Starting from the "core"

On April 17, ZTE issued a statement saying that it had been informed that the U.S. Department of Commerce had activated a denial order against the company.
The war has come, and this technical war has come so quickly, so quickly, so ruthlessly, so accurately!
In fact, as early as March 6, 2016, according to Xinhua News Agency, the US government claimed that ZTE and its three affiliates violated the relevant US export ban and were included in the export restriction list, restricting US suppliers from exporting chips, including chips, to ZTE. U.S. products included. At this point, it is already doomed that this technological war is inevitable.
From the front, for example, Microsoft's operating system black screen event can be traced back to October 20, 2008.
From 2008 to today, it has been 10 years. After 10 years of reflection, China is still "lack of cores and souls", so how can this problem be solved?
One of the questions: government-funded, enterprise-funded, or government-enterprise joint venture?
Question 2: Enterprises as the main R&D team, or universities as the main R&D team?
Question 3: How to conduct KPI assessment every year?
Question 4: The principle of pressure, the priority of the chip, or the priority of the operating system?
Question 5: How to build an ecosystem after having a chip?
Question 6: Who will develop the equipment for making chips?
Question 7: Who will produce the materials for making chips?
Question 8: Who will develop the CAD software for making chips?
Question 9: Where is the market entry point for chips?
Question 10: Start with low-end chips or high-end chips?

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