November 24, a satellite intelligent manufacturing project in Beijing completed the procurement of industrial-grade CMM training equipment services. It is reported that this core equipment is a high-precision CMM independently developed, featuring nanometer-level grating positioning (±0.5μm), dynamic error compensation, and intelligent probe switching functions, which can meet the high-precision testing needs of satellite components. This procurement marks a substantial progress in the application of China CMMs in high-end fields such as satellite manufacturing.

November 27, at the 2025 World Intelligent Manufacturing Conference held in Nanjing, the "Huazhong 10" intelligent CNC system jointly developed by Huazhong CNC and Huazhong University of Science and Technology was successfully selected as one of the "2025 World Top Ten Intelligent Manufacturing Technological Advances". It became the first China enterprise's intelligent CNC system for machine tools to receive this honor. The system is a new generation of platform-based product developed for intelligent manufacturing environments, adopting a three-tier architecture , integrating core technologies such as big data in the instruction domain, digital twin, and integrated modeling. This enables machine tools to have autonomous perception, learning, decision-making, execution, and deep interaction capabilities for the first time. Its machining accuracy has been further improved by 30% on the original micron level, machining efficiency has increased by 5%-10%, and it has achieved a leap from "single-point breakthrough" to "system integration".
November 27, the world's largest 3D printing factory project was launched. The world's largest 3D printing factory, jointly built by Winner Technology and BambuLab in Shenzhen, plans to deploy 15,000 BambuLab FDM printing devices by the first quarter of 2026, becoming the first super-large FDM printing factory in China. Currently, nearly 5,000 devices have arrived and been deployed.
November 28, affected by the uncertainty of U.S. trade policies, Japan's Okuma will reduce its sales revenue for the 2026 fiscal year from 230 billion yen to 220 billion yen, and net profit from the original 15.5 billion yen to 10 billion yen, a decline of about one-third.
