At least they still chose to write in English... - did you try to read it? My experience with papers by some (not all, but a substantial percent) of foreign, especially Chinese authors, is that at least they still try to write in English. :-(
Yes, it's not a very good English mostly, but the quality of science seems to be going up. At least this is my impression from superficial browsing...
What occurred to me is that there is no equilibrium point in the future: given that they still know English much better, than other people know Chinese, and given how difficult Chinese seems to be, at the equilibrium (when the Chinese school does not have to publish in English too fast anymore), it can gain an advantage by simply publishing Chinese versions a year earlier.
At the end of the day, it's not about the quality of writing. So, unless we get a decent quality machine translation from Chinese before that moment...
Alas, the capacity of today's FPGAs is not enough to simulate large networks. But if the network is regular, some state can be off-loaded to RAM; I wonder what performance can be achieved using a hardware-based implementation.
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What occurred to me is that there is no equilibrium point in the future: given that they still know English much better, than other people know Chinese, and given how difficult Chinese seems to be, at the equilibrium (when the Chinese school does not have to publish in English too fast anymore), it can gain an advantage by simply publishing Chinese versions a year earlier.
At the end of the day, it's not about the quality of writing. So, unless we get a decent quality machine translation from Chinese before that moment...
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