On June 29, the Beijing Space Computing Innovation Center was officially inaugurated in Zhongguancun, Haidian at the highly anticipated Global Digital Economy Conference Space Computing Forum. The establishment of this innovation center marks that China's industrial layout in the cutting-edge field of space computing has entered a stage of practical and coordinated advancement.

The center adopts an innovative "company + alliance" dual-driving model, with Beijing Tian Suaxinglian Technology Co., Ltd. responsible for daily operations. According to information, the innovation center undertakes four key responsibilities: first, focusing on joint research of common technologies, conducting collaborative development on key aspects such as satellite AI chips, intelligent satellite platforms, space large models, and integrated cloud platforms; second, providing public infrastructure services, building a comprehensive ground verification platform from chips to systems for upstream and downstream industries in the supply chain; third, leading the formulation of standards, gathering industry ecosystems through the concept of open-source and open development; and finally, promoting commercialization, applying space computing services to urban governance and broader social scenarios.

In fact, this initiative is not an isolated action. Since April this year, the first domestic space computing industry collaboration platform - the Space Computing Special Committee - was already established in Beijing, and proposed the ambitious goal of building a space computing native industry system during the 14th Five-Year Plan period. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology previously also clearly stated that it would support forward-looking research on space computing technology, promoting computing resources to extend into this emerging dimension of space.

With the official operation of the Beijing Space Computing Innovation Center, it is expected to connect the "meridians and collaterals" of air, space, and terrestrial computing networks in the future. This not only means we will have stronger capabilities in processing space data, but also indicates that a series of commercial applications based on space computing will move from concepts to reality, injecting new momentum into the high-quality development of China's digital economy.