Queclink dévoile des solutions réseau pour connecter tous les appareils IdO

SHANGHAI, 21 février 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Queclink (code boursier : 300590. SZ), l’un des principaux fournisseurs mondiaux d’appareils et de technologies de l’Internet des objets (IdO), annonce aujourd’hui le lancement de ses solutions de réseau, pour aider ses clients et partenaires à bâtir une connectivité sécurisée et fiable ouvrant de nouvelles possibilités.

Queclink’s Wireless Industrial Router Series

Selon Statista, le nombre d’appareils IdO connectés dans le monde devrait tripler, passant de 8,74 milliards en 2020 à plus de 25,4 milliards points de terminaison actifs en 2030. Chaque objet peut être connecté virtuellement dans le monde de l’IdO.

Les solutions de réseau de Queclink sont adaptées à de nombreux cas d’utilisation, tels que l’automatisation industrielle – usine intelligente, énergie, transport et vente au détail. Elles conviennent également à diverses applications dans les villes intelligentes, notamment le contrôle de l’éclairage public, la sécurité publique, les réseaux d’entreprise et la connectivité à distance. La série de routeurs sans fil combine la connectivité cellulaire à haute vitesse, les interfaces industrielles et l’expertise en solutions télématiques pour l’IdO propre à Queclink.

« La demande mondiale augmente. Il est temps de distribuer nos solutions de réseau qui aident à établir une connectivité cellulaire stable et privée pour l’IdO, a déclaré Edwin Peng, directeur général adjoint de Queclink. Ce type de connectivité est facile à déployer dans un environnement où les données sont abondantes. Nous avons été proactifs dans l’IdO qui a vraiment amorcé “l’industrie 4.0”, dont l’objectif principal est de tirer parti des mégadonnées pour la gestion des situations délicates. L’industrie automobile en est un précurseur caractéristique. »

L’une des principales sociétés automobiles de Chine a amélioré son programme de transformation numérique d’usine et a récemment choisi la série de routeurs industriels Queclink pour permettre le premier test de terrain. Grâce à un réseau sûr et fiable, il est possible de recueillir de nombreuses données, d’employer l’informatique en périphérique – analyser et stocker des données localement et en privé, et prendre des décisions fondées sur les données en conséquence.

Les séries WR100 et WR200 déjà disponibles sont des routeurs industriels sans fil 4G LTE. Queclink a lancé la série WR300 (version 5G) sur le marché chinois et observera de près la migration de la 4G vers la 5G tout en faisant la promotion de la série WR300 à l’étranger.

À propos de Queclink

Depuis 2009, Queclink Wireless Solutions travaille pour « un IdO plus intelligent ».

Queclink est une société virtuelle qui conçoit et fabrique du matériel IdO tout en collaborant avec de nombreuses entreprises industrielles et grand public de renom pour mettre sur le marché des solutions IdO innovantes. Ses unités commerciales couvrent le transport, les actifs et la mobilité, les réseaux et l’agriculture. Avec 42 millions de produits IdO livrés dans plus de 140 pays, Queclink engendre des solutions axées sur les données pour sa clientèle internationale.

Pour en savoir plus, consultez le site web de l’entreprise, suivez-la sur LinkedInYouTube, ou Facebook, ou envoyez un e-mail à sales@queclink.com.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1747789/image1.jpg

What next for Africa as US-China enter New Cold War era?

The world is on the cusp of a new Cold War. On April 20, 2021, in his keynote speech to the Boao Forum economic conference in southern China, President Xi Jinping warned the world against a ‘New Cold War’, decrying the “unilateralism of certain countries”.

The international liberal order that America helped establish some 75 years ago is falling apart. As Michael Beckley, a scholar at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center recently argued, fear of China is forging a new international order. Will Africa get sucked into the new Cold War or will the continent forge a new policy to lift the mass of its poor from poverty?

No consensus has emerged so far on how to fix the increasingly anarchic post-liberal order. The US is under pressure to reassert a pax-Americana, rededicate itself and lead the liberal order.

Others, resigned to the reality that the US empire is crumbling before our eyes, are nostalgically returning to an order akin to the ‘Concert of Europe’ in the seventeenth century. In a re-imagined post-Napoleonic vague consensus among great European monarchies, the world’s great powers would form a concert to guide the international community into a new age of multipolar cooperation in the 21st Century.

Old and emerging powers will preserve their territorial and political status while assuming the responsibility and right to intervene and impose their collective will on weaker states, especially in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

In line with this thinking, former colonial powers in Europe are courting the idea of a grand bargain, a new ‘scramble and partitioning’ of the globe into stable spheres of influence. They are using militaristic strategies such as coups and terrorism and influencing key diplomatic forums and organisations to remake new informal empires in the weaker corners of the world.

These top-down solutions to the collapsing international liberal order carry the promise of great powers renegotiating away their conflicting interests and mutual suspicions and hatreds to forge a new win-win cooperation.

New international order

These, however, are no more than solutions for the strong and the mighty. China is also crusading for a new win-win cooperation, but from below. China’s pathway to a new post-liberal order is the creation of ‘a community of shared destiny for mankind’ as a radical alternative to the top-down cooperative solutions that serves only the security interests of great powers.

Beijing is putting its money behind the vision of a new international order based on inclusive organisations of equal states and civilisations working through mutual respect and solidarity for a peaceful and prosperous world and for the greater good of humanity.

However, like the Soviet Union before it, China is facing a new policy of containment, giving rise to a new Cold War. In his new article, Enemies of My Enemy: How Fear of China is Forging a New World Order (Foreign Affairs, March/April 2022), Michael Beckley concludes that: “For the first time since the Cold War, a critical mass of countries face serious threats to their security, welfare,and ways of life – all emanating from a single source.”

The political hostility between the US and China, threats, propaganda and other measures that now characterise the New Cold War, carry eerie echoes of the containment policy against the Soviets. China is accused of trying to carve out exclusive economic zones in the global economy, ‘acting belligerently’, ‘frightening countries’ and exporting digital systems that make authoritarianism more effective than ever.

China is pushing for a cooperative model based on a peaceful and shared vision of development. The model intellectually reflects the thoughts of Indian economist and philosopher Amartya Sen. In his 1999 book, Development as Freedom, Sen argues that development, by its nature, enhances freedom. Peaceful development begets freedom and justice. As Nelson Mandela once said: “Peace is the greatest weapon for development.”

Lee Kuan Yew created an economic superpower in Singapore. Lee’s achievements inspired reforms that have contributed to the remaking of modern China. A slew of reforms that President Deng Xiaoping introduced under the Reforms and Opening-up firmly placed development at the centre of China’s civilisational state.

Peaceful development

Globally, as China’s power grows, it has to provide global public goods to avoid what Joseph S. Nye popularised as “the Kindleberger Trap”. In a January 2017 article, the Harvard scholar argued that America’s failure to take on Britain’s role in providing global public goods when it replaced London as the largest global power resulted in the collapse of the global system into depression, genocide and world war in the disastrous decade of the 1930s.

China has provided global public goods to promote peaceful development. In Africa, the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) form a new architecture of development aligned with the African Union Agenda 2063.

As the world gropes for a post-Covid-19 recovery model, China has moved the concept of peaceful development to a whole new level. President Xi announced the Global Development Initiative (GDI) as China’s new vehicle of providing global public goods.

GDI is expected to assist the global community and the United Nations achieve the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. It will reverse the devastating impact of the Covid-19 on developing countries, address the challenges of environmental degradation and climate change, promote green recovery and realise the principles of ecological civilisation that harmonise development and natural environment.

In the Horn of Africa, where civil wars, terrorism, disease and the effects of climate change have wreaked havoc on development, China has proposed the “Initiative of Peaceful Development”.

On January 6, 2022, during his three-nation trip to Africa (Eritrea, Kenya, and the Indian Ocean Island State of Comoros), China’s State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi announced the creation of the “Initiative of Peaceful Development in the Horn of Africa” to support regional countries to address security, development and governance challenges.

Wang also announced that Beijing would also appoint a Special Envoy for the Horn of Africa Affairs to help galvanise regional consensus on peace, security and development. Africa should oppose new cold war alliances and aggressive power politics. But the continent must also be firmly align with peace and development.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Thousands of Eritrean refugees displaced in clashes in Ethiopia’s Afar region – UNHCR

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is working with the Ethiopian authorities and partners to provide emergency aid to thousands of Eritrean refugees who fled Barahle refugee camp and its environs in the Afar region after fighting engulfed the area.

Refugees who trekked the long distance to the regional capital in Semera told UNHCR staff that armed men entered the camp on 3 February, stole their belongings and occupied their homes. According to their testimonies, at least five refugees were killed and several women were kidnapped. Family members lost one another in the chaos of fleeing the camp.

So far, over 4,000 refugees are in Semera where UNHCR together with Ethiopia’s Government Refugees and Returnees Service (RRS) and other partners are providing immediate support with shelter, relief items, food as well as clean water. We have also set up protection desks where the most vulnerable among the refugees, including separated children and others with specific needs, are being identified and provided with support.

Around 10,000 refugees are also reported to be living in Afdera town, approximately 225 kilometers from Semera. Others are also believed to have fled towards the towns of Altefa and Dabure, further inland.

The government has identified a temporary site in Serdo town, 40 kilometers from Semera, where UNHCR, RRS and partners are making preparations in order to quickly relocate refugees.

With yet another refugee camp severely impacted, UNHCR remains extremely worried about the safety and wellbeing of thousands of Eritrean refugees caught up in the conflict.

We condemn the attack on the refugee camp and reiterate the call for cessation of hostilities to avoid further destruction and potential loss of life for refugees and Ethiopians alike, and so that much needed humanitarian assistance can reach them.

There are also large numbers of internally displaced Ethiopians in the Afar region, including some 300,000 uprooted by the recent fighting.

UNHCR will continue our efforts to support the Ethiopian government in its response to refugees and displaced populations affected by the conflict.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Zurich Maraton de Sevilla (ESP)-Results

Alemu Megertu and Asrar Abderehman secured an Ethiopian double at the Zurich Maratón de Sevilla, a World Athletics Elite Label road race, on Sunday (20) with huge world-leading PBs of 2:18:51 and 2:04:43 respectively.

Both men’s and women’s races had strong depth as seven men finished inside 2:07 with the 13th finisher clocking 2:08:30, while nine women went sub-2:26, confirming the course is conducive to fast times.

Perfectly paced by Hassan Aouchar, the women’s contest opened at a brisk pace with opening splits of 16:13 (5km) and 32:44 (10km), suggesing a finishing time well inside 2:20, which would smash the course record of 2:23:13. By then the leading quintet was formed by Ethiopians Megertu, the fastest entrant thanks to a 2:21:10 PB, Meseret Gola, runner-up at last November’s Barcelona Marathon in a PB of 2:24:09, Kalayu Chekole, Chimdesa Kumsa and Alema Gebremedhin. Behind them, Britain’s Jess Piasecki, eager to improve on her marathon best after smashing her half marathon PB with 1:07:20 last month, passed through 10km in 33:24.

Megertu and her compatriots went through halfway in 1:09:25, more than a minute ahead of Piasecki. But Kumsa, then Gebremedhin and finally Chekole lost ground from the heading duo and the race became a two-woman battle between Megertu and Gola, both still following the pacemaker.

The key movement came at 35km when Gola simply could not live with the steady 3:17 pace and began to lose contact. Megertu, meanwhile, metronomically maintained her cadence and reached the finish line in a massive career best of 2:18:51, having ran halves of 1:09:25 and 1:09:26.

Runner-up Gola also set a massive PB of 2:20.50 while Chekole completed an Ethiopian sweep of the podium with a lifetime best of 2:21:17. Kumsa held on for fourth place (2:22:13), while Piasecki overtook Gebremedhin just before 40km and finished fifth in 2:22:27, becoming the second-fastest Briton in history behind former world record-holder Paula Radcliffe.

Abderehman prevails over debutant Mamo

The men’s pacemakers, Enock Onchari and Wilfred Kimeli, were asked to maintain a 2:57/km tempo in the hunt for a race record (2:04:46) but they covered the opening 5km in 14:54, a bit slower than expected, closely followed by the main favourites which included Eritrea’s 2015 world champion Ghirmay Ghebreslassie, his compatriot Awet Habte and a large Ethiopian contingent led by Abderehman, Adugna Takele and debutante Adeladlew Mamo among others.

The pace heated up over the following kilometres and the leading group reached 10km in 29:39, 15km in 44:22 and the half-way point in 1:02:31, still eight seconds outside the required pace to break the record. By then, 12 men remained in the heading pack. Way back, Spain’s 40-year-old Ayad Lamdassem, who finished fifth at the Tokyo Olympics, was in the chasing group, timed at 1:03:16 by halfway.

The steady pace progressively whittled down the main group and by the time the pacemakers dropped out at 30km, the Ethiopian pair of Abderehman and Mamo took command and opened a sizeable gap on the rest. The leaders took turns at the helm but it was Mamo who made most of the pacing duties with his fellow Ethiopian running alongside.

By 35km the lead duo was timed at 1:43:17 with Ghebreslassie and Takele 27 seconds in arrears. A 35-40km split of 15:26 seemed to ruin the chances of a course record but Abderehman unleashed a devastating kick with some 1200m to go and built a sizeable margin over Mamo to secure the win in 2:04:43, a course record by three seconds and an improvement of more than three minutes on his previous best.

Runner-up Mamo produced a promising 2:05:12 debut, while Ghebreslassie got rid of Takele in the closing stages to complete a classy podium in 2:05:34, a massive PB for the 26-year-old Eritrean. Debutant Habte finished fifth in 2:06.25.

Running negative splits (1:06:17/1:06:08) Lamdassem placed sixth to improve his own national record by 10 seconds (2:06:25). Likewise, Israel’s Maru Teferi dipped under 2:07 for the first time to improve on his national record, while compatriot Tachlowini Gabriyesos, a member of the Athlete Refugee Team at the Tokyo Olympics, clocked a PB of 2:10:09.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Financial contribution by nationals in US

Nationals in the United States contributed 1 million, 352 thousand 421 Dollars in support of families of martyrs and towards augmenting the Martyrs Trust Fund.

According to the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare, 818 thousand 965 Dollars was contributed in support of families of martyrs while 553 thousand 456 towards augmenting the Martyrs Trust Fund.

Similarly, Ms. Margarita Zekarias a national residing in Frankfurt contributed 1 thousand 200 Euros and Sister Tsigehana Ghilazghi from Asmara contributed 20 thousand Nakfa towards augmenting the Martyrs Trust Fund.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea