ByteDance raises 2026 capex by at least 25% amid AI boom, rising memory costs, sources say
Innovation

ByteDance raises 2026 capex by at least 25% amid AI boom, rising memory costs, sources say

ByteDance is allocating a proportionally larger budget to domestic AI chips to mitigate geopolitical risks and heed Beijing’s call TikTok owner ByteDance is ramping up its spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure, boosting its planned capital expenditure this year to more than 200 billion yuan (US$30 billion), according to two people familiar with the matter. This represented an increase of at least 25 per cent compared with a preliminary plan discussed late last year that proposed AI capex of 160 billion yuan, they said. The increase was necessary because of the company’s growing commitment to AI, as well as rising memory chip costs, one of the people said. Notably, ByteDance has allocated a proportionally larger budget to domestic AI chips, now a common practice among Chinese tech companies to mitigate geopolitical risks and to heed Beijing’s call to use more domestic semiconductors.

Transsion Invests in Future Smart as AI Earbuds Race Heats Up
Technology

Transsion Invests in Future Smart as AI Earbuds Race Heats Up

Transsion has taken a strategic stake in Future Smart, the maker of iFlytek-powered AI meeting earbuds with 1.5M global users, as both companies collaborate to build next-generation AI Agent hardware for international markets.

Kling Native 4K Generation Breaks the AI Video Commercial Quality Ceiling
Technology

Kling Native 4K Generation Breaks the AI Video Commercial Quality Ceiling

Kuaishou's Kling AI has launched the world's first native 4K video generation — outputting true 3840x2160 resolution at generation time rather than upscaling from 1080P — solving the detail and artifact problems that blocked AI video from real commercial delivery.

Xiaomi SVOR Wins CVPR 2026 Challenge, Open-Sources Video Object Removal Framework
Technology

Xiaomi SVOR Wins CVPR 2026 Challenge, Open-Sources Video Object Removal Framework

Xiaomi's model application team has released SVOR, a video object removal framework that solves three practical problems — shadow residue, motion jitter, and mask defects — winning the CVPR 2026 Physical Perception Video Instance Removal challenge ahead of 17 other teams.

This 22-Year-Old SJTU PhD Is Building Flapping Wing Robots — and Sequoia Just Backed Him
Technology

This 22-Year-Old SJTU PhD Is Building Flapping Wing Robots — and Sequoia Just Backed Him

Yingkong Zhivi, founded by four Shanghai Jiao Tong University PhD students, has raised tens of millions of RMB in a Pre-A round led by Yuanhe Origin, becoming the world's first company focused on embodied intelligence flapping wing robots.

Sony and TSMC form Japan joint venture to develop next-gen image sensors
Technology

Sony and TSMC form Japan joint venture to develop next-gen image sensors

Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox. Your support helps TechNode continue to provide credible, on-the-ground journalism and industry insights about the Chinese tech industry. Sony Semiconductor Solutions and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) have signed a memorandum of understanding to establish a joint venture in Japan focused on the development and production of next-generation image sensors. Under the agreement, Sony will hold a majority stake and maintain control of the new company. The facility will be based at Sony’s newly constructed plant in Koshi City, Kumamoto Prefecture, and is expected to serve as an integrated hub for both research and manufacturing. The partnership brings together Sony’s long-established expertise in image sensor design with TSMC’s advanced semiconductor manufacturing capabilities, aiming to accelerate innovation and improve performance in imaging technologies. [TechNode reporting]

Why Japan’s Mogami-class warship is winning over New Zealand
Business

Why Japan’s Mogami-class warship is winning over New Zealand

Japan’s Mogami and Britain’s Type 31 are the top two contenders, but Australia may have already tipped the scales Under its 2025 Defence Capability Plan, the government in Wellington has committed to replacing its two ANZAC-class frigates – launched in the early 1990s – with more capable, modern warships. Analysts say that while both vessels are extremely capable, other considerations will factor into Wellington’s decision. “The decision likely extends beyond a simple assessment of which one is the better platform,” Joseph Kristanto, a maritime security analyst at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, told This Week in Asia. “Both vessels represent robust general-purpose frigate designs. In fact, one might argue that the Type 31 may offer greater long-term adaptability due to its larger hull and modular design, which will allow it to be more easily upgraded with new sensors and weaponry in the future.”

China summons eight EV makers over OTA battery locking practices
Technology

China summons eight EV makers over OTA battery locking practices

Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox. Your support helps TechNode continue to provide credible, on-the-ground journalism and industry insights about the Chinese tech industry. Complaints on China’s national 12315 consumer platform surged to 12,000 cases, up 273% year-on-year. China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and the State Administration for Market Regulation issued four major bans: no silent OTA (Over-the-Air) updates, no battery locking or feature downgrades, mandatory filing for core parameter changes, and no misleading advertising. Authorities found that several automakers remotely altered BMS (Battery Management System) parameters via OTA updates without owner consent, limiting battery charging and discharging capacity. This reportedly reduced driving range by more than 30% and doubled charging times, while billions of yuan in warranty costs were effectively shifted onto consumers. Currently, eight automakers have been summoned for talks, three cases have been formally investigated, and two companies have withdrawn the disputed update packages and pledged to restore vehicle performance.

Singapore pair test negative for hantavirus after cruise ship outbreak
Business

Singapore pair test negative for hantavirus after cruise ship outbreak

The men, aged 65 and 67, were on board the virus-hit MV Hondius last month and remain in a 30-day quarantine as a precaution The two men aged 65 and 67 had been on the MV Hondius and also the same flight as a confirmed hantavirus case from St Helena to Johannesburg on April 25, the CDA said a day earlier. The confirmed case did not travel to the city state and died in South Africa. The CDA’s National Public Health Laboratory conducted testing with “multiple samples collected from the individuals”, that confirmed that hantavirus, including the Andes virus, was “not detected”, it said in a statement late on Friday. As a precaution, the two men would remain in quarantine for 30 days from the date of last exposure and testing would be conducted again before release from quarantine, CDA added, saying “the risk to the general public in Singapore remains low”. Both men arrived in Singapore in early May before being isolated and monitored at Singapore’s National Centre for Infectious Diseases.

Has China just ended the end of history?
Business

Has China just ended the end of history?

As China continues to thrive, Western observers are beginning to rethink past assumptions about the country’s future You can perhaps judge the rise and decline of a society by the quality of its public intellectuals. In the last century, the United States had some genuinely great thinkers such as Walter Lippmann and Hannah Arendt who addressed a literate public while producing enduring works that can still be read today with great benefit. Now you have people like Francis Fukuyama and Sam Harris who may be studied in the future more as a symptom of their society. A podcast between the two last month went viral because the end-of-history guy now acknowledges authoritarian China may be a viable political model after all while democratic America looks less and less attractive to others. “I think that the Chinese have created a pretty impressive system. It is authoritarian. It’s quasi-market-based and they are very successful at marshalling new technology,” Fukuyama told Harris. “They’re capable of innovating a lot of things we thought they weren’t able to do.

Hong Kong schools record net student rise for 2 years straight
Business

Hong Kong schools record net student rise for 2 years straight

Figures shift from net decrease to net increase after Top Talent Pass Scheme launched and annual quota for another key admission scheme removed Hong Kong schools have recorded net student rises for two consecutive years, with the current academic year seeing an increase of about 7,200 pupils, a surge that an industry leader has attributed to the influx of dependants of admitted talent. The Education Bureau published enrolment figures on its website on April 28. The data covers all government, aided, private, international and direct subsidy scheme schools at the time of the annual headcount exercise in September 2025. To determine the population change, the South China Morning Post calculated the net increases by comparing the enrolment figures for Kindergarten One to Form Five in September 2024 against those from Kindergarten Two to Form Six a year later. This method accounts for the natural progression of students moving up one grade level annually. The tally excluded the 2024-25 Form Six students, who had finished their school education a year later. Total student numbers rose from about 733,593 to 740,819 – a 1 per cent increase.

Investors have worries about Trump’s pick for Fed chair. Should they?
Business

Investors have worries about Trump’s pick for Fed chair. Should they?

Kevin Warsh said at a confirmation hearing he would not become the US president’s ‘human sock puppet’, but concerns over interference persist In an extraordinary break from the diplomatic restraint typical of central banks, a dozen leaders of the world’s foremost monetary institutions issued a joint statement in January declaring their “full solidarity” with the US Federal Reserve and its embattled chair, Jerome Powell. “The independence of central banks is a cornerstone of price, financial and economic stability in the interest of the citizens that we serve,” they wrote. The move was intended to shore up the separation of monetary policy and political interference viewed as crucial to Western economies, a principle which came under unprecedented strain amid bitter public clashes between US President Donald Trump and Powell. Those tensions escalated into a controversial criminal investigation of Powell by the US Department of Justice over alleged cost overruns during renovation of the Federal Reserve headquarters. Now, stepping directly into the crossfire is Kevin Warsh, Trump’s pick to succeed Powell, who since his nomination in January has come under increasing scrutiny in US and Chinese economic circles.