The
revelation
that a groundbreaking mobile phone chip is a fake has shocked China, where the
home-grown 'invention' had become a source of considerable national pride.
Shanghai's prestigious Jiaotong University announced at the weekend that the
Hanxin DSP (digital signal processing) chip had been faked by inventor Professor
Chen Jin, who was also the dean of the university's School of Microelectronics.
Rumours of foul play have been swirling around the project for several
months, and appear to have provided the impetus for the investigation of
Professor Chen.
One anonymous online forum post that began circulating in China in January
claimed that Professor Chen had created the original Hanxin chips simply by
grinding away the top surface of some of
Motorola's
Freescale DSP chips with
sandpaper and having them reprinted with the Hanxin logo.
The university did not confirm this version of events, but investigators told
local media that the chip had used "foreign" technology.
They also said that, contrary to claims by the design team, Hanxin's
performance in tasks like media encoding and fingerprint image matching had
failed to meet targets.
Professor Chen, a 38 year-old who earned his doctorate at the University of
Texas at Austin, has been lauded by the media and feted by China's political
leaders during the past three years.
However, he has now been fired from his post and will have to repay millions
of dollars in government funds invested in the project, reports say.
Angry comments on Chinese forums and blogs have called for everything from
criminal charges to execution for the disgraced academic.
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