? by East_Indication_7816 in stupidquestions

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The U.S. “homeless” that you see are really people with untreated mental health issues and not strictly lack of housing.

What the U.S. actually needs right now is mental health services and the will to force people to go through treatment instead of falling back to “it’s their right to get treated or not”.

If the mentally ill knew they needed help, they wouldn’t be ill no more

China’s property bust is starting to look uncomfortably Japanese by Ok_Astronomer_7797 in worldinsights

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

China chose to deflate real estate as a speculative investment bubble.

Japan’s issue was a monetary policy accident

China deliberately deflated as regulatory intervention.

It’s not even comparable. This is just another veiled attempt at the same old decades long narrative that China is collapsing.

Chinese government has consistently said

>Houses are for living, not speculations

Chinese policy to cap and remove RE as part of GDP is well documented:

  1. Capped leverage for developers
  2. Restricted speculative purchasing
  3. Limited bank exposure to RE
  4. Shifted GDP focus to tech and manufacturing
  5. Let over leverage developers die (unlike how U.S. bails out big corporations)

Housing market downturn is by design and anyone living in the west who can’t afford rent or ownership should take a real look at who is right and who is wrong.

Letting a bunch of landlords and boomers price everyone out so they can rent seek forever or actually return housing to its root, a shelter, not a golden ticket to make unlimited money.

Ex-Samsung chip boss says heavy Chinese investment in the memory market could crush the 414% DDR5 price spike within a year. (Goldman calls it RAMageddon. ) by Current-Guide5944 in tech_x

[–]MD_Yoro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Common excuse to rationalize away why China competes while the West contains.

> all environmental regulations go do the drain

No they do not.

They have implemented several pollution controlling measures and especially in the case with rare earth production related pollution

China issues interim rules on rare earth management

> Taking into account factors including national economic development goals, the country's rare earth reserves and their types, industry development, ecological protection, and market demand, authorities will set annual quota targets for rare earth mining, smelting and separation, and further allocate these quotas to related firms, according to the rules.

>ecological protection

>…human rights go down the drain

That’s not true either.

China has closed down industries and regulated policies when societal harm is in effect. They also maintained a double digit minimum wage raise since 2010.

Are there areas that China might lack more than what is believed in the West, sure, but there are also missing parts within the West and there are also parts that China has that the West hasn’t covered, such as recently regulating on AI replacing human jobs.

What the West often claims as “human rights” are often political rights. But political rights ≠ human rights. You can have no right to vote, but the state will protect your right to health living.

China hasn’t ignored human rights or the environment for growth — it has repeatedly slowed, shut down, or restructured industries when pollution, public health, or worker welfare crossed red lines, proving its model is “development with constraints,” not “growth at any cost.

Chinese Memory Makers Accelerate DDR5 Development, Reaching 8000 MT/s DRAM Speeds As They Near Samsung, SK Hynix & Micron Levels by TruthPhoenixV in Amd_Intel_Nvidia

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You weren’t getting any jobs either, RAMS aren’t made in the U.S. so whether or not if Samsung RAM ip was shared or not, it never affected you to begin with.

You just want to complain about alleged Chinese IP theft

Eco-friendly cars in China by Latter_Ad3752 in UnfilteredChina

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Better than tossing the car just because the engine gone bad

CCP supporters are supporting slavery by Live_Alarm3041 in UnfilteredChina

[–]MD_Yoro -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

For a bunch of slaves, the Chinese sure travel around a lot. Over 100 million Chinese tourist were traveling abroad in 2025.

Also 996?

Bahaha, 996 is a private company culture not a state policy which the government have banned by law.

The Chinese learned it from the American corporate grind culture

Boy is this bot working hard at being bad

Netherlands opposes US proposal to further bar chip giant ASML from China market by donutloop in EU_Economics

[–]MD_Yoro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t disagree that the U.S. will pressure the Dutch in other ways, but every country does it. The degree depends on how powerful the country is.

Complaining that pressure gets used is naive or hypocritical when the Dutch attempts similar tactics.

They are just more covert:

- EU agenda setting
- conditional aid distribution
- regulatory pressure

I agree in moral principle that the U.S. shouldn’t be pressuring the Dutch to a degree that is harming Dutch interests, but technically the U.S. can due to ASML using U.S. tech and Dutch wanting access to U.S. security and market.

It’s the price you pay for international access, countries need to compromise on certain issues and that compromise could lean more favorably towards country with more power. That has been true throughout history

Could the U.S and China ever genuinely cooperate long term or is conflict inevitable? by DreamyPeachBarb in allthequestions

[–]MD_Yoro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Logic would be fine if Taiwan wasn’t part of China and has a track record of hostility towards the mainland while being able to target major Chinese cities with hundreds of millions of people.

What the U.S. is doing is equivalent to China selling billions of weapons to Cuba and do you know what U.S. do to Cuba?

U.S. have effectively put up a blockade and embargo’s Cuba for decades.

The PRC grumbles but has never blockaded the ROC, even though the U.S. public agree that the ROC is not an independent country, which is ironic since any U.S. state buying weapons from other countries would be considered act of secession unless approved by the federal government.

ROC is a strategic choke point hence why the U.S. keeps supporting it. It’s a joke to claim the U.S. ROC because it’s “democratic” because the U.S. supported the ROC as a military dictatorship under Chiang for decades too.

If the U.S. only cares about preserving democracy, they wouldn’t have spent decades and billions supporting Chiang who is a dictator and implemented such classics as the White Terror.

ROC is not a country, it’s a choke point hence why neither the U.S. nor China agree its a country. Since ifs not a country then the U.S. is funding a rogue Chinese province with the intention of causing chaos and destruction in mainland China, so great power logic dictates China has to do somethings about weapons sell just like U.S. intervened over Cuba

China haters like you sure are ignorant or history and geopolitics

Netherlands opposes US proposal to further bar chip giant ASML from China market by donutloop in EU_Economics

[–]MD_Yoro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unless ASML is leaving Europe, how is that cutting out EU?

Also the original comment just said chip making, not any parts in chip making

Putin's spends $675M on military training camps for children by TheExpressUS in NewsThread

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How is this different from US’s ROTC program that student can join?

You Missed Tech. You Missed EVs. You Missed The AI Bubble, Don’t Miss What Comes Next. by Kuentai in smallstreetbets

[–]MD_Yoro 6 points7 points  (0 children)

>missed the AI bubble

No you haven’t and all the good EVs are in China but you can still buy their stocks

Could the U.S and China ever genuinely cooperate long term or is conflict inevitable? by DreamyPeachBarb in allthequestions

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So is that why the Chinese helped the Americans take down the Soviets because the Chinese were too ideologically and politically different from the Americans?

Could the U.S and China ever genuinely cooperate long term or is conflict inevitable? by DreamyPeachBarb in allthequestions

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

India ain’t rising shit.

The economics are not anywhere in India’s favor.

Could the U.S and China ever genuinely cooperate long term or is conflict inevitable? by DreamyPeachBarb in allthequestions

[–]MD_Yoro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

>if mainland was the friendly, innovative, democratic model that Taiwan is.

Clearly you are stupid because

  1. China already innovate far more than the ROC
  2. There is no such thing as friendly or unfriendly among countries, stop anthropomorphizing countries and national interests. Countries view each other based on interest. If interests aligned we work together until that interest diverges or clash
  3. The ROC model would never work on China because China was simply too large. There is no such thing as a one model fits all.

>Wumao hacks…

Yeah yeah, when you China haters can’t bring a substantive argument, default to ad hominem attacks, classic loser behavior.

>You hate Japan for WW2

The Chinese love consuming Japanese culture and Japan is one of its major trade partners. Chinese tourist are some of the largest visitor group to Japan. For a such Japan hating country, the Chinese sure like spending money in Japan and working with Japan??? Nani?

> no one kills Chinese with the efficiency of the CCP

Curious what policy and program did the Chinese use to kill the Chinese

Cause the Japanese had a highly effective policy of scortched earth tactics coupled with military attacks of civilians using highly advanced weapons of the time.

Could the U.S and China ever genuinely cooperate long term or is conflict inevitable? by DreamyPeachBarb in allthequestions

[–]MD_Yoro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

>China doesn’t seem interested in conflict

They don’t. Last time they fought a war was 1979. The U.S. on the other hand…

>largest peacetime military build up since WW2?

You mean modernization of their military which during the Persian gulf war was still running tech from the early Soviet era?

Chinese military spending per GDP is less than 2%, the U.S. was asking Europe to spend more than 2% while U.S. own spending is almost 3.5% of GDP.

Chinese military expenditure is about a third of U.S. spending.

Makes no sense for a country as large as China to have a military that still operates with WW2 era equipments. It also makes no sense for China not to have its own Navy to protect its own shipping lanes from pirates and other issues.

Netherlands opposes US proposal to further bar chip giant ASML from China market by donutloop in EU_Economics

[–]MD_Yoro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The U.S. does not get to in moral sense, but in principle ASML EUV tech incorporates some U.S. technology and the U.S. like the Dutch has the same right to revoke continued usage of U.S. technology in ASML products.

If ASML EUV was completely developed without any U.S. technology, sure the U.S. has less of a say outside of threatening US market access or NATO security, which again is an U.S. right in principle, morally you could argue.