Tencent helps Chinese students bypass the prohibitively low speeds for overseas schoo ~ DIỄN ĐÀN RAO VẶT

Monday, May 31, 2021

Tencent helps Chinese students bypass the prohibitively low speeds for overseas schoo

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Hundreds of เข้าเกม slotxo thousands of Chinese students enrolled in overseas schools have been stranded as the COVID-19 outbreak. It continues to affect lives and airlines around the world. Learning at home in china Everyone faces one challenge: school websites and other academic resources. Their loading is very slow. This is because all web traffic goes through a country's censorship tool known as a "censorship". "Excellent firewall"Seeing a business opportunity, Alibaba's cloud unit has been working to connect Chinese students with overseas university portals through a deal with Fortinet, an American cybersecurity solution provider.

Details of Tencent's offer have been released. An app called "Chang'e Education Acceleration" debuted in Apple's App Store in March. Helps accelerate loading times for a selection of study abroad services. It describes itself in one word: "Free Online Learning Accelerator Program from Tencent, with a mission to accelerate the Internet and search services in educational resources to both local and international students and researchers.Alibaba Cloud said Fortinet Partners provided a virtual private network solution to the university network while its own technology worked to accelerate the network.

Chang'e is not a VPN, Tencent told TechCrunch. The company did not say whether it defines a VPN or explains how Chang'e technically works. Tencent said Chang'e launched on the app's official website in October.The word "VPN" is a very loaded word in China. As it often means bypassing Illegal "great firewall" people refer to the word When Chang'e is turned on, the iPhone's VPN status will be displayed as "On", according to a test by TechCrunch.Tencent's Chang'e 'accelerator' website helps Chinese students who are stuck at home get to their school website faster. Screenshot: TechCrunch

On its welcome page, Chang'e asks users to choose from eight countries, including the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom, for "Acceleration" also shows the increased expected latency and speed for each region.Once a country is selected, Chang'e will display a list of educational resources that users can visit from the app's built-in browser. as well as the websites of 79 top universities, mostly US and UK. team collaboration tools such as Microsoft Teams, Trello, and Slack; Distance learning platforms UDemy, Coursera, Lynda and Khan Academy; research networks such as SSRN and JSTOR; programming and engineering communities such as Stack Overflow,

Codeacademy, and IEEE; Economics databases from the World Bank and OECD, as well as resources for medical students like PubMed and Lancet.Many of these services are not blocked in China. but slow loading in mainland china behind A "great firewall" user can request to include sites that are not on the list.
Accessing Stanford's website via Chang'e. Screenshot: TechCrunch Chang'e seems to only allow selected sites. Rather than all traffic on users' smartphones, Google, Facebook, YouTube and other websites banned in China are still unavailable when Chang'e is at work. The app is free to use on both Android and iOS, and currently doesn't require users to sign up. This is a rare practice in countries where online activities are heavily regulated. And most websites ask to register the real name of the user.

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