On a long train ride, a Han Chinese played the erhu, a Kazakh played the dombra, and three Uyghurs played the rawap and gijak. Together, they performed the Mongolian piece Horse Racing, bringing the dull journey to life with the sound of their traditional ethnic instruments.😌😌😌
China’s Maglev train just clocked 620 mph — that’s faster than most commercial airplanes.
This isn’t sci-fi; it’s the next phase of ultra-high-speed travel. With magnetic levitation tech and zero physical contact with the tracks, the future of transportation is not just fast — it's frictionless.
Every big forest starts with one little tree. Protect trees. Protect the Earth. Protect our future.
#PandaPic#PandaFun#TreePlantingDay
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China’s often-overlooked mega project, the ‘Vegetable Basket Project,’ has been running for nearly 40 years and ensures that 1.4 billion Chinese people have affordable, fresh vegetables on their tables every day.
On this Women's Day, we celebrate her power, her grace, her voice. We honour every woman who shines bright in her own unique way. Happy International Women's Day!
#PandaPic#WomensDay#PandaFun#AIPanda#PandasAIStudio
To combat the mounting stresses of modern life, more young Chinese are adopting the calming properties of baduanjin, or "eight pieces of brocade". #CulturalJourney#八段锦
Beijing woke up to a spring snowfall—quiet, beautiful. Rooflines and branches were coated in white and silver, turning familiar streets into a soft, shimmering scene. In Chinese tradition, snow in spring is an auspicious sign—heralding a year of good fortune and happiness. Here’s to a bright year ahead.
Getting to know the giant panda is also a chance to know the lives that share its forest home. On World Wildlife Day, protect giant pandas, protect the harmony of all lives. 🐼🐯🐒🐬🦩🐘🦌🐻
#wildlife#PandaMoment#PandaFun#AIPanda#WildlifeParadise
Chinese President Jiang Zemin Taught Limits Using Zhuangzi’s One-Foot Rod.
In November 2001, then Chinese President Jiang Zemin visited Beijing University of Technology.
During an impromptu stop in a calculus class discussing derivatives, he picked up chalk and wrote on the blackboard: Zhuangzi said: "A one-foot hammer (or rod), take half of it each day, and it will never be exhausted through eternity." (一尺之棰,日取其半,万世不竭。)
He then wrote a mathematical formula to precisely capture its meaning, explaining: "This is our ancestors' extremely important idea of limits."
This ancient paradox from Zhuangzi's "Tianxia" chapter beautifully illustrates the concept of infinite division and the limit approaching zero — a profound insight predating modern calculus by over two millennia.