
Zeyi Yang
China Tech Reporter at MIT Technology Review
Senior Writer at WIRED Magazine
Two cats in a trench coat writing about China and tech for @WIRED. he/him, 外星人. DM is open unless Elon changed it again. I have Signal/Protonmail/Telegram/+
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
maharlikanews.com | Zeyi Yang
Those requirements could soon become a serious problem for both Guowang and Qianfan. Since they began launching their non-experimental satellites last year, the clock is now ticking, and the ITU rules state they will need to have sent 10 percent of their spacecraft into the sky by 2026. Compared to Starlink, both constellations appear to be slow in making progress.
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2 weeks ago |
es.wired.com | Zeyi Yang
Si miras al cielo nocturno, es muy probable que veas una estela de puntos brillantes que se mueven rápidamente. Se tratará, casi con seguridad, de satélites de Starlink recién lanzados. Pero pronto podrías ver algo más: naves espaciales de proyectos chinos que construyen sus propias redes de internet satelital en órbita baja, similares a las de Elon Musk.
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2 weeks ago |
technewstube.com | Zeyi Yang
Tech News Tube is a real time news feed of the latest technology news headlines.Follow all of the top tech sites in one place, on the web or your mobile device.
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2 weeks ago |
wired.com | Zeyi Yang
If you gaze up at the night sky, there's a good chance you’ll spot a trail of fast-moving, bright dots—newly launched Starlink satellites. But you might soon also see something else: spacecraft from Chinese projects building their own Starlink-like low Earth orbit satellite internet networks. More than 100 satellites have been launched from China since August—the first batches of two mega-constellations that are aiming to have about 28,000 satellites combined when they’re completed.
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1 month ago |
wired.com | Zeyi Yang
It’s official: As part of President Donald Trump’s roller-coaster trade war, the de minimis exemption no longer applies to packages arriving to the United States from China as of Friday, May 2. The provision previously allowed Chinese ecommerce giants like Temu, Shein, and AliExpress, as well as American companies like Amazon, to send goods valued at less than $800 to US customers duty-free. Those same goods are now subject to tariffs as high as 145 percent.
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