←back to thread

78 points JumpCrisscross | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.237s | source
Show context
_kava ◴[] No.43667054[source]
It is both amazing and sad to see China is literally in the future compared to the US in terms of infrastructure and social development.

A trip to one of the major cities in China made it clear to me that they are ahead of the world right now. The amount of tech and the level of integration are unbelievable. In comparasion, the streets of SF, one of the crown jewels of the US technosphere, are just so "normal" I find it hard to believe.

It is the same feeling I had decades ago walking into a then-modern metropolis in the US for the first time. All the cool tech, the convenience, the upscale atmosphere, the extravagance of it all were striking. I have not felt that again for a while and I just think it can't happen again with what I am already used to now. Incredible that China managed to evoke that sense of awe in me again.

replies(10): >>43667123 #>>43667191 #>>43667293 #>>43667364 #>>43667539 #>>43671744 #>>43672009 #>>43672807 #>>43673086 #>>43674497 #
sepositus ◴[] No.43667123[source]
Is there hard evidence of this beyond random anecdotes? Genuinely curious as I haven't visited there.
replies(3): >>43667208 #>>43667217 #>>43667227 #
1. malshe ◴[] No.43667227[source]
Chinese cities like Shanghai have been world class for a long time. The last time I was there, I had a dinner with a client on the outskirts of Shanghai. I took multiple subways to reach there and found that neighborhood quite ordinary and starkly different from Shanghai itself. Of course this is also an anecdote but gives you a different perspective. I also know a few people who visit China often and they tell me the cities are definitely futuristic.

Personally I think Singapore is the most futuristic city-state in the world.