Mardi 27 octobre 2009
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China Mobile phones, the country's largest
cellphone operator, will next week launch the pre-commercial service of third generation (3G) mobile phone telephony based on a home-grown standard.
3G mobile phone sales volume swelled more than 150% year on year in the National Day holiday, scoring a peak high in 2009, according to statistic by D.Phone, one of the largest mobile phone
retailers in China.
Daily sales volume of 3G mobile phones topped 400. Sales volume of 3G netbooks and network interface cards also jumped. Growths in 3G mobile phone sales volume outpaced that of 2G mobile phone
sales volume.
3G mobile phone sales volume in the National Day holiday leapt 36% from the previous days, according to the operational data of Zoom Flight, a Beijing-based telecom product retailer.
Driven by the hiking 2G mobile phone sales volume, 3G mobile phone sales volume also rose fast in the National Day holiday. Sales volume of 3G mobile phones in China during the holiday was
estimated to hit 100,000. By the end of the National Day holiday,TV cell
phones sales volume in the country in 2009 was forecasted to outnumber 1 million, according to a report by a consulting firm.
Data from SINO Market Research Limited (Sino-MR), a leading market research and information agency in China, also showed that 3G mobile phone sales volume in the domestic market amounted to
600,000 in the first seven months of 2009. In July alone, 3G mobile phone sales volume arrived at 251,000, increasing 41.7% from the sales volume of 177,000 in June.China's mobile terminal market achieved a mobile phone sales volume of 33.066 million in the second quarter of 2009, according to a report by technology, media and telecom
(TMT) market researcher Analysys International. Sales volume of the 3G handset segment touched 242,000, including 131,000 CDMA EVDO mobile phones and 64,000 TD-SCDMA mobile phones.
Of the 3G mobile phones sold in January-July 2009, Samsung, LG, and Sony Ericsson-branded products ranked the top three, with a market share of 21.3%, 20.3%, and 18.7% respectively.
China's top three integrated telecom operators, particularly China Telecom, all actively boost 3G terminal operations. China Telecom expects to achieve three goals for 3G terminals, noted an
executive at the telecom operator. Its iphone clone
sales volume topped 2.5 million in September 2009, rocketing 600% from the period last year. If the sales volume grows at the above pace, the telecom carrier will be likely to seek a net increase
of 35 million in its CDMA subscribers.
Par nancai
2
Mardi 27 octobre 2009
2
27
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/Oct
/2009
06:38
When the china mobile
Phones was released in the United States two years ago, thousands camped outside Apple stores overnight to secure one of the prized devices. The official launch of the
trendy handset in China this month isn't likely to spur the same zealotry. That's because the iPhone is already here.
Over the last two years, while Apple Inc. was tied up in negotiations with a Chinese carrier to bring the iPhone to the Middle Kingdom, nimble entrepreneurs were busy importing Apple handsets
manufactured for the U.S. and Hong Kong markets.
They downloaded software to make the phones compatible with local networks, switched the language settings and -- voila -- the Chinese iPhone was born. Travelers coming back from their trips
abroad also smuggled the coveted devices into the country.
The result: an estimated 1.5 million so-called gray-market iPhones are in use in China.
Then there are the iPhoneys. Shoppers can walk into any electronics bazaar in Beijing and buy a counterfeit iPhone for as little as $50. These pirated devices aren't the equals of the real thing,
of course. It takes thumb-wrestling strength to get some of the touch screens to respond. And that e-mail icon? It's just for show.
But for shoppers like Luo Qiang, a 32-year-old worker at the state electric company, just the appearance of rocking a genuine-looking iPhone is enough.
An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment other than to confirm that the company had reached a multiyear agreement with mobile carrier China Unicom to sell the iPhone. The telecom operator is
taking online pre-orders for the devices this month and plans to sell the phones at its retail outlets by Oct. 30.
Despite the challenges, the opportunity is enormous. China is the world's largest cellphone market, with about 680 million mobile phone users. An increasing number are embracing sophisticated
devices known as smart phones, which function like mini cell
phones by enabling users to access the Web and e-mail. Use of smart phones in China is expected to triple to around 116.2 million handsets by 2013, according to BDA
China, a telecommunications consulting group.
Although only a small slice of China's population has the means to purchase a genuine iPhone, that could still prove to be a success for Apple in a country with more than 1 billion inhabitants.
For young professionals such as Beijing marketing executive Elton Lee, the iPhone that a co-worker brought him from Hong Kong is a must-have status accessory.
"People notice," said Lee, whose handset sports a red rubber protector and a ringtone that sounds like a rotary phone. "They'll say, 'Ah, you have an iPhone.' "
Still, Chinese consumers may not develop the same cultish devotion to Apple as their American counterparts. The company's other signature products -- iPod music players and Mac computers --
haven't gained much traction here largely because of their premium prices.
Chinese bureaucracy hasn't helped much either.Then there's Apple's lackluster telecom partner, China Unicom, which ranks a distant second to China Mobile and has a reputation for inefficiency and
poor decision-making, analysts said.
Meanwhile, China Mobile, which controls 73% of the market, is gunning for Apple with its so-called OPhone. That's the nickname for its new smart phone operating system based on Google Inc.'s
much-touted Android platform. The goal is to attract Chinese customers to upgrade to so-called 3G technology that enables them to stream video, watch movies and enjoy other multimedia content on
their phones.
Already, a slew of major manufacturers including Motorola, HTC and Samsung have signed on to supply China Mobile's new line of handsets, dubbed TV cell Phones, which will compete head-to-head with iPhone.
The first salvo arrives this month in the form of a smart phone built by Lenovo, China's leading computer maker. The Lenovo O1 is a slim, black touch-screen phone that looks a lot like the
iPhone. China Mobile has yet to announce the device's retail price, but analysts are predicting that it will undercut iPhone sales.
Par nancai
0
Mardi 27 octobre 2009
2
27
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/2009
06:35
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Par nancai
0