Space Industry and Business News  
Emerging market firms turn giants in telecom sector

Half of French kids use mobiles in class: survey
Nearly half of French youths are using their mobile phones in class, with a majority saying they had answered calls during lessons, according to a survey published Tuesday. The survey of French youths age 12-17 by TNS Sofres found that 73 percent have their own mobile phone, a figure that rises to 95 percent for 16- and 17-year-olds. A fifth said they have had their phones confiscated by school officials, according to the survey published in the daily Le Parisien. Mobiles are not officially banned in French schools, and administrators lack the legal authority to confiscate phones, the newspaper noted. Some seven percent of students surveyed said they had surreptitiously filmed their teachers. The survey questioned 500 French school students from 17-19 September.

Microsoft unveils line of Windows phones
Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer on Tuesday unveiled his company's line of Windows smartphones in an offensive against Apple's iPhone and Google's Android system. Around 30 types of "Windows phones" with various designs will be available by the end of the year in more than 20 countries. Seven phone-makers, including Sony, Samsung and Toshiba, and 16 operators including Orange, Vodafone and T-Mobile, are involved in the launch. The phones, which combine the ability to make calls, surf the Internet and view videos, carry Microsoft's Windows Mobile 6.5 operating system. "We have done a lot of work on the user interface, we simplified the user interface," Ballmer told a news conference at Microsoft's new French headquarters near Paris in Issy-les-Moulineaux. "We have taken the Internet Explorer browser technologies, and we rebuilt them for the first time for these Windows phones. So you can get the same experience on these phones that you will get on your windows PC," he said. The new mobile operating system was launched simultaneously in France and New York on Tuesday. With Tuesday's launch Microsoft hopes to reassert itself on the smartphone market, where it has lost ground. The sector is considered especially promising, with 29 percent jump in sales expected this year. But in the second quarter only 9.0 percent of all smartphones sold were equipped with Microsoft's operating system, against 12 percent a year earlier, according to the Gartner research group.

Verizon Wireless, Google to release Android phone
Verizon Wireless and Google announced on Tuesday that mobile phones powered by the Internet giant's Android software will be introduced in the next few weeks. Verizon Wireless and Google, in a statement, also said they planned to commit "substantial resources" to a strategic partnership to deliver "leading-edge mobile applications, services and devices." "Through this partnership, we hope to deliver greater innovation in the mobile space to consumers across the US," said Google chief executive Eric Schmidt. "The Android platform allows Verizon Wireless customers to experience faster and easier access to the Web from any location," he said. Verizon Wireless and Google said they will "create, market and distribute products and services" which will be available in Verizon Wireless retail and online stores. The companies said the first Android-based handsets would be introduced "within the next few weeks." They also said they plan to co-develop several Android-based devices which will be made by "leading handset manufacturers." Verizon Wireless is the latest US telecom carrier or manufacturer to adopt Google's open-source Android software in a bid to challenge the Apple iPhone and Blackberry from Research in Motion. Android mobile operating systems are already being used to power smartphones from Motorola and T-Mobile. US wireless carrier Sprint Nextel and Taiwan's HTC have also announced plans to release a touch-screen mobile phone in October powered by Android.
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Oct 6, 2009
Take a careful look at a Vodafone handset in Britain and chances are, somewhere in small print it would say that the mobile telephone was made by China's homegrown phone manufacturer, ZTE Corporation.

Home-grown firms from emerging markets have quietly swooped in on global telecommunications giants, changing the perception that the developing world is just fertile ground for growth to the fact that it is now also home to the industry's biggest players.

ZTE underlined at the Telecom World 2009 fair here that it is aiming to rank among the four biggest telecommunications equipment makers in the next three years.

Within the next five to six years, the target is to get to at least number three, said Xiong Hui, a senior vice president at the group, which not only makes handsets but also builds network systems.

The group is eyeing growth not only in domestic or emerging markets, but also in the developed countries.

"In our early years, we moved very quickly into emerging markets. But in recent years, our growth was really driven by developed countries," Xiong told AFP.

He noted that purchasing power remains strong in Europe and North America, and that while growth is rapid in developing countries, demand there is leaning towards lower-end products.

"We will certainly continue to do what we can to satisfy needs in developing countries ... but most of our growth is coming from North America, Europe and of course, China," he said.

And if "made in China" was once a byword for inferior quality products, it may no longer be so in the world of telecommunications.

"At first when you sell a million products to (foreign companies), they may approach the goods with a test-and-see attitude. By the time you manage to sell 100 million products to them, it means they have already accepted your products," said Xiong.

Likewise, Egypt-based Orascom Telecom is not only providing services to its domestic market, but has also expanded to Italy, Greece and Canada, said Khaled Ismail, a business development officer at the group.

Like Orascom, China's biggest mobile phone operator, China Mobile, is looking beyond its domestic market for growth.

Having already established a presence in Pakistan, it is also aiming to reach into other parts of Asia.

"We would like to expand internationally in emerging markets," said the group's chief executive Wang Jianzhou.

Asia would be a priority market, Wang told AFP, due to its proximity and cultural similarities.

"We have accumulated experience in the developing world," said Wang, adding that China Mobile can rely on its economies of scale to offer more price competitive products.

But beyond telecommunications, the Chinese giant is already looking to the so-called "Internet of Things" -- a wireless network connecting objects ranging from luggage to household appliances -- for its next burst of growth.

Describing one of its applications, the group's chief executive Wang Jianzhou told AFP that the group has tagged sheep in China with barcode chips which allows any meat product made from a particular sheep to be traced back to its farm of origin.

"This will be a huge market. We have great expectations for this. We can't even estimate the size of the market, it is simply too huge," said Wang.

"Imagine, there are only six billion people in the world but there are hundreds of billions of machines and all these machines can potentially be linked up," he added.

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technologies



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Google adds options as search engine race continues
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 1, 2009
Google on Thursday rolled out search engine refinements as Microsoft strives to lure people to Bing and Twitter heightens appetites for real-time updates and news. Google modifications include tools that let people limit online searches to only serve up results from the past hour, or by specific date ranges. "This can be particularly helpful when you're looking for the freshest ... read more







The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2009 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement