【ANBOUND GEOPOLITICAL REVIEW】 What will computers look like in the future? Can we foresee the miraculous products? The answer is yes, said
ANBOUND’s founder Kung Chan. Microsoft Windows and Apple's OS system will face significant challenges. Its hardware design may be more similar to today’s iPad, and would be a barrier-free computer in terms of language. It is capable of transforming the current notebook computer into a AI terminal device, which requires all existing applications to be fully “re-intelligentized”. Peripheral devices and other system hardware must adapt to the era of AI, and design natural language interfaces to keep up with the trend. This sort of computer model, due to the existence of AI technology, has astonishing self-learning abilities and could provide better work capabilities for humans.
>> On January 24, the "Belt and Road & High-Quality Development Symposium” took place in Urumqi under the collaborative effort organized by ANBOUND, Xinjiang Association for Science and Culture Communication, Xinjiang Private Industrialists Union for Science and Technology, and the Secretariat of the Silk Road Development Forum. More than 60 representatives from the state and local governments, industry organizations, universities and think tanks, SOEs and private firms attended this event.
Yi Wang, Head of Global Development Program and Senior Researcher at ANBOUND, was invited as a keynote speaker presenting at the event. She shared what ANBOUND has completed the latest research studies on China's external environmental changes, the advancement of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) with China's high-level opening-up, as well as new opportunities for the future of Xinjiang. She advocates three policy measures for Xinjiang, including skills education, sustainable urban development and improvement of wellbeing, international cooperation and open dialogue.
>>An
article jointly written by
ANBOUND’s founder Kung Chan and He Jun, Director of Macro-Economy Research Center and Senior Researcher at ANBOUND published in
the Diplomat, which stated unlike for China to adopt a “war-driven economy” as it is highly improbable for China to engage in actual warfare. Instead, the future Chinese economy is more likely to gravitate toward centralization. This economic model, characterized by dominance from state power, achieves control over resources. The central government could very well exert more control in key strategic sectors. Central enterprises, concurrently, policy and mechanism, and resource allocation that may enable a degree of control over competitive sectors occupied by private enterprises. Market players and government institutions, not just in China but in other countries, will be aware of impending changes. It is better to prepare how adapt to challenges.