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NINGBO, Zhejiang, May 16 (Xinhua) -- Internet of Things (IOT) -- which refers to digital networks of physical objects -- has huge potentials but many challenges lie ahead, said scientists, entrepreneurs and government officials on Sunday.IOT has become a catchword for those at the Information and Communication Technology and Urban Development Forum held in east China's coastal Ningbo this weekend on the sidelines of the Shanghai Expo; from ministers to mayors, scientists to entrepreneurs, keynote speakers to audiences.China should accelerate the development of the IOT industry so as to create a new platform for economic growth, said Li Yizhong, Minister of Industry and Information Technology in his opening speech to the forum.The first theme forum of the Shanghai World Expo is closed in Ningbo, a coastal city of east China's Zhejiang Province, May 16, 2010. The two-day forum focusing on information and communication technologies (ICT) and urban development attracted over 600 participants including renowned scholars and entrepreneurs.Minister Li's words were echoed by Zhao Hongzhu, communist party chief of Zhejiang Province, who called for more efforts to develop such key concepts as IOT, which, in his words, "present a brilliant future for urban life."In what's called Internet of Things, networks of real-world objects are linked to the Internet and interact through web services. As more objects are embedded with sensors, giving them the ability to communicate, and networked together, the possibilities are enormous, potentially resulting in new business models, improved business processes and reduced costs and risks, according to a March 2010 report by McKinsey & Co..
BEIJING, May 15 -- China is planning to raise the proportion of profits it collects from major State-owned enterprises (SOEs) in a move to balance income distribution, but analysts said the move should be bolder and the collected profits used to improve public well-being.The Ministry of Finance said on Tuesday that it might raise the ratio of profits of SOEs to be submitted to the State coffers.According to existing rules, monopoly enterprises under the administration of the central government in sectors like tobacco, oil, petrochemicals, power, telecommunications and coal mining should submit 10 percent of their post-tax profits, while the ratio for those in the iron and steel, transportation, electronics and trade sectors should be 5 percent.Financial corporations and companies in sectors like railways, transportation, education, culture, science and technology and agriculture are not included in the profit submission framework.The Ministry of Finance did not reveal by how much the ratio would be raised."It should be raised properly, and even if it were raised by 10 percentage points, it doesn't matter too much for those central enterprises, given their high profit level," said Zhang Wenkui, researcher with the State Council's Development Research Center.Central enterprises have been criticized by the public for having taken advantage of their monopoly or market predominance to make excessive profits. Some of them have further fueled public anger as they bid to purchase land at high prices, which is believed to have pushed up home prices.The central government collected profits of 14 billion yuan ( billion), 44.4 billion yuan and 98.9 billion yuan respectively in 2007, 2008 and last year from SOEs. In 2009 alone, however, the enterprises made profits totaling 965.6 billion yuan.

BEIJING, May 23 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan Sunday met with U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who was in Beijing for the second round of the China-U.S. Strategic and Economic Dialogue (S&ED).They exchanged views on issues including global economy and finance, and the reform on financial supervision system.Wang and State Councilor Dai Bingguo, as Chinese President Hu Jintao's special representatives, will co-chair the dialogue on May 24-25 with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who are President Barack Obama's special representatives. Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan (R) meets with U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in Beijing, capital of China, May 23, 2010.
BOAO, Hainan, April 11 (Xinhua) -- Competitions between China and India do not necessarily mean confrontation between the two neighboring Asian nations, Indian minister of state for environment and forests Jairam Ramesh said here Sunday."These two giants must cooperate, as the Chinese leaders say, in a harmonious manner," Ramesh said at the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) annual conference which concluded Sunday in south China's island province of Hainan.Ramesh said both sides have to move forward and compromise.For example, he said cooperation between India and China in the United Nations climate change conference last December in Copenhagen could become a "trigger for deepening cooperation" between the two nations in all fields.At a panel discussion, Ramesh was asked whether the competition between the two nations was as fierce as what was described in The Elephant and the Dragon: The Rise of India and China and What It Means for All of Us, a book written by American journalist Rogyn Meredith.
STOCKHOLM, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Sustainability expert, Professor Mohan Munasinghe who is also director general of Sustainable Consumption Institute at University of Manchester said China's development is more sustainable than the U.S. and Europe when they were in the similar development stage.In a recent interview with Xinhua in the Swedish capital city Stockholm, Munasinghe who was also Co-winner of the 2007 Nobel Prize for Peace as Vice Chairman of IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) said sustainable development meant to balance the economic and social development with the damage of environment."What China proposes to develop harmonious society and especially to harmonize economic and social development and the environment is a way towards sustainable development," Munasinge said."China is more hopeful because stainability index shows that China's development is much more sustainable than the U.S. and Europe when they had similar development stage when per capita income was around 3,000 U.S. dollars he said."The second reason is that the discipline in eastern culture especially in China and Japan, you have a discipline to mix the social changes with economic development, you need a lot of discipline to bring about these changes," he said, adding that China's way of experiment in changes is very good."China often implements a pilot program and if it is good, it then promotes it in other areas and finally in the whole country and if you fail, then forget it and try new ways, this way you make the changes more beneficial than make it a total failure," commended Munasinge."China has the social capital that you make your society a consensus building society, this is Chinese social capital. Modernization sometimes is destroying very useful value systems, the value systems that survived from the ancient times are the sustainable values systems, for example, how to use less land and less water to farm and so on," he said.Munasinghe believes that due to Chinese culture and due to its development stage, China will be quicker to step into sustainable development track than that in developed countries because it is difficult to change their mindset and behavior.
来源:资阳报