Think Tank

The Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou: Exploration and Inspiration

2025-02-19   

At the private enterprise symposium held on February 17th, two young entrepreneurs stood out particularly. One is Wang Xingxing, the founder of Yushu Technology, and the other is Liang Wenfeng, the founder of DeepSeek. The former was born in 1990 and the latter was born in 1985. They are representatives of China's young generation of entrepreneurs, and their enterprises are also benchmarks for China's emerging industries. Yushu Technology, Deep Search, along with Game Science, Brain Power Technology, Qun Core Technology, and Cloud Deep Technology, are all headquartered in Hangzhou and have emerged as "new technological stars" in recent years. Netizens have given these six companies a nickname: "Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou". At the beginning of the Chinese New Year, from the popularity of humanoid robots on the Spring Festival Gala to the attention of the AI big model world, each phenomenal product has spread the name of "Hangzhou Six Little Dragons" throughout the country. The public opinion arena is also lively. For a while, some cities began to reflect on why the 'Six Little Dragons' did not emerge locally, and conducted in-depth investigations from many aspects such as business environment, talent services, innovation investment, and government guidance. The product has its highlights, and there is depth in asking questions. This phenomenon can be called the "Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou" phenomenon. This phenomenon first shows that Chinese enterprises and Chinese people have the ability to "take the lead in the world" in the most cutting-edge scientific and technological fields. The "Six Little Dragons" cover fields such as AI, robotics, brain computer interfaces, cloud design software systems, game development, etc. Each of them is a "hardcore technology", which not only deepens and expands existing achievements, but also pioneers knowledge in "no man's land". Faced with various "patent barriers" and "technological bottlenecks", the emergence of the "Six Little Dragons" once again proves that China has sufficient ability and confidence to break through high walls and barriers, and independently achieve one breakthrough after another. This phenomenon also shows the world that China's vast land and market contain infinite vitality and potential. The "Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou" represent a new group of innovative and dynamic private enterprises led by young people in China. Many of them are debugging models on the subway, drawing architecture diagrams at breakfast stands, using code as bricks and tiles, using algorithms as steel bars, and building bridges to the future. China's past achievements have been the result of generations of workers' hard work, and China's future potential will also be realized through such struggles. The phenomenon of the "Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou" also tells the world that China has been striving to "do its own thing well" and firmly following the path of developing itself and benefiting the world. The deep exploration of open-source models has lowered the threshold for AI applications, Yushu Technology's robots have broken through some countries' high price barriers, and the progress of QiangBrain Technology's brain computer interface technology is expected to benefit countless patient populations... This is a real "technological equality" in Chinese technology. The papers and products generated around these new technologies are essentially public goods that can benefit all countries in principle. Faced with the challenges of weak global economic recovery and intensified geopolitical competition, should we focus on decoupling and suppressing our opponents, or concentrate on innovation and driving global technological progress? China has once again responded with actions. For other cities in China, the "Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou" phenomenon is a reminder that urban competition in China has shifted from "competing for policy incentives" to "competing for innovative ecosystems". Enterprises settling in Hangzhou will not eat a meal, drink a glass of wine, or give away a cigarette, while the government will not interfere with anything and will always respond to requests. In this way, young talents will naturally "vote with their feet" and truly take root, relax, and take steps in the city. For the world, the phenomenon of China's "Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou" is undoubtedly a revelation: what humanity truly needs is not short-sighted speculation and stimulation, but ambitious perseverance and perseverance; The future of humanity will not be isolated in a closed door, small courtyard with high walls, but in a pattern of daring to be the first, openness and win-win. (New Society)

Edit:Luo yu Responsible editor:Zhou shu

Source:people.cn

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