
Sinical
@Sinical_C • 88,120 subscribers
Reading China news between the lines
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Stunning high-definition footage captures the breathtaking launch of the Shenzhou-23 crewed spaceship last night. At 5:13 a.m. today, the in-orbit Shenzhou-21 crew opened the hatch of China Space Station and welcomed the arriving Shenzhou-23 team aboard. This marks the 8th in-orbit crew reunion in China’s space history and a new milestone: for the first time a Hong Kong astronaut has entered the Tiangong space station.
Sinical2,062,406 görüntüleme • 10 gün önce

Giant panda twin cubs Qian Ran and Qian Yi have officially started their outdoor adventures at Shanghai Wild Animal Park—part of a carefully planned “nature boot camp” to help these bamboo-obsessed fluffballs get used to the real world. Let’s hope the grass is softer than their indoor cushions.
Sinical12,930,539 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

Meet Tamas Hajba, a true China expert who has worked in the country since the Boao Forum for Asia was founded 25 years ago. He has witnessed China's transformation firsthand and seen how opening up drives trade and investment. On China's push to open even wider, he calls the Hainan Free Trade Port a crucial bridge linking the country to global markets.
Sinical12,437,794 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

I didn’t realize how unique the Chinese sense of security is—until I came across some vlogs that amazed at the unmanned 24/7 package pickup stations in China. The stations open late into the night with no one guarding them, yet package stay safe. Well, for people in China, it is just…daily. Like leaving your bag on a café table to "save" your seat without a second thought.
Sinical3,862,119 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

RoboCop patrolling the streets of Shenzhen, one of China’s tech hubs
Sinical1,533,258 görüntüleme • 27 gün önce

A small hand held in war. A promise carried for life. A veteran sailor who has served on four warships, working deep below deck. Far from the horizon, yet never far from the sea in his mind. A man who once sent his childhood savings to support an aircraft-carrier dream, now standing aboard the Liaoning. As the Chinese Navy marks its 77th anniversary, their stories converge, where memory, duty and belief become a bond that endures.
Sinical2,428,783 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

A six-story residential building in Beijing was rebuilt in just 46 days using 156 prefabricated modules—like stacking LEGO bricks at city scale, with roughly one floor rising each week. China State Construction replaced an aging 1978 walk-up with a modern, energy-efficient home for 54 families—in record time. Using modular construction—closer to assembling cars in a factory than traditional on-site building—the project cut construction waste by 75% and carbon emissions by 30%. The new building includes elevators powered by rooftop solar panels, improved soundproofing, and safer layouts for families of all ages. Beyond speed and sustainability, the approach also made life easier for residents. Instead of waiting years in temporary housing, families moved back in within just five months. Less disruption, less dust, less noise—a brand-new start for the community. Zoom out, and it echoes a broader pattern. Across China, bridges stretch across rough seas, high-speed rail tunnels carve through mountains, and massive projects like the Three Gorges Dam tame mighty rivers. Again and again, engineers face steep cliffs, deep valleys, and choppy waters—and find ways through. Backed by the strength of 1.4 billion people, projects that once looked out of reach are now routine. When communities need safer homes, faster trains, or stronger bridges, the response is simple: build it—and build it well.
Sinical4,716,290 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

China’s launch pads are heating up, with rockets lifting off one after another across multiple sites. This week alone saw the Yaogan-50 02 satellite sent into orbit aboard a modified Long March-6. Built for land surveys, crop yield estimates, and disaster response, the mission highlights how space technology is tied to everyday needs on the ground. That context is often lost in outside coverage. Some recent Japanese media reports, citing U.S. data, have struck a different note—saying Chinese satellites pass over Japan roughly once every 10 minutes and casting that as a security concern. But such frequencies are standard for modern satellite constellations used by all major space powers. These systems underpin navigation, weather forecasting, and emergency services. In fact, they are less a source of risk than part of the shared infrastructure supporting regional stability. Claims of “threat” tend to say more about strategic mistrust than about the technology itself. Meanwhile, the tempo is hard to ignore. In just four days—from March 13 to 16—China carried out four successful launches from different sites, underscoring growing capacity and reliability. The bigger shift is structural: space is becoming infrastructure. And as that happens, the real question is no longer how often satellites pass overhead, but how the capabilities behind them are applied—and to what end.
Sinical2,013,171 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

Will the “second” of the future run faster or slower than it does today? Maybe the very definition of this unit of time is about to shift, thanks to a more precise clock: a cutting-edge optical clock developed by a team at the University of Science and Technology of China, boasting an accuracy where the error stays under 1 second over roughly 30 billion years. This optical clock marks a roughly 30-fold improvement in precision over current global standards. Until now, leading-edge technology in this field has been dominated by a handful of elite institutions in the U.S. and Germany. The breakthrough is seen as a milestone: the International Bureau of Weights and Measures plans to redefine the “second” sometime around 2030, paving the way for a dramatic boost in the accuracy of nearly all physical measurements. This could enable ultra-precise monitoring of phenomena like earthquakes, volcanoes, and groundwater levels, while also providing new tools for testing general relativity, detecting gravitational waves, and probing dark matter. For any nation, the ability to independently calibrate its own time standards carries huge strategic weight—especially in scenarios like wartime disruptions. Last year, Chinese security agencies revealed that the country’s National Time Service Center had endured nearly two years of sustained cyberattacks from the U.S. It’s essentially a battle for control over time itself: a mere one-nanosecond (0.000000001s) discrepancy can throw satellite positioning off by 30 centimeters, potentially triggering widespread chaos on the ground. Accurate timekeeping is like air or water—we barely notice it until something goes wrong, at which point entire societal systems could grind to a halt.
Sinical428,469 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

22,580 drones soared into the sky at the 2026 Spring Festival Gala in Hefei, all controlled by a single computer and setting a new Guinness World Record. Powered by a fully homegrown system, the drones delivered a stunning display of scale, speed, and coordination. The night unfolded like a glowing canvas. Over eight minutes, the drones executed more than 5 million movements, each with centimeter-level precision. Building on this flawless control, lanterns symbolizing joy and celebration, visual elements inspired by Huangmei Opera and local architecture, and a sci-fi-style “time tunnel” appeared in sequence. The lights blended festive warmth, cultural memory, and futuristic imagination into one flowing spectacle. The show was presented by EHang, the company behind the performance team, whose drone fleets have staged numerous exhibitions across Asia, Africa, and Europe, repeatedly setting global records. This latest milestone highlights how China’s innovation is driving the rapid growth of the low-altitude economy, lighting up the traditional festival with technology, culture, and a distinctly Chinese sense of wonder.
Sinical360,440 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce

You might be familiar with Donnie Yen on the big screen, who has won global fans with Chinese kung fu through the Ip Man series. Now at the two sessions, he, also a national political advisor, delves into a bigger question: how do stories rooted in one culture resonate across borders?
Sinical301,439 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, lead negotiator in last year’s China–U.S. economic talks, voiced firm support for free trade and multilateralism in Davos, Switzerland, where rising frictions and power politics set the tone. This year’s World Economic Forum (WEF) carried sharper edges. Donald Trump arrived sowing discord—pressuring Europe, criticizing NATO, and floating U.S. control of Greenland—while Canada’s Mark Carney warned middle powers of a global order losing its grip. He Lifeng struck a different note. He reframed China as moving beyond the role of factory toward that of market, with tariff and trade wars pushing up costs and sapping growth. The message, delivered as Beijing and Bern mark a decade of their innovative strategic partnership, cast openness not as nostalgia—but as a pragmatic choice in an increasingly unsettled global economy.
Sinical296,287 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

China’s tapping the potential of ethnic minorities to expand its advantage in winter sports—and its officially-launched 2026 Winter Olympics delegation proves it. 16 athletes are from 7 ethnic minorities, including Manchu, Tibetan, and Kazak. In China, 3 of the 5 ethnic autonomous regions—Xinjiang, Xizang, and Inner Mongolia—have vast snowy landscapes, creating natural high-quality ski resorts. For folks in some areas, skiing or skating is just how they get around daily. Kids growing up in these high-altitude, frigid mountains are practically born with snow in their veins, plus they’ve got built-in resilience to cold and low oxygen. General Administration of Sport of China rolled out the Strong Heart Program, testing thousands of students in ethnic minority regions and selecting over a hundred for pro training. This has opened doors for kids from farming and herding families to winter sports. Take ski mountaineering: Last year’s Asian Winter Games saw Buluer (Tibetan) and Cidanyuzhen (Mongol ethnic group) sweep all the golds in men’s and women’s individual and mixed relay events, earning them qualification for this year’s Olympics. “Engage 300 million people in ice and snow activities” was China’s slogan to hype the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, and served as a push to turn winter activities into a fresh economic engine. According to China’s official reports, they’ve hit that goal, with China’s ice and snow industry now topping $144.6 billion. The country has nearly 800 ski resorts, from outdoor to indoor ones even in the south. In Altay, Xizang, the cradle of human skiing, the government has invested $1 billion to build 3 world-class 5S resorts, drawing an average of 110 thousand visitors daily, on a par with Switzerland’s nationwide numbers.
Sinical244,023 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce
