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  • You get in the metal tube.

  • Zoom up 115 floors at a ridiculous speed to the top of the Ping An skyscraper.

  • Then you find a window, and marvel at the sublime bigness of Shenzhen.

  • Forty years ago, all this was farmland and dirt roads,

  • a minor hub for rural goods trading just across the border from Hong Kong.

  • Now, it's the hot, steamy, frenetic home to 13 million people

  • that just about everyone on Earth calls the Silicon Valley of China.

  • Everything here moves at what's known as Shenzhen speed.

  • It's a phrase that describes an unyielding pace of change

  • and I came here to feel it firsthand.

  • To do that, it's an Instagram pose with the cityscape, a quick scan for government spy drones,

  • and then a car ride, to see we're just about everything we use gets made.

  • You hear about factories in China all the time.

  • Today, I'm lucky enough to actually go visit one that's located about an hour outside of the center of the city.

  • They're gonna let us see what life is like inside one of these factories.

  • There are grim factories.

  • There are decent factories.

  • And then there's this place, run by Grandsun Electronic.

  • It's safe to say this is not what I expected.

  • The plush surroundings are intended to make customers from all parts of the world feel comfortable.

  • But inside it's more like you'd expect.

  • Dozens of workers moving at Shenzhen speed,

  • making fancy headphones for an Australian company called Nura.

  • How did you guys end up in Shenzhen? I guess that's the thing to do these days.

  • Yeah.

  • Shenzhen's known as a place that people come to to make things.

  • You don't come here to mess around, you come here to get things done.

  • They have the supply chain here, a supplier that can make any component the headphones you need,

  • and of course there's the labor cost, which is not cheap as it used to be, but still reasonable.

  • The production line's been running at basically maximum capacity since we started and yeah, we can do 500 a day normally.

  • What are the little noises were hear in the background?

  • You're hearing them make sure they assembled the speaker correctly.

  • So that's, like, a test noise.

  • Yeah, that's right.

  • But what is life like for the people who make these wonderful toys?

  • To get a taste of the factory experience. I join the mad dash for lunch.

  • Mmm... cafeteria food.

  • How are you? Good?

  • How's the food?

  • It's good?

  • How long have you worked here?

  • It's tough to say anything terribly new about the life of the Chinese factory worker.

  • Most of these people have come from China's hinterlands,

  • often leaving their families behind in their rural hometowns.

  • They'll spend about two years on average in Shenzhen,

  • busting their butts working overtime to save up as much money as they can.

  • Is it a step up from hardscrabble subsistence farming?

  • Probably.

  • Are there still safety nets?

  • Yep.

  • But I can tell you one major lifestyle advantage the Chinese have over us gweilos.

  • When we first started working here, after lunch, we couldn't really get anyone's attention.

  • Eventually, we cottoned on - everyone's just sleeping at that time of day.

  • That said we embraced it very quickly.

  • What is your preferred sleeping apparatus?

  • I'm pretty Spartan,

  • so either on the desk or under the desk with a bit of bubble wrap for a pillow.

  • Trust me, it's good.

  • Luke is just one of many entrepreneurs who come to get their gear made in Shenzhen.

  • There's a flourishing scene here for hardware startups that want to move fast and make things.

  • Many of them can be found here, at a startup incubator called Hax.

  • The idea here is simple:

  • Help startups build a prototype,

  • then connect them with factories that can start cranking out their products by the thousands.

  • Take Jamie here, an affable chap who's part of a British startup called Carv.

  • We make a digital ski coach. So effectively it's like

  • an insert you put into your ski boot and it teaches you how to ski better.

  • So you get like real-time feedback through headphones like, that was a bad turn. That was a bad turn.

  • That was a better turn.

  • You have one here don't you?

  • Yeah, let me show you.

  • So yeah, these are motion sensors, so we have full motion sensing.

  • Like many startups here, Carv began life as a humble Kickstarter campaign.

  • Now just a couple of years later, they're pumping out 5,000 units of their product every month.

  • Do you think you could have brought something like this to life in the UK if you'd have been

  • accepted by an incubator there? Or now that you've been here, you've seen a new world I guess?

  • I think it kind of depends a little bit on how much of a shoestring you're on.

  • Here in Shenzhen, it's so much cheaper. In many different categories it's cheaper.

  • Like in the product development phase, to get different materials 3D printed or machined,

  • you get it here for kind of half the cost and twice as fast. And sometimes seven times as fast.

  • To get a feel for that high-speed energy, I hop across the street with Jamie to the famed Huaqiangbei markets.

  • Yeah, so this is the biggest electronics market in the world probably.

  • They're an important resource for the young entrepreneurs here,

  • and a fantastic place to get your senses overloaded.

  • Such a hive of activity in here!

  • Aw man it's great, so this is the energy right?

  • You just walk through the market and it's like, bang. You know, like, okay.

  • This is where factories have come to display their wares to potential buyers,

  • who is me and a lot of the other people here. Kind of a storefront for factories.

  • Okay, and if I make like smartphones or TVs or anything like that, I kind of come here to see

  • the latest and greatest stuff?

  • Exactly. You want to find a manufacturer, you come to Huaqiangbei.

  • It's also a great place to find that missing part for your prototype,

  • which is why you run into other crews from Hax roaming the aisles.

  • Buying some screws?

  • Have you tried, there's a spring woman out the front as well if you want one. Just on the left as you go out.

  • The fact that I can get a component in like an hour is like absolutely phenomenal.

  • That's like, that is Shenzhen speed. That's why we're here.

  • It's all happening here in Shenzhen, like some kind of crazy 21st-century gold rush.

  • But to really give Silicon Valley a run for its money, it's going to have to become more than just a factory to the world.

  • It's going to take invention and original thinking.

  • And where better to find those things than at the world's most intense robotics competition.

  • Please welcome Robomaster!

  • We'll get into it next time on Hello World.

  • Thanks for watching, and if you want to see more Hello World, click on the link to subscribe.

You get in the metal tube.

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B1 中級

中国の未来工場の内部 (Inside China's Future Factory)

  • 7 2
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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