The Japan Times - US-China tensions weigh on Lisbon's Web Summit

EUR -
AED 4.199348
AFN 73.181572
ALL 93.876793
AMD 420.372184
ANG 2.047251
AOA 1049.119899
ARS 1708.398165
AUD 1.649988
AWG 2.061084
AZN 1.94663
BAM 1.954276
BBD 2.303704
BDT 141.030021
BGN 1.933451
BHD 0.431264
BIF 3402.146925
BMD 1.143458
BND 1.476049
BOB 7.920823
BRL 5.929862
BSD 1.143808
BTN 108.968024
BWP 15.42697
BYN 3.318612
BYR 22411.782757
BZD 2.300406
CAD 1.62506
CDF 2568.207165
CHF 0.919387
CLF 0.026768
CLP 1053.513356
CNY 7.763056
CNH 7.758596
COP 3826.777602
CRC 521.093639
CUC 1.143458
CUP 30.301645
CVE 110.17908
CZK 24.191915
DJF 203.681165
DKK 7.474278
DOP 67.757161
DZD 152.493082
EGP 56.395134
ERN 17.151875
ETB 183.41277
FJD 2.584731
FKP 0.85633
GBP 0.856685
GEL 3.012999
GGP 0.85633
GHS 12.993867
GIP 0.85633
GMD 82.894538
GNF 10031.177448
GTQ 8.729193
GYD 239.253424
HKD 8.968379
HNL 30.614126
HRK 7.532988
HTG 149.603336
HUF 353.467544
IDR 20578.819096
ILS 3.428831
IMP 0.85633
INR 108.87444
IQD 1498.331565
IRR 1573341.453286
ISK 144.007743
JEP 0.85633
JMD 181.068798
JOD 0.810755
JPY 184.729692
KES 147.986065
KGS 99.992801
KHR 4580.428073
KMF 492.830105
KPW 1029.112874
KRW 1757.369039
KWD 0.354804
KYD 0.953257
KZT 540.908187
LAK 25826.859598
LBP 102425.725974
LKR 383.111241
LRD 207.59811
LSL 18.552532
LTL 3.376335
LVL 0.691667
LYD 7.331283
MAD 10.696359
MDL 20.11931
MGA 4849.218464
MKD 61.586973
MMK 2401.129041
MNT 4096.036573
MOP 9.239795
MRU 45.648402
MUR 53.799243
MVR 17.678157
MWK 1983.453256
MXN 19.990213
MYR 4.655365
MZN 73.078368
NAD 18.552532
NGN 1566.114609
NIO 42.087179
NOK 11.249461
NPR 174.349038
NZD 2.006644
OMR 0.441036
PAB 1.143808
PEN 3.892065
PGK 5.025081
PHP 70.283773
PKR 318.000316
PLN 4.292245
PYG 6954.576655
QAR 4.181239
RON 5.227321
RSD 117.285538
RUB 88.095632
RWF 1674.494189
SAR 4.294571
SBD 9.214606
SCR 15.397992
SDG 686.643948
SEK 11.03186
SGD 1.477342
SHP 0.853707
SLE 27.843319
SLL 23977.753094
SOS 653.690237
SRD 42.95509
STD 23667.278258
STN 24.480909
SVC 10.008195
SYP 126.388845
SZL 18.549535
THB 38.019579
TJS 10.602832
TMT 4.013539
TND 3.375767
TOP 2.753174
TRY 53.533742
TTD 7.751955
TWD 36.525475
TZS 3002.28474
UAH 50.941275
UGX 4174.744435
USD 1.143458
UYU 46.004125
UZS 13702.314608
VES 730.55925
VND 30068.37956
VUV 135.993314
WST 3.171015
XAF 655.445868
XAG 0.018287
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.090253
XCG 2.061392
XDR 0.815164
XOF 655.445868
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.057067
ZAR 18.572553
ZMK 10292.499464
ZMW 21.016611
ZWL 368.193107
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

US-China tensions weigh on Lisbon's Web Summit

US-China tensions weigh on Lisbon's Web Summit

Global tech leaders packed Lisbon's annual Web Summit Tuesday to talk artificial intelligence, robots and startups -- all under the shadow of global tensions over cutting-edge hardware and software and the resources needed to build them.

Text size:

Lanyard-wearing visitors were exploring bright blue-and-pink stands under a grey November sky, on the lookout for the latest in quantum computing or humanoid robots.

Over four days, the "Davos for geeks" is set to welcome over 70,000 visitors from 150 countries, including 2,500 startups and 1,000 investors, according to organisers.

China's climb towards tech dominance is on mind of many attendees.

"Half the world's computer scientists and computer engineers who are on the frontier of these technologies are in China," Nvidia's vice-president of simulation technology Rev Lebaredian told AFP.

The American chip giant's chief executive Jensen Huang warned earlier this month that China "is going to win" the race to master next-generation artificial intelligence.

That was despite the fact that Nvidia's most advanced chips -- used to train and run AI systems -- are unavailable in China due to export restrictions.

"If we try to exclude them, they will find a way to go develop the same things," Lebaredian said.

"We will lose the opportunity to work with them and benefit from the work that they do."

Web Summit founder Paddy Cosgrave had told attendees at Monday's opening night event that "this year, more than any year before, it's clear that the era of Western tech dominance is fading."

- Robots and autonomous cars -

The "most advanced humanoid robots in the world" on display are "not European, they're not American. Instead, they are Chinese," Cosgrave said.

Leading manufacturer Unitree was running demonstrations of its humanoids on Monday.

And a few metres away, Chinese 3D printer maker Bambulab's stand showed off machines able to crank out physical objects within a few hours -- themselves designed based on text prompts to a generative AI model, rather than traditional software tools.

Such uses show off a transition for AI from "purely software, abstract plays, into... the physical world," Lebaredian said.

US speakers in the field will include Amazon Robotics boss Tye Brady and Robert Playter of Boston Dynamics.

Uber president Andrew Macdonald and rival Lyft's chief David Risher will talk up schemes to fill the streets with robotaxis.

Uber has partnered with Nvidia to upgrade tens of thousands of vehicles with automation tech from 2027.

Waymo, a subsidiary of Google parent company Alphabet, has said its driverless vehicles will arrive in London next year. And several Chinese manufacturers including Baidu and Pony.ai have Europe in their sights for an automated car rollout.

- AI and chips -

The struggle for dominance may be fiercest in generative artificial intelligence.

Tuesday speaker Cristiano Amon, boss of American chip developer Qualcomm, has announced AI chips squaring up to sector heavyweight Nvidia and challenger AMD.

He talked about future phones as "just a big processor that runs AI".

Several leaders of other top AI firms will also appear, including Microsoft president Brad Smith.

Monday's opening night had starred Swedish AI firm Lovable, one of several firms allowing users to create apps and websites via a chatbot without coding experience.

British dictionary publisher Collins dubbed this "vibe coding" approach its word of the year for 2025.

"We're seeing 100,000 new products built on Lovable every single day," chief executive Anton Osika told attendees.

- Health and sports -

Monday also saw tennis great Maria Sharapova praise AI tools' value to sports -- from preparing athletes for competition to speeding up recovery time or stoking fans' engagement.

And wearables, such as watches and rings able to monitor sleep, heart rate or body temperature, mean that tech's ability to detect initial signs of illness will be another hot topic.

- Tech sovereignty -

Brussels will send Henna Virkkunen, the European Commission's digital chief, as the 27-nation EU is increasingly fearful for its technological sovereignty amid rising trade and political tensions.

As the Commission pressures American and Chinese platforms to tighten measures for underage internet users, American games publisher Roblox -- whose game platform is popular with minors -- will outline how it plans to verify players' ages.

Y.Kato--JT