logo
Chinese researchers achieves internet 5 times faster than Starlink using 2-watt laser: Report

Chinese researchers achieves internet 5 times faster than Starlink using 2-watt laser: Report

Time of India4 hours ago

Representative image (Source: Reuters)
A team of Chinese scientists has reportedly developed a new way to improve
satellite laser communication
from space to Earth, achieving faster data speeds despite atmospheric interference. According to a South China Morning Post, researchers led by Wu Jian of Peking University of Posts and Telecommunications and Liu Chao from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have managed to transmit data to a ground station at speeds of 1 gigabit per second using a 2-watt laser from a satellite over 36,000 kilometers above the Earth. This, the report says, is significantly faster than current systems such as
Starlink
, which offers speeds in the megabit range.
The team tested the method using a 1.8-meter telescope at a research facility in Lijiang, southwest China. The system targets the challenges of atmospheric turbulence, which weakens and distorts laser signals as they pass through the Earth's atmosphere.
How China achieved faster internet speed than Starlink
To address this, the scientists combined two existing techniques—adaptive optics (AO) and mode diversity reception (MDR). The combined AO-MDR method helped correct the shape of distorted light beams and captured multiple signal modes simultaneously, improving both signal strength and reliability.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Free P2,000 GCash eGift
UnionBank Credit Card
Apply Now
Undo
In their paper – published on June 3 – in the journal Acta Optica Sinica, the researchers said the technique reduced transmission errors and increased the chance of receiving usable signals from 72% to over 91%.
The method was tested using advanced components such as 357 micro-mirrors inside the telescope to reshape the laser's wavefront and a multi-plane converter that split the signal into eight channels. A custom-built algorithm selected the three strongest channels for data transmission in real time.
China has been expanding its research and development in laser-based satellite communications. In 2020, its Shijian-20 satellite achieved a record 10Gbps laser downlink from geostationary orbit. The power level used on that satellite remains undisclosed.
JOB SCAM ALERT! Don't Let Fake Recruiters Steal Your Money
AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

DeepSeek Aids China's Military And Evaded Export Controls: US Official
DeepSeek Aids China's Military And Evaded Export Controls: US Official

NDTV

time30 minutes ago

  • NDTV

DeepSeek Aids China's Military And Evaded Export Controls: US Official

Washington: AI firm DeepSeek is aiding China's military and intelligence operations, a senior U.S. official told Reuters, adding that the Chinese tech startup sought to use Southeast Asian shell companies to access high-end semiconductors that cannot be shipped to China under U.S. rules. Hangzhou-based DeepSeek sent shockwaves through the technology world in January, claiming its artificial intelligence reasoning models were on par with or better than U.S. industry-leading models at a fraction of the cost. "We understand that DeepSeek has willingly provided and will likely continue to provide support to China's military and intelligence operations," a senior State Department official told Reuters in an interview. "This effort goes above and beyond open-source access to DeepSeek's AI models," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to speak about U.S. government information. The U.S. government's assessment of DeepSeek's activities and links to the Chinese government have not been previously reported and come amid a wide-scale U.S.-China trade war. Among the allegations, the official said DeepSeek is sharing user information and statistics with Beijing's surveillance apparatus. Chinese law requires companies operating in China to provide data to the government when requested. But the suggestion that DeepSeek is already doing so is likely to raise privacy and other concerns for the firm's tens of millions of daily global users. The U.S. also maintains restrictions on companies it believes are linked to China's military-industrial complex. U.S. lawmakers have previously said that DeepSeek, based on its privacy disclosure statements, transmits American users' data to China through "backend infrastructure" connected to China Mobile, a Chinese state-owned telecommunications giant. DeepSeek did not respond to questions about its privacy practices. The company is also referenced more than 150 times in procurement records for China's People's Liberation Army and other entities affiliated with the Chinese defense industrial base, said the official, adding that DeepSeek had provided technology services to PLA research institutions. Reuters could not independently verify the procurement data. The official also said the company was employing workarounds to U.S. export controls to gain access to advanced U.S.-made chips. The U.S. conclusions reflect a growing skepticism in Washington that the capabilities behind the rapid rise of one of China's flagship AI enterprises may have been exaggerated and relied heavily on U.S. technology. DeepSeek has access to "large volumes" of U.S. firm Nvidia's high-end H100 chips, said the official. Since 2022 those chips have been under U.S. export restrictions due to Washington's concerns that China could use them to advance its military capabilities or jump ahead in the AI race. "DeepSeek sought to use shell companies in Southeast Asia to evade export controls, and DeepSeek is seeking to access data centers in Southeast Asia to remotely access U.S. chips," the official said. The official declined to say if DeepSeek had successfully evaded export controls or offer further details about the shell companies. DeepSeek also did not respond to questions about its acquisition of Nvidia chips or the alleged use of shell companies. When asked if the U.S. would implement further export controls or sanctions against DeepSeek, the official said the department had "nothing to announce at this time." China's foreign ministry and commerce ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. "We do not support parties that have violated U.S. export controls or are on the U.S. entity lists," an Nvidia spokesman said in a prepared statement, adding that "with the current export controls, we are effectively out of the China data center market, which is now served only by competitors such as Huawei." ACCESS TO RESTRICTED CHIPS DeepSeek has said two of its AI models that Silicon Valley executives and U.S. tech company engineers have showered with praise - DeepSeek-V3 and DeepSeek-R1 - are on par with OpenAI and Meta's most advanced models. AI experts, however, have expressed skepticism, arguing the true costs of training the models were likely much higher than the $5.58 million the startup said was spent on computing power. Reuters has previously reported that U.S. officials were investigating whether DeepSeek had access to restricted AI chips. DeepSeek has H100 chips that it procured after the U.S. banned Nvidia from selling those chips to China, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, adding that the number was far smaller than the 50,000 H100s that the CEO of another AI startup had claimed DeepSeek possesses in a January interview with CNBC. Reuters was unable to verify the number of H100 chips DeepSeek has. "Our review indicates that DeepSeek used lawfully acquired H800 products, not H100," an Nvidia spokesman said, responding to a Reuters query about DeepSeek's alleged usage of H100 chips. In February, Singapore charged three men with fraud in a case domestic media have linked to the movement of Nvidia's advanced chips from the city state to DeepSeek. China has also been suspected of finding ways to use advanced U.S. chips remotely. While importing advanced Nvidia chips into China without a license violates U.S. export rules, Chinese companies are still allowed to access those same chips remotely in data centers in non-restricted countries. The exceptions are when a Chinese company is on a U.S. trade blacklist or the chip exporter has knowledge that the Chinese firm is using its chips to help develop weapons of mass destruction. U.S. officials have not placed DeepSeek on any U.S. trade blacklists yet and have not alleged that Nvidia had any knowledge of DeepSeek's work with the Chinese military. Malaysia's trade ministry said last week that it was investigating whether an unnamed Chinese company in the country was using servers equipped with Nvidia chips for large language model training and that it was examining whether any domestic law or regulation had been breached.

Trump slashes STEM funding, AI disrupts jobs: Are students toiling hard for degrees the job market no longer needs?
Trump slashes STEM funding, AI disrupts jobs: Are students toiling hard for degrees the job market no longer needs?

Time of India

time40 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Trump slashes STEM funding, AI disrupts jobs: Are students toiling hard for degrees the job market no longer needs?

Credit: iStock images Cracks are deepening in the foundations of modern education. The myth that STEM degrees offer lifelong employability is beginning to unfold, stemming from not the lack of ambition among students. But from the very ground shifting beneath them. As artificial intelligence grows more capable and policy shifts undercut foundational support for science and technology learning, a haunting question is emerging: Are we educating students for a future that no longer wants them? Donald Trump 's latest budget proposal, which slashes 75% of federal STEM education funding through the National Science Foundation, doesn't just signal a change in numbers; it suggests a philosophical reversal. As the Fourth Industrial Revolution accelerates, the United States appears poised to abandon the very workforce it once championed. Silicon replaced by circuits : AI rewrites the workforce No longer a speculative force on the horizon, artificial intelligence is now the architect of change across industries. At tech giants like Microsoft and Alphabet, AI already writes up to a quarter of all code. Junior developers, once the bedrock of the software industry, are increasingly redundant. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The 13 Most Luxurious Hotels In The World Learn More Undo New-age firms such as Anthropic have begun substituting entry-level human coders with AI tools altogether. The statistics mirror the trend. Employment for 22–27-year-olds in computer science and math has dropped 8%, according to The Atlantic. This isn't simply the result of layoffs—automation is becoming an invisible workforce, eroding roles once deemed essential. Public concern is rising. A 2025 Pew Research Center survey reveals nearly half of Americans believe software engineers will be among the hardest hit by AI. In a bitter irony, those who once felt safest at the top of the professional hierarchy are now among the most vulnerable. The budget guillotine falls: A contradiction in motion Even as AI cannibalizes traditional technical roles, the Trump administration has decided to pull back critical support for STEM education. A 75% reduction in National Science Foundation funding threatens the pipeline of future engineers, scientists, and innovators. Community colleges, institutions that bridge economic gaps and train millions in applied sciences, stand to suffer the most. These colleges serve not just as classrooms, but as conduits to careers in biotechnology, healthcare, and sustainable energy. Their survival often hinges on federal grants, which Trump's budget now seeks to dismantle. The contradiction is stark. Days after extolling vocational education, the administration now threatens to strip the very resources that sustain it. The result? A generation at risk of becoming technically trained but professionally obsolete. STEM's aura fades : The employment mirage Once held as the holy grail of academic pursuit, STEM degrees are revealing cracks in their promise. Recent data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York show that unemployment among computer engineering graduates has risen to 7.5%, with computer science graduates not far behind at 6.1%, both figures significantly higher than national averages for recent graduates. Unexpectedly, so-called 'soft' disciplines are outperforming their technical counterparts. Graduates in nutritional sciences (0.4%), philosophy (3.2%), and art history (3%) report markedly lower unemployment rates. The notion that only STEM leads to success is not just outdated—it's being disproven in real time. Oversupply in technical fields, paired with the growing capabilities of AI, has created a saturated, brittle job market. Degrees that were once tickets to upward mobility are now struggling to justify their cost. The rise of the human advantage Contrary to decades of dismissive rhetoric, liberal arts education is stepping into the spotlight. As machines take over structured, repeatable tasks, human skills—those rooted in ethics, communication, cultural insight, and critical thinking—are proving more resilient. This isn't just a philosophical pivot; it's a pragmatic one. Employers across sectors now seek candidates who can navigate ambiguity, synthesize across disciplines, and contextualize innovation within real-world implications. These are capabilities that computer science curricula rarely prioritize, but that humanities and social sciences cultivate by design. The shift is profound: education is no longer about building proficiency in isolated fields but about mastering the art of integration. The future belongs not to the best coders, but to those who can connect code to consequence. A global reflection: India's rebalancing The tremors are being felt far beyond American borders. In India, a country once enthralled by the engineering dream, enrolment in traditional engineering streams has dipped to 24.5%, while a rising 42.9% of students gravitate towards computer science and mathematics. Yet even here, the old formulas no longer yield success. The AI disruption is borderless, and students from New Delhi to New York are asking the same question: Will my degree still matter when I graduate? Redrawing the blueprint of higher learning The architecture of higher education must evolve. Universities can no longer afford to treat STEM and liberal arts as opposing worlds. Instead, curricula must blend technology with philosophy, data with design, and algorithms with empathy. This is not about discarding STEM—it's about rescuing it from obsolescence. Cybersecurity, AI governance, bioethics, and climate technology remain crucial fields. But to lead in them, future professionals must be more than just technically literate. They must be ethically grounded and globally aware. Education in the AI age must not prepare students to compete with machines, but to do what machines cannot: lead, imagine, question, and empathize. A future no longer linear The Trump-era cuts to STEM education may not make daily headlines, but they speak volumes about where the nation sees its future. At the same moment that technology outpaces human labor, policymakers are abandoning the very infrastructure that might help humans adapt. Degrees are no longer one-way tickets to job security. As the economy becomes less predictable and technology less forgiving, students must prepare not just for careers, but for reinvention. The age of specialization is yielding to the age of synthesis. And those who will thrive are not those with the narrowest expertise, but those with the broadest vision. Is your child ready for the careers of tomorrow? Enroll now and take advantage of our early bird offer! Spaces are limited.

Tesla shares soar after first robotaxi rides hit the road in Austin, Texas
Tesla shares soar after first robotaxi rides hit the road in Austin, Texas

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Tesla shares soar after first robotaxi rides hit the road in Austin, Texas

The automaker deployed a small fleet of self-driving taxis in Austin, Texas, on Sunday, marking the first time its cars have carried paying passengers without human drivers. The rides were being offered for a flat fee of $4.20 in a limited zone. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tesla shares jumped 10% on Monday, lifted by the long-awaited launch of the company's robotaxi service that CEO Elon Musk has for years championed as a key driver of the electric vehicle maker's lofty automaker deployed a small fleet of self-driving taxis in Austin, Texas, on Sunday, marking the first time its cars have carried paying passengers without human drivers. The rides were being offered for a flat fee of $4.20 in a limited trial's success is crucial for Tesla as Musk has pivoted the company to self-driving cars and robots, shelving plans for mass-market dominance in the EV space as Chinese competition heats up and demand slows for its aging line-up of models."It was a comfortable, safe, and personalized experience," said Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives, who took multiple robotaxi rides on Sunday and has long been a Tesla bull."There was a moment where we drove up a narrow road going up a hill with cars parked on both sides with oncoming traffic and people opening their car doors into the road and the robotaxi masterfully maneuvered with patience and safety."Many social-media influencers also posted videos of their first rides on X, showing the cars navigating busy city streets by slowing down and making room for incoming the tightly controlled trial - with about 10 vehicles and front-seat riders acting as "safety monitors" - is just the first step in what could be a years-long process of scaling up the service, according to some industry as well as rivals including Google-backed Waymo, have faced federal investigations and recalls following experts have questioned the efficacy of Tesla's self-driving technology that depends mostly on cameras and AI, without redundant sensors such as lidar and radar, claiming fog, heavy rain and glaring sunlight can hamper company will also have to navigate a new Texas law taking effect September 1 that requires a state permit for self-driving vehicles and reflects bipartisan calls for a cautious roll-out.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store