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by sergiomattei 1548 days ago
I personally read it as less of an English-supremacist stance, more of a general distrust of Chinese institutions.
2 comments

I took it as being representative of the experience I have had many times getting software from obscure Chinese manufacturers: a “dev environment” that includes pirated software, up to and including the occasional pirated windows XP installer lol.

I knew exactly what he was talking about- not xenophobia, but legitimately shady software that is common to get from Chinese manufacturers, often from some equally dodgy ftp server or torrent seed.

> I knew exactly what he was talking about- not xenophobia, but legitimately shady software that is common to get from Chinese manufacturers, often from some equally dodgy ftp server or torrent seed.

This so much. Part of the reason we decided against using one microcontroller that was China-only was that their "support" included a pirated and cracked version of Keil.

Uh, no.

As someone who doesn't speak Chinese, I can actually deal with Chinese datasheets, surprisingly (diagrams and hexadecimal generally don't need translation). Chinese support forums are a bit tougher if I can even get to them from outside China.

However, once you start exhibiting some level of casual illegality, that's a full stop.

Hopefully, RISC-V will side step a lot of this in the future by standardizing the toolset on something open-source.

Still seems unfair - surely you shouldn't consider every Chinese company and person an extention of CCP?

If one called this program glitchy, sloppily, poorly written, or incomprehensible, we could discuss it in it's merit, and perhaps compare it against it's equivalents.

Shady implies criminality, it installs spyware and steals your bitcoins - and thats quite unlikely given how limited the audience of such a tool would be.

Every Chinese company is an extention of the CCP, read about China's "National Intelligence Law" it goes a lot further than the patriot act.
In reality it doesn't. In US the agencies can "convince" any company to do absolutely anything, starting from installing backdoors.