2026-06-14 Воскресенье

Новостной центр - Страница 621

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Token Going Global: Selling China's Electricity to the World

The article "Token Goes Global: Selling Chinese Electricity to the World" draws a parallel between the 19th-century British Empire's control over global telegraph networks and China's emerging dominance in AI model-based token consumption. By 2026, data from OpenRouter shows Chinese models (like MiniMax M2.5, Kimi K2.5, and GLM-5) account for 61% of the top ten models’ token usage, driven by significantly lower costs—sometimes 17 times cheaper than Western alternatives. This shift accelerated with tools like OpenClaw, which increased token consumption exponentially, leading developers to seek affordable alternatives. Chinese models offer competitive performance at a fraction of the price, thanks to lower electricity costs, efficient MoE architectures, and intense domestic competition. The core idea is that token consumption represents a new form of “electricity export.” While physical electricity remains in China, its value is delivered globally via tokens—avoiding traditional trade barriers. This mirrors China’s earlier role in Bitcoin mining, but tokens now offer more practical, embedded value in developer workflows. However, challenges like data sovereignty and U.S. chip restrictions remain. The situation is framed as a new strategic competition between the U.S. and China, akin to the space race, where control over AI infrastructure could shape global digital influence. The token-driven battle is ongoing, silent, and fought on every developer’s machine.

marsbit02/26 10:09

Token Going Global: Selling China's Electricity to the World

marsbit02/26 10:09

Myanmar Under Fire: The Dignity of the Dollar, Trapped Youth, and the Underground Financial Market

In 2026, a two-week field investigation in Myanmar revealed a nation fractured by war, economic collapse, and extreme social inequality. The country exists in multiple layers of reality: the official state versus the black market, internet stereotypes versus on-the-ground simplicity, and a brutal economic disparity where a server in Hong Kong earns 18,000 RMB monthly, compared to just 300 RMB in Bagan. The economy is defined by a shattered financial system. The official exchange rate is a fiction; the black market rate of 1:550 (USD to MMK) is the real one. This instability manifests in an absurd reverence for physical US dollars, which must be pristine to be accepted, while the local currency is treated with contempt. Hyperinflation has crippled daily life. Prices have surged 5x in a decade, while wages have only doubled. A day's wage for an adult in Bagan is less than 10 RMB, meaning five bottles of water cost a full day's pay. This pressure forces children into labor. It's common to see 9-year-olds working in restaurants or children begging in streets. For the youth, escape is nearly impossible. The government restricts passport issuance for those aged 18-60, making legal departure a privilege. The only options are dangerous illegal routes or being "bought" as a bride by foreigners. The report concludes with a guide's stark summary of his existence: "A lifetime. No happiness." Men live in fear of being forcibly conscripted, and the relentless struggle for survival leaves no room to ponder happiness.

marsbit02/26 09:39

Myanmar Under Fire: The Dignity of the Dollar, Trapped Youth, and the Underground Financial Market

marsbit02/26 09:39

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