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Sharp-er Hon Hai / Foxconn
Update: IGZO: Vision for the Future [a special advertising section by sharpusa.com in The Wall Street Journal, Jan 7, 2013] which was timed for the CES 2013 opening and was used as a detailed landing site for banners put everywhere like here with view (Jan 20):
Powering the resolution revolution
Liquid crystal display (LCD) performance is about to take another leap forward. Existing LCDs have given us remarkable quality in HDTV, tablets and smartphones, as well as reasonably low power consumption. But Sharp Corporation is on the verge of delivering a new technology that will enable much higher resolution and significantly lower power consumption. More
The science behind the breakthrough technology
The hunger for display resolution will probably never be satisfied until displays are indistinguishable from a printed page and as nuanced as a watercolor. IGZO takes a large step in that direction by enabling very high pixel-per-inch counts on small displays and Ultra-High Definition on larger monitors, while retaining brightness. More
Inventing the future
The great thing about a technological breakthrough like IGZO is that it makes dreams come true. Yesterday’s dreams, today’s dreams, tomorrow’s dreams. More
Update: Capital Alliance with Qualcomm, Inc. and Display Technology Development Agreement with its Subsidiary Pixtronix, Inc. [Sharp press release, Dec 4, 2012]
Sharp Corporation (hereafter “Sharp”) today announced that the Company has reached an agreement with Pixtronix Inc. (hereafter Pixtronix), a subsidiary of Qualcomm Incorporated (hereafter “Qualcomm”, NASDAQ: QCOM), concerning the development of Pixtronix’s MEMS*1 displays. In addition, Sharp signed the capital alliance agreement and will issue new shares by a third party allotment (hereafter “This Third Party Allotment”) with Qualcomm Incorporated, a world leader in 3G, 4G and next-generation wireless technologies, as the allottee.
MEMS display to be developed jointly by the two companies is a display using ultrafine process technology and existing display manufacturing infrastructure with features including high color reproducibility and low-power consumption. The development for commercialization of MEMS display will be achieved by integrating Sharp’s core display technology, IGZO*2 and MEMS display technology of Pixtronix.
In addition, Sharp is planning to accept up to 9.9 billion yen*3 from Qualcomm in equity investment to pursue this joint development. This capital will be used for the development of MEMS display and necessary capital investments related thereto targeting for the achievement of the technology for commercialization.
With this agreement, the two companies will consider the possibility of further collaboration of chipsets by Qualcomm Technologies, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Qualcomm Incorporated and IGZO-based display technology for lower power consumption and higher performance of mobile terminals.
With this agreement, Sharp will accelerate its strategy for growth in small- to medium- sized LCD business with IGZO-based display technology as its core, and expand its revenue and corporate value.
*1 MEMS: Micro Electro Mechanical Systems
*2 IGZO: IGZO (InGaZnO) is an oxide comprising indium (In), gallium (Ga), and zinc (Zn). A thin-film transistor using this material has been developed by Sharp in collaboration with Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. (a company based in Kanagawa, Japan, and led by President Shunpei Yamazaki)
*3 Equivalent to 120 million U.S. dollars calculated by exchange rate of December 3, 2012
Summary of the joint development and capital alliance
1. Development for the Commercialization of Next Generation Display
- The next generation display will be jointly developed integrating Sharp’s IGZO-based display technology and Pixtronix’s MEMS display technology. The joint development will establish facilities in the LCD panel plant in Sharp Yonago Corporation (location: Yonago city, Tottori prefecture, Japan) for development of the technology for commercialization.
- The development for next generation displays and necessary investment will begin immediately. At the point when the development of the technology for commercialization is confirmed to be feasible, we will move to the next stage by implementation of equipment targeting to achieve mass production technology.
2. This Third Party Allotment
Sharp will issue new shares by third party allotment with Qualcomm as the allottee by each stage of joint development of the technology for commercialization. The second stage is contingent upon achieving certain milestones.<Notice Regarding the Execution of Capital/Business Alliance Agreement with Qualcomm (US Company) for the Joint Development of Next Generation MEMS Display and the Issue of New Shares by Third Party Allotment (PDF:83KB)>
http://sharp-world.com/corporate/ir/topics/pdf/121204.pdf
Update: Foxconn aims to land iTV orders by investing in Sharp, says CMI former executive [DIGITIMES, June 29, 2012]
Foxconn Electronics’ investment in Sharp is aimed at securing iTV orders from Apple, which will be a positive development for the flat panel industry if the strategy works, according to Ho Chao-yang, former president of Chimei Innolux (CMI) [also controlled by Foxconn] and current chairman of Chi Mei Materials Technology.
It is a win-win strategy for Foxconn and Sharp, and the tie-up is believed to be able to create new markets, Ho stated.
In addition to benefiting the flat panel industry, the launch of iTVs will also benefit polarizer makers, including Chi Mei Materials, Ho added.
Chi Mei Materials posted net profits of NT$1.43 billion (US$47.73 million) or an EPS of NT$3.37 in 2011.
Foxconn [Hon Hai] `Gamble’ on Sharp an Apple TV Bet [Bloomberg YouTube channel, March 28, 2012]
Updates: Hon Hai Estimated to Ship Some 10 Million LCD TVs This Year [CENS, May 8, 2012]
[The Shanghai office of the] Market research firm DisplaySearch [in preparation to the 2012 China Smart TV and Smart Display Conference] estimated Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd., currently the world’s No.1 contract electronics manufacturer, to ship close to 10 million LCD TVs this year thanks to hefty contracts from Sony and Sharp.
Sony has contracted Hon Hai to supply eight million TVs while Sharp has designated the contract supplier to ship 1.5 million TVs this year. Hon Hai has acquired many of Sony’s overseas factories and bought into Sharp in order to secure steady contracts with the two brand name suppliers.
People say Hon Hai is likely to acquire Sharp’s TV factories in mainland China, Indonesia and Mexico to expand its contract TV manufacturing capacity.
Sharp plans to deliver 12-13 million TVs this year while Sony projects to ship 19 million TVs. Both companies will ramp up outsourcing.
As Hon Hai is the primary recipient of the contracts, other contract suppliers like Wistron Corp. are estimated to receive reduced number of contracts from the two companies. Wistron is projected to ship 4.8 million TVs this year, around half the number it shipped last year.
Hon Hai is posing a challenge to the world’s No.1 contract supplier TPV Technology Corp. with the bright shipment estimate. TPV shipped 13-14 million LCD TVs last year to big-name suppliers including Philips, Sony, Vizio, Best Buy, TCL and Skyworth. Its 2012 shipment is projected at 15 million systems.
Compal Electronics Inc. has put its 2012 shipments of LCD TVs at eight million systems mostly thanks to contracts from Toshiba, which will increase outsourcing to 70% of its output this year.
Samsung also revises strategy to begin outsourcing the TVs, planning to depend on contract suppliers for around 30% of its total output this year. This year alone, the company aims to ship 45 million LCD TVs.
– Special analysis: Hon Hai into sharp and subsequent effects [DisplaySearch Shanghai office press release, May 3, 2012] as traslated by Bing (or the alternative translation by Google)
NPD DisplaySearch Shanghai Office, May 3, 2012-the flat panel display industry as a whole in the near future the most shocking news is Hon Hai into sharp’s investment. Be held in Shenzhen on May 24- DisplaySearch 2012 smart TVs in China Summit Forum [see the English version of 2012 China Smart TV and Smart Display Conference]will provide an in-depth analysis of industry news and discussion between participants and Panel and an oversized TV Panel development trends. For more details, please refer to the official Web page of the Conference www.DisplaySearch.com.CN.
On March 27, 2012, Hon Hai and sharp have announced the following two types of investment decisions.
- Hon Hai gets sharp will invest 800 million dollars approximately 11% shares, Hon Hai also became sharp’s largest shareholders, this will ensure that the Hon Hai can be directly involved in operation sharp liquid crystal display sector and related technology research and development projects.
- Hon Hai gets sharp to invest about 800 million dollars in Japan, Sakai 46.5% stake in ten lines, thus ensuring that Hon Hai can has about half of the ten generations line capacity and ownership of the output panel products.
After the investment of the sharp, Hon Hai in the two panel manufacturers in the possession stakes: Chimei 12% equity 10% equity and sharp. Our blog posts in March 27, 2012 (DisplaySearch Blog) , “Hon Hai investments Sharpe-10 line joined the competition with Samsung and LG” (Hon Hai Invests in Sharp’s Gen 10 – Joining to Compete with Samsung and LG) have discussed the background and impact of this massive investment, further analysis of this article will be on the …
Hon Hai and before its investment stake among panel makers Chi Mei, has established in the past a number of strategic alliances with the sharp, specific terms are the following several points:
- Hon Hai was sharp LCD module Assembly contract manufacturer.
- Sharp UV2A photo distribution to it by technology licensing technology licensed to Chi Mei, sharp has helped us improve and odd in Taiwan 7 ‘s and 8 ‘s line of light distribution to the production process of climbing.
- Sharp LCD TV OEM business orders it to the company.
- Chi Mei started to supply some not for the production of the sharp LCD sharp LCD TV.This sharp 8 generations it wire into metal oxides (Oxide TFT) production process and the capacity utilization rate of 10 lines to reduce gradually increased.
- Hon Hai is a major machine-Assembly of the Apple iPhone and iPad. At the same time, sharp is a major Panel suppliers for iPhone and iPad. Both have worked closely together to address the production of Apple mobile phones and tablet computers and technology issues.
- Hon Hai is also a main unit of the Sony LCD TV Assembly; at the same time Sony purchased from a sharp LCD TV panels, mainly sharp 10-generation production line of 40-inch and 60-inch Panel and Panel provides to its television assembly plant for Assembly. In other words, sharp and Hon Hai on Sony LCD TV products to cooperate on the project with indirect relationship.
Taking into account these relationships, you can guess Hon Hai and sharp through both direct and indirect cooperation for a long time on the other side there is a certain understanding. This fusion of the two companies ‘ corporate culture would be very helpful.
Hon Hai into sharp and influence
Once the company into sharp, lots of new status will appear. Direct effect is Hon Hai will obtain sharp 10 lines of a large production capacity, as well as many leading LCD Panel sharp technology. With such huge sums of money into, Sharpe must also be able to improve its financial position and balance of expense reports. According to our analysis, there will be the following:
50% 1, Hon Hai will obtain sharp 10 lines of capacity control
LCD TV market in the current situation, sharp 10 line capacity utilization has been poor.Its total capacity is 10 lines 72K mother glass into a month, but Sharpe has been unable to get enough orders to meet the maximum capacity, capacity utilization is not high.Sharp 10 lines are now mainly produce 40-inch, 60 and 70 inch panel products, but in the first quarter of this year, only input 42k of glass per month. And sharp originally planned in two or three quarters of this year reduced input to 35~36k per month with a minimum of cost. After the arrival of Hon Hai will be by looking for more orders to meet the remaining close to half of the capacity requirements. At the same time, 40-inch, 60 and 70 inch does not singularly American TV panel production within product list, so relatively speaking on the impact of the Chi Mei is also relatively small.
Table a, sharp 10-generation size glass line inputs (in thousands of pieces/month)
Data source: Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report , Q2’12-Q4’12 to forecast values
Table II, sharp glass 10 lines into the size ratio
Data source: Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report, Q2’12-Q4’12 to forecast values
2, the company will expand sharp’s LCD TV manufacturing
Company plans produce 9.5 million in 2012 LCD TV sets, including 1.5 million of the 8 million units of Sony and sharp. Hon Hai was a few years ago Sony and Sony’s LCD TV assembly line production. With sharp Panel capacity and technology, Hon Hai will expand its OEM business. Sharp LCD 2012 TV shipments expected to reach 1,200 to 13 million units, in other words 1.5 million accounted for 12.5% of the Hon Hai worker, compared to the last quarter of 2011 only 3.2% sharp LCD TV is Hon Hai worker, has a good growth. If Hon Hai is sharp more OEM orders, TPV and other contract manufacturer Wistron orders will be directly affected.
Table three, sharp LCD TV manufacturer and percentage list (Q4’11)
Data source: Quarterly LCD TV Value Chain Report
3, Hon Hai will contact sharp many industry-leading Panel technology
Not only large-size LCD Panel technology, Hon Hai will also get sharp’s small and medium size panel technology and mobile devices. As sharp’s largest shareholder, Hon Hai will be greater use of sharp’s reserves of power engineering technology to strengthen its display technology. These technologies include LTPS (low temperature poly silicon, sharp called the CGS), oxide TFT,UV2A,RGBY the four panels of the color spectrum, and a number of other important related technologies. Hon Hai’s need to leverage these technologies to assist them in deep in China Shenzhen Super 5 line shifts from amorphous silicon to LTPS process and Hon Hai in Chengdu city LTPS 6 generations of the construction of a new line-Tianyi display 6 generations line of science and technology, these technologies will help a lot. Rumor has Apple will launch a new display technology used in LCD TV products, Hon Hai can also use a sharp order to win Apple’s advanced technology projects. Even more interesting is that shown in the following figure, Sharpe is also a major patent holders of the naked-eye 3D technologies, which would also become a major advantage of Hon Hai.
Figure, naked-eye 3D technology patent ownership
Data source: Synergytek Consultancy
4, Hon Hai will be on material procurement of parts and components to help sharp
Hon Hai to components suppliers, strong negotiating abilities known to the industry. In his intervention after sharp 10-line operation, Hon Hai is its powerful procurement negotiation skills can also be used to assist the sharp reduction of parts procurement costs.
5, the Chi Mei will benefit from Hon Hai and sharp’s new relationship
Chi Mei was originally through the payment of licensing fees, Forms Panel gets sharp UV2A technology production and supply to the sharp. After this investment, the company also owns shares of the two companies and 12%, Hon Hai will have the opportunity to coordinate between the two companies, greater support of Chi Mei to get sharp, even you can reduce licensing costs and sharp agreement to pay.
6 Panel, sharp will be able to get more customers
Sharpe has been dominated by self production, its LCD TV panels from the main internal supply. In the past, sharp had planned to rely on its strong customer base high-generation panel production capacity expansion, but sharp panel facing a Terminal product under the brand over competitors ‘ challenges. Currently main supply Panel for sharp TV sharp, Philips, Samsung, Sony, TPV and (as described in the following table), Hon Hai after intervention, Hon Hai helps Sharpe to find more customers. However, because there is a competitive relationship between, Hon Hai allows sharp continues to supply to Samsung and TPV would face uncertainty. In addition, Philips and TPV TPVision has a joint venture, and TPV compete on many OEM business with Hon Hai, so delicate.
Table four, first quarter of 2011 sharp LCD TV Panel’s main customers
Data source : Quarterly LCD TV Value Chain Report
Hon Hai and sharp the next possible courses of action
Analysis and judgment based on NPD DisplaySearch, we believe that the Hon Hai will then take the following action:
- Hon Hai could get further sharp located in China, Indonesia and Mexico’s TV manufacturing plant. After getting these manufacturing plants, Hon Hai will also further consolidate its important position in the Sharpe television manufacturing business.
- North America’s leading brand of LCD TV Vizio may balance Hon Hai and sharp’s resources in an attempt to form a new supply chain, and this will also help to Vizio in markets such as China and Europe have more choices. Vizio LCD TV OEM customers currently Hon Hai. This investment Vizio can seek more flexible company and Sharpe’s contract manufacturing and supply Panel. Sharp 60 inch to 70 inch Vizio to enrich their product lines are also useful.
- Hai dedicated business team formed to sharp 10-line business and plant operations.Sharpe 10 lines for the business group supply and capacity allocation, customer choice, Panel pricing and so on all have the right to decide; 10 lines of course they also need to be responsible for the sales and financial performance. Therefore, Hon Hai for sharp TV’s growth in the global market will have a significant impact. Hon Hai was also needed on the productivity of 10 lines to maintain a higher capacity utilization and rational distribution planning is responsible for.
- The company want to optimize the productivity of 10 lines, and clearly is the best cut of 10 lines of products are more than 60 products. Target customers will be sharp, Vizio (60 and 70 inch), Sony (60 inch), Panasonic (60 inch) and channel in mainland China customers (such as SUNY), Vizio, and so on. Now sharp Samsung 60 inch LCD TV Panel supplier, the future is likely to gradually fade. Therefore, Samsung may have alternative sources of supply for its 60-inch TV Panel.
- Samsung on a 60 inch TV products may be forced to only get a supply from Samsung Panel, Samsung will also focus on the 65-inch, 65 inch Panel can have friends, strange, after all, in the United States, BoE and Panda, and many other vendors.
- In order to promote its 60-inch product, best time will be the second half of 2012 television season, especially the November Black Friday sales season in North America.Therefore, Hon Hai will begin and the 60 inch product strategy 10 lines of its potential customers to discuss possible cooperation plan. Example is most likely cooperation, sharp panels and company Foundry manufacture mode of cooperation, between October and November this year in terms of costs and prices to attract customers.This terminal products price LCD TV market this year will have a certain effect.
The impact on other television brands and contract manufacturers
Before the Hon Hai to fund, sharp selling its 10 lines for production of 60-inch products are very positive. For example, in last year’s Black Friday sales in North America, sold its 60-inch LCD TV CCFL Backlight only $ 999. Now with Hon Hai’s power, sharp 60 inch product pricing strategy may be more active.
Hon Hai-sharp Alliance will lead to more intense competition, and also brought more price cuts urge the whole supply chain. Sharp in 2011 in North America and Europe by the end of the 60-inch low-price policy has caused a certain amount of pressure on competitors, already there are concerns in the industry now, price wars in particular, more than 60 inch price war, teamed up with Hon Hai and sharp and is only just beginning, and not what we want to become relaxed.
Of course, Hon Hai and more than 60 inch sharp product policy also means that 60-inch product penetration will further improve in the world, particularly in China and the United States market. Hon Hai to sharp’s investment will also affect other contract manufacturers such as performance of the TPV and Wistron. Now with sharp panel power, Hon Hai in the foundry business will be even more powerful.
For more industry news, master the first flat-panel displays and television industry development and welcome to NPD DisplaySearch 2012 China smart TV Forum .Conference invite the leading television brands, Panel manufacturers, operators and technical programmes, covering Intelligent interactive, 3D TV and flat panel industry and networking with naked-eye 3D, AMOLED, LED backlight, TV technology and market value chain. Global sound control, smart synchronization procedure and intuitive man-machine interface control lead program Nuance, Flingo and Hillcrest Labs is also a keynote speech. In addition, NPD DisplaySearch special brings 2012 global TV for consumer survey results to share, as well as the analysis of the usage of network TV and 3D TV.
Welcome to enjoy early bird discount prices, costs include the two-day meeting of the Conference, information (including USB), afternoon refreshments and VIP dinner, is an extension of your contacts, listen to different views and ideas best occasion for policy.For more details, please refer to the Conference Web site www.DisplaySearch.com.CN,or please contact Shanghai offices.
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Luo Mei-Director of marketing, DisplaySearch China
Phone: +86-21-62752555 Mobile phone: +86-139-1738-2072 Fax: +86-21-32097567 E-mail: michelle.lo@displaysearch.com Company Web site: www.displaysearch.com.cn
– Commentary: The battle cry in the global LCD TV market [DIGITIMES, May 4, 2012]
– CEC-Panda, TPV to jointly set up 10G LCD panel line in Nanjing [DIGITIMES, May 4, 2012]
China-based CEC-Panda LCD Technology and Top Victory, a subsidiary of TPV Technology, will jointly invest CNY35 billion (US$5.57 billion) to set up a 10G line for the production LCD panels. CEC-Panda will take up a 99.2% stake in the 10G line, according to an announcement by the companies.
The 10G line will focus on the production of large- and ultra large-size LCD panels for local brand TV vendors in China.
TPV said the establishment of the 10G plant will save a substantial amount of import tariffs due to the local availability of large-size TV panels in China, while strengthening its global competitiveness.
The 10G line has a cost advantage for the production of large-size panels, according to industry sources. Glass substrates at the 10G line can be cut into eight units of 60-inch TV panels compared to a yield of three units from the 8.5G lines at Samsung Electronics and LG Display, the sources indicated.
However, Taiwan-based panel makers are currently reluctant to commit investments on 10G lines due to heavy capital requirements and the financial strain, the sources commented.
– TPVision [TP Vision] likely to showcase OLED TVs in 2012 IFA, say sources [DIGITIMES, April 17, 2012] TP Vision
TPV Technology has finished a takeover of LCD TV business operations from Philips through the establishment of a joint venture, TPVision [TP Vision], which is expected to showcase OLED TVs at the 2012 IFA consumer electronics trade fair to take place in Berlin, Germany from August 31-September 5, according to industry sources.
TPVision [TP Vision] is likely to purchase large-size OLED panels from LG Display for its production of OLED TVs, the sources noted.
For 2012, TPVision [TP Vision] will continue to launch a series of high-end LED, 3D, and smart TVs under the Philips brand, including the Philips 3500, 4000, 6000 and 7000 lineups, said the sources.
In China, TPVision [TP Vision] will release the 5-series of Philips-branded models, including PFL5825, 5820 and 5721, supporting Philips’ Ambilight and AmbiwOOx technologies, added the sources.
– Increased competition in TV sector as Korean brands promote OLED TVs [DIGITIMES, April 30, 2012]
Competition in the TV sector is continuing to grow as Korean firms are reporting increased sales and developing their TV technology.
Samsung Electronics’ consumer electronics business, which includes TVs, saw its operating profits grow 550% on year to US$467 million in first-quarter 2012 as Smart TV and LED TV sales increased. This is mostly in part because of the firm’s success in commercializing technologies for Smart TVs, OLED TVs and direct-type LED TVs, commented industry observers.
Despite Japanese brands designing TVs that have 3D and Internet connection features, Korean-brand TVs have better voice-controlled functions and are more advanced with OLED technology, added the sources.
With Samsung setting a shipment of 48 million LCD TVs, and LG Electronics 46 million for 2012, the target of Sony, the third laregest TV vendor in 2011, is only 20 million units. Sony says its focus has shifted from boosting unit shipments to providing high value added products.
However, Samsung is set to merge its subsidiaries, Samsung Display, Samsung Mobile Display and S-LCD into one for OLE technlogy development, with the sources saying OLED technology mature may not mature until 2013-2014. However, the sources said Korean manufacturers will get the upper hand on the OLED industry before Japanese and Taiwan brands, which will pose challenges in the market.
– China TV firms see increasing sales as domestic demand heats up [DIGITIMES, May 7, 2012]
China TV firms have overtaken Japanese and Korean ones in China’s market as Chinese consumers are increasingly purchasing LCD TVs.
Sources said China brands are pushing their products domestically mainly in third- and fourth-tier cities as populations there are seeing economic growth.
Chinese brands have smart TVs similar to Korean and Japanese brands with functions such as voice control and cloud computing, and they have price advantages over Japanese and Korean ones, making their TVs a popular choice for domestic consumers added sources.
Chinese brands are looking to become more competitive by putting more added value features in their products and are figuring out strategies for expanding sales abroad amongst Korean firms pushing their OLED technology and Japanese firms lowering prices for high-end LCD TVs.
Display Research, however, stated that China’s market will see a big shift in 2012 as past government subsidies for purchasing new energy efficient TVs have already expired, making China’s TV brands more reliant on what kind of competitive edge they can offer for consumers.
– Foxconn may receive large-size TV orders from Vizio, say sources [DIGITIMES, May 7, 2012]
Foxconn Electronics is likely to also land large-size OEM TV orders from Vizio in addition to existing clients including Sharp and Suning Appliance after it took up a 46.5% stake in Sharp’s 10G LCD panel line, according to industry sources.
The inclusion of Vizio into the Sharp-Foxconn alliance is also expected to result in a reduction in shipments of 60-inch TV panels to Samsung Electronics, which has been counting on Sharp and in-house facilities for the supply of large-size panels, the sources indicated.
The possible shift of shipment policy at Sharp will force Samsung to focus on 65-inch products with the 65-inch panels coming from AU Optronics (AUO), Chimei Innolux (CMI) or even BOE Technology, the sources noted.
Foxconn is expected to see its shipments of OEM TVs reach 10 million units in 2012, including eight million units to Sony, 1.5 million units to Sharp and the remaining to Panasonic, Vizio and Suning, said the sources.
Foxconn’s increasing shipments of OEM TVs will also affect rival company Wistron, which is expected to see its OEM TV shipments slide to five million units in 2012 compared to eight million in 2011, the sources estimated.
End of Updates
Sharp Sells Stake to Hon Hai [Foxconn] [WSJDigitalNetwork YouTube channel, March 27, 2012]
Sharp Establishes Strategic Global Partnership with Hon Hai Group [Sharp press release, March 27, 2012]
Sharp Corporation (hereinafter “Sharp”) entered into agreement today with Hon Hai group, the world’s leading EMS (electronic manufacturing service) company, to establish strategic global partnership to collaborate in various business fields, and to issue new shares to Hon Hai group through third-party allotment (hereinafter “the issuance of new shares through third-party allotment”).
The market surrounding electronics industry is becoming severe, with rapid price decline due to the development of digital technology and increasing competition in a global market. We believe the timely action is necessary to tackle these changes in the market.
Looking at the business environment, Hon Hai Precision Industry, the key company of Hon Hai group, saw Sharp’s LCD technology with high reputation, and decided to procure ultimately up to 50% of large-size LCD panels and LCD modules manufactured at the LCD panel plant in Sakai-city, Osaka, Japan. The LCD panel plant will be mutually managed by one company set by partner companies.
In addition, this partnership allows each company to establish a new business model, combining each company’s strength, to launch cost competitive component and products fit to market demand by utilizing Sharp’s potential for the development of one-of-a-kind components and products with Hon Hai group’s mounting technology and cost competitiveness.
Sharp plans to enhance this partnership by broadening the collaboration field, to allocate funds received from Hon Hai group by the issuance of new shares through third-party allotment, to the investment for the new technology introduction, to increase mid-and long- term profitability, and to strengthen competitive edge in the global market.
Overview of Strategic Partnership
1. Stabilize LCD panel plant operation in Sakai and strengthen cost competitiveness by purchasing power of Hon Hai Precision Industry
Hon Hai Precision Industry will procure ultimately up to 50% of LCD panels and LCD modules manufactured by SDP. Both companies will mutually take in part of the management through one company set by partner companies, which enables stable operation of the LCD panel plant in Sakai.
The two companies will take advantage of the economy of scale and material procurement in LCD panel and LCD TV fields, and will further enhance cost competitiveness in the global market.
*Share holding rate of SDP:
Current status:
Sharp: Approx. 93%
Sony: Approx. 7%
After signing the partnership:
Sharp: Approx. 46.5%
Terry Gou and others including investment corporations: Approx. 46.5%
Sony: Approx. 7%2. The issuance of new shares to Hon Hai group through third-party allotment
Sharp will issue new shares to Hon Hai group through third-party allotment (the number of new shares to be issued: 121,649,000 shares)
*The issuance of new shares through third-party allotment and share holding rate after the issuance of new shares:
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd.: 4.06%
Foxconn Technology Co., Ltd.: 0.65%
Foxconn (FAR EAST) Limited: 2.53%
Q-Run Holdings Limited: 2.64%
[Total of 9.88%]
Source information is from: Issuance of New Shares Through Third-Party Allotment Associated with Business Alliance and Partial Transfer of Shares in Subsidiaries [Sharp Corporation, March 27, 2012] as per the following essential details compiled from that:
Capital Increase Through Third-Party Allotment (no director from Hon Hai is scheduled to be dispatched as of today in association with the Capital and Business Alliance): with issue price of 550 yen per share
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd ([also known as Foxconn, http://www.foxconn.com/] represented by chairman: Terry Tai-Ming Gou)
– major shareholder and ratio of shareholding: Terry Tai-Ming Gou 12,02%
– 50,000,000 shares [27,500 million yen = US$ 332.0M]
Foxconn Technology Co., Ltd (represented by president: Lin, Don-Lang)
– [as per Businessweek: engages in the design sales and manufacturing of Mag/Al casing and mechanic parts primarily in Taiwan. It also involves in the design sales and manufacturing thermal modules for O/T, NB, server, and other 3C products. In addition, the company engages in the design sales and assembly of consumer electronic products.]
– major shareholder and ratio of shareholding: Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd 10,09%
– 8,029,000 shares [4,415,950 thousand yen = US$ 53.3M]
Foxconn (FAR EAST) Limited (represented by directors: Yu Huang, Chiu-Lian, Lee Jin-Ming)
– [as per Annual Report for 2010*: Investment holdings in Mainland China, Europe and North America and Hong Kong electronics manufacturers]
– major shareholder and ratio of shareholding: Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd 100%
– 31,143,000 shares [17,128,650 thousand yen = US$ 206.8M]
[*for Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd and subsidiaries consolidated]
Q-Run Holdings Limited (represented by director: Lee Han-Ming)
– [as per Businessweek: through its subsidiaries manufactures and distributes computer thermals and hardware parts]
– Foxconn Technology Co., Ltd 100%
– 32,477,000 shares [17,862,350 thousand yen = US$ 215.6M]
Total: 121,649,000 shares[66,906,950 thousand yen = US$ 807.7M]
Transfer of Shares in a Subsidiary: Sharp Display Products Corporation
Terry Gou (Terry Tai-Ming Gou):
– 1,320,000 shares providing a holding rate of 46.48%
(Sharp Corporation the same 46.48%, Sony Corporation 7.04%)
– Transfer price: 66,000 million yen [US$ 796.8M]
(as per the registered capital: 6,972 million yen [US$ 84.2M])
Sharp and Sony Amend Agreement Regarding Joint Venture to Produce and Sell Large-Sized LCD Panels and Modules [Sharp press release, March 28, 2012]
Sharp Corporation (“Sharp”) and Sony Corporation (“Sony”) announced that they have agreed to further amend the joint venture agreement originally executed by the parties in July 2009, as amended in April 2011, for the establishment and operation of Sharp Display Products Corporation (“SDP“), a joint venture to produce and sell large-sized LCD panels and modules.
Pursuant to the April 2011 amendment, Sharp and Sony discussed possible further contributions by Sony to SDP, but they have agreed that Sony will not make additional capital injections to SDP. The parties have also agreed to set a new time period, up to the end of September 2012, to permit study of the future direction of the joint venture, including with respect to the treatment of the shares that Sony has in SDP (7.04% of all issued shares) and possible purchases of large-sized LCD panels and modules. Under the March 2012 amendment, Sony may require that Sharp acquire all of Sony’s shares in SDP, even before the end of September 2012, upon the occurrence of certain events such as a transfer by Sharp to any third party of some or all of the shares that Sharp has in SDP.
On July 1, 2009, Sharp transferred its LCD panel plant in Sakai City, Osaka Prefecture, to SDP. On December 29, 2009, Sony invested 10 billion yen into SDP in exchange for new shares issued by SDP to Sony (representing 7.04% of the issued shares in SDP) and, as a result, SDP became a joint venture company of Sharp and Sony. Since then, Sharp and Sony have continued discussion about possible further contributions by Sony to SDP.
Nokia trying the first Lumia month in China with China Telecom exclusive
Update: Nokia Recruits Locals to Compete in China [Business Week, March 28, 2012]
“In China, the game is far from over,” said Derek Ling, who runs Tianji, China’s biggest professional networking site with 9 million users. “The iPhone is not nearly as dominant in China as it is in the U.S.” Apple has been “having difficulty negotiating the right terms with the biggest provider in China, which is China Mobile (941), so everything is up for grabs.”
Advantages of such a launch strategy for Nokia:
- China Telecom has been a top 3G performer so far (3G subscribers in millions):

- A one time opportunity to gauge high-end Lumia performance against the current market leader as: China Telecom to Offer iPhone 4S in China on March 9 [China Telecom press release, Feb 21, 2012]
China Telecom today announced it will offer iPhone 4S to customers in China beginning Friday, March 9. iPhone 4S will be available starting at RMB 0 for the 16GB, 32GB and 64GB models on select contracts in China Telecom’s authorized stores and online at http://www.189.cn. Online reservations will be available beginning Friday, March 2.


source: Annual Results 2011 – China Telecom Corporation Limited [March 20, 2012] - As such it is also a very good fit for Nokia’s Lumia strategy is capitalizing on platform enhancement opportunities with location-based services, better photographic experience etc. [Jan 12, 2012]: … in 2011, China Telecom … accelerated development of innovative businesses, with substantial progress in the strategy of the “Three New Roles” (i.e. “a leader of intelligent pipeline”, “a provider of integrated platforms” and “a participant in content and application development”); …
source: China Telecom 2012 Annual Work Conference Highlights [Dec 21, 2011]

source: Annual Results 2011 – China Telecom Corporation Limited [March 20, 2012] - A very good fit for Exclusive applications and services [strategy of Nokia] for a uniquely local experience:

China Telecom and Nokia have worked closely together to bring integrated China Telecom services that target young people including music, games, videos, and integrated reading apps right onto the Nokia 800C home screen. To reach this target market, the Nokia 800C will be featured prominently in Tianyi FlyYoung shops, a distribution arm and new, youth-centered sub-brand of China Telecom.People purchasing Nokia Lumia smartphones in China will have access to exclusive applicationssuch as magazines from Trends and special offers for free downloads of popular gaming titles such as Fruit Ninja and PVZ.- Trends, a provider of highly interactive fashion magazine applications, will launch Cosmopolitan first forNokia Lumia smartphones and provide people using a Nokia Lumia phone with free access to For Him Magazine (FHM), Harper’s Bazaar and Esquire magazines inMarketplace, opening today.
– As an added incentive for people using a Nokia Lumia smartphone in China, Nokia will soon offer 100,000 free downloads of the hit gaming titles Fruit Ninja and PVZ through the Nokia Collection in Marketplace.Nokia and Microsoft also announced the Be Top program, which is designed to encourage and support developers in creating great new applications on Windows Phone specifically for people in China.
These exciting offers and the BeTop development program illustrate Nokia’s commitment to the local ecosystem of application developers and service providers. Through joint innovation with leading local providers, Nokia is able to offer Lumia users access to all major Internet services in China including Sina, SOHU, Tencent and Renren. When paired with the choice of nearly 20,000 apps available for download through Marketplace, people using a Nokia Lumia smartphone in China can create a truly personalized and locally relevant experience on their device.
Source: China Telecom and Nokia launch first CDMA Windows Phone in China [Nokia press release, March 28, 2012]
More information:
– Nokia launches first CDMA Windows Phone in China [Windows Phone blog, March 28, 2012]
– China says Ni Hao to the Nokia Lumia [Nokia Conversations, March 28, 2012]
– Nokia seeks to retake China market share [Reuters, March 28, 2012]
Nokia Chief Executive Stephen Elop unveiled two models based on the Lumia 610 and Lumia 800 cellphones but designed for Chinese networks, which will go on sale initially through China Telecom, the nation’s third-largest carrier.
The Lumia 800C will be sold without a carrier contract for 3,599 yuan ($573) from April, Elop said. Pricing for the 610C, to launch in China in the second quarterand intended as an entry-level phone to bring younger users to Nokia Windows phones, will be announced later.
Nokia also plans to bring its 700, 800 and 900 models to the China market, and they will eventually run on all three of China’s mobile networks, including China Mobile and China Unicom, said Colin Giles, Nokia’s executive vice president for global sales.
He would not give a time frame for their introduction to the Chinese market, for which they are specifically designed. “We’ve invested heavily in China,” Giles told reporters. “We’re creating innovation in China for China, which a number of our competitors aren’t doing.”
…
Shares in Nokia rose 3.6 percent to 4.14 euros, boosted after Sweden’s Swedbank lifted its rating on the stock to “buy” from “neutral”.
Nokia has lost its No. 1 position in the Chinese mobile handset market to Samsung, with Samsung at 24.3 percent and Nokia 19.6 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, according to market researcher Gartner.
China’s Huawei Technologies and ZTE stood at 12.6 percent and 11.1 percent, respectively, with Apple a small but buzz-grabbing 7.5 percent.
Google adding a style guide (design guidelines) to Android (4 years late)
While it is still quite distant from Microsoft’s achievements in design, and taken together with Nokia even more so, it is better to be late than never come to that discipline at all. And Google is definitely here by any accounts now. A couple of quite impressive illustrations:
– “Pure Android” dialer, action bar and settings design solutions in the upper row vs. the corresponding iOS designs:
– “Pure Android” sampling of UI elements from Android, iOS and Windows Phone 7:
– “Pure Android” sampling of icons from Android, iOS and Windows Phone 7:
Introducing the Android Design site [Android developers, Jan 12, 2012]
[This post is by Christian Robertson, who leads the Android visual design group. He is also the designer of the Roboto font family. —Tim Bray]
Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0) is our biggest redesign yet — both for users and developers. We’ve enhanced the UI framework with new interactions and styles that will let you create Android apps that are simpler and more beautiful than ever before.
To help you in that mission, we’re introducing Android Design: the place to learn about principles, building blocks, and patterns for creating world-class Android user interfaces. Whether you’re a UI professional or a developer playing that role, these docs show you how to make good design decisions, big and small.
The Android User Experience Team is committed to helping you design amazing apps that people love, and this is just the beginning. In the coming months, we’ll expand Android Designwith more in-depth content. And watch this blog for a series of posts about design, and invitations to Google+ hangouts on the topics you care about most.
So head on over to Android Design, and make something amazing!
Matias Duarte interview: Android Design guidelines announcement [TheVerge, Jan 12, 2012]
Four essential twitter reflections on that:
mjeppsen Matt Jeppsen
4 yrs after Android was released. Brilliant. RT@verge: Google introducing UI & style guidelines for Ice Cream Sandwich http://bit.ly/zfgXSFrazvanpetru Razvan
Reading the Android UI guidelines, one thing’s clear – they’re not in the same league as iOS/WP7 yet.JCDunn Jonathan Dunn
I like the intent behind the Android design guidelines. Content too. Adoption’s the nut. Especially w. an uncurated app ecosystem.nickheer Nick Heer
“Please stop making iOS-style apps” is a good call from Google: http://developer.android.com/design/patterns/pure-android.html
Please note that before Android had only rudimentary User Interface Guidelines [June 1, 2009]:
- Icon Design Guidelines and Android Icon Templates Pack»
- Your applications need a wide variety of icons, from a launcher icon to icons in menus, dialogs, tabs, the status bar, and lists. The Icon Guidelines describe each kind of icon in detail, with specifications for the size, color, shading, and other details for making all your icons fit in the Android system. The Icon Templates Pack is an archive of Photoshop and Illustrator templates and filters that make it much simpler to create conforming icons.
- Widget Design Guidelines
- A widget displays an application’s most important or timely information at a glance, on a user’s Home screen. These design guidelines describe how to design widgets that fit with others on the Home screen. They include links to graphics files and templates that will make your designer’s life easier.
- Activity and Task Design Guidelines
- Activities are the basic, independent building blocks of applications. As you design your application’s UI and feature set, you are free to re-use activities from other applications as if they were yours, to enrich and extend your application. These guidelines describe how activities work, illustrates them with examples, and describes important underlying principles and mechanisms, such as multitasking, activity reuse, intents, the activity stack, and tasks. It covers this all from a high-level design perspective.
- Menu Design Guidelines
- Android applications make use of Option menus and Context menus that enable users to perform operations and navigate to other parts of your application or to other applications. These guidelines describe the difference between Options anontext menus, how to arrange menu items, when to put commands on-screen, and other details about menu design.
This is in sharp contrast to the other platforms as per:
UI Guidelines for mobile and tablet web app design [Mobile Web Programming, Oct 15-20, 2010]
Official user interface (UI) and user experience (UX) guidelines from the manufacturers, links to which you can find below, are a source of inspiration for mobile web and app design. Here, you will find guidelines, samples, tips, and descriptions of common mistakes. Many of the guidelines focus on native application development, but we can apply most parts of them to mobile web design too.
Remember to provide the best possible experience on each platform. Do not deliver an iPhone experience to a BlackBerry user. Every platform has its own UI and usability guidelines that every user is expecting on your app.
- iOS Human Interface Guidelines (iPhone, iPod and iPad) – PDF version
iPad Human Interface GuidelinesiPad HIG was merged with iPhone in iOS HIG (see above)- UI Guidelines for BlackBerry 6.0 Smartphones – PDF version
- UI Guidelines for BlackBerry 4.x, 5.x Smartphones – PDF version
- Android User Interface Guidelines
- Nokia N9 & Meego 1.2 Harmattan UX Guidelines
- UI Guildelines for BlackBerry PlayBook – PDF version
- BlackBerry Browser Content Design Guidelines (PDF)
- Motorola’s Best Practices for Android UI
- Nokia Design & User Experience Library
- Symbian^3 UI Style Guidelines (PDF)
- Nokia Developer Design Portal (PDF)
- Symbian UI Wiki
- Nokia Series 40 UI Style Guide
- Bada Application UI Guide
- Sony Ericsson UI Rulebook
- UI Guidelines for Windows Mobile
- Windows Touch UI Guideline
- UI Design & Interaction Guide for Windows Phone 7 (PDF)
- webOS UI Guidelines
- Hildon UI Guidelines for Nokia Maemo
- MeeGo UI Design Guidelines (shared by Mark Jones)
More tips on mobile web design on the Programming the Mobile Web book.
Do you know any other UI Guideline? Insert the link on the comment area.
Now a verdict on the new Android Design Guideline from the maturity point of view:
Half-Assed [Nick Heer, Jan 12, 2012]
On one hand:
Android OEMs and app developers will be provided with a set of in-depth guidelines on how to build atop of Android.
The initial version of the guide includes information like typography, color palettes, and other stylistic advice, as well as a breakdown of the components making up the Android UI.
That’s great for everyone. Developers get a clear idea of what an Android app should look like, and how it should behave. Users get a consistent, reliable experience.
On the other hand, though:
Matias stresses that what we’re seeing today is a purely optional aid for Android designers, not something that Google will seek to enforce.
Half-assed.
The Pure Android page is a wise attempt to note Android conventions and to try to convince developers not to adopt iOS conventions. It’s a good guide throughout, but without more direct intervention from Google, Android will remain a convoluted and fragmented platform.
Exclusive: Google Launches Style Guide for Android Developers [WIRED, Jan 12, 2012]
Matias Duarte, the head of user experience at Android, aims to change the way developers design for the platform.
…On Thursday, Google launched Android Design, a web site created specifically to help aid developers in the creation of applications for ICS [version 4.0, also known as ‘Ice Cream Sandwich’]. The site offers a comprehensive visual to third-party application developers, giving suggestions on everything from how to implement different visual elements to overall back-end patterns for the OS itself.
In theory, it will help developers better understand just how the Android team thinks about layout and implementation, while simultaneously giving suggestions to interaction designers on how to maintain visual integrity. Basically, it will help both first-time developers and Android veterans make apps look less crappy.
“We haven’t really had a style guide,” Duarte says. “We haven’t really given you a lot of guidance on how to migrate your application from a phone, perhaps, to a tablet. We’ve done so only by example.”
Which has been a chief complaint of developers whenever another version of the OS is released. Developers are forced to reverse engineer the code from the new version and translate that to the previous version of Android to figure out how to move their app to the new software environment. What’s more, Android averages a new version launch about twice a year. It’s an incredibly fast pace in the mobile world, not to mention a pain in the ass for mobile developers who just want to keep their apps up to speed.
…
“This is the second part of our Ice Cream Sandwich launch,” he says. As this site goes up, I can feel like it’s finished. Like ICS is truly complete.”
Continuing with some more twitter reflections on the style guidelines:
gameshints Erik
Will crappy android apps be a thing of the past? New style guidelines from the android team: http://developer.android.com/design/index.htmlandroid.com/design/index.h…Godzilla07 Jacob
Another thing for Android porters to ignore “@verge: Google introducing UI and style guidelines for Ice Cream Sandwich http://bit.ly/zfgXSF”PANCAKESo Terry
#Android#Design site. Finally a good resource for patterns, style guidelines and building blocks of android UI design. http://developer.android.com/design/index.htmlandroid.com/design/index.h…
A few other twitter reflections on the style guide:
tsuki_chama Ian Renton
Wow, Android finally has a UI style guide. Shame that didn’t arrive four years ago!noscope Joen
From the Android style guide (http://moc.co/8b): “Don’t mimic UI elements from other platforms” — Amen!Meza Meirion Williams
Android’s UI grows up: A decent style guide for UI, UX and designers of Android applications http://developer.android.com/designandroid.com/designDeveloper_Tech Developer Tech News
Developers get design help from#Android, thanks to new style guide http://bit.ly/ylxLSg#Dtech#appdev#google#design
More on the UI guidelines:
sanderwehkamp Sander Wehkamp
Android has proper UI guidelines, Finally#late http://developer.android.com/design/index.htmlandroid.com/design/index.h…Still well donerennarda Andy Rennard
Also, the fact that Android’s UI guidelines have only just been published speaks volumes.satyesh Satish Pamidimarthi
Thank you#Google for finally giving us a decent UI guidelines http://ow.ly/8rXiu . Now give us a better#AndroidIDEandrew_k Andrew K
Haven’t looked at it closely yet, but any official Android UI guidelines is better than nothing http://developer.android.com/design/index.htmlandroid.com/design/index.h…#devsmakeuglyuimaxt3r Max Al Farakh
Oh look, it’s been just four years and Android already has UI guidelines: http://developer.android.com/design/index.htmlandroid.com/design/index.h…
A few more twitter reflections on the design guideline:
techknow Juixe TechKnow
Google took yet another page from Apple and released a Android design guideline document.taylorling Taylor Ling
I am truly impressed with the new@AndroidDesign Guideline. A good guide for me to improve my Android GUI Design Kit.brunning Benjamin Running
Sick of ugly design, Google launches Android design guideline site: http://bit.ly/wF9mHC
The first appraisal: Notes From the Android Design Guidelines [Nick Heer, Jan 12, 2012]
I posted earlierabout Google’s new Android Design Guidelines. This is a great guide to help developers understand the platform and all its own peculiarities, especially when an app is developed for multiple platforms. I disagree with a number of these conventions, but that’s another topic entirely. The guide itself is well-written, though I have some thoughts and comments for some of the points.
The Themes page:
Android provides three system themes that you can choose from when building apps for Ice Cream Sandwich:
- Holo Light
- Holo Dark
- Holo Light with dark action bars
Pick the system theme that best matches the needs and design aesthetics for your app.
Like Apple’s infamous brushed metal look, the Holo Light with dark action bars theme is an ill-defined third choice. There seem to be no guidelines on its use. The Light and Dark themes are easy enough to interpret, as the former is for text-based apps — the Gmail app is shown as an example. The Dark theme is clearly geared towards multimedia and utility applications. Google uses Settings as their example, but Photos also uses this theme. They’ve chosen Google Talk, however, to represent the dark action bars variant of Holo Light, and I don’t understand the context of its use.
From the Metrics and Grids section:
Touchable UI components are generally laid out along 48 [display pixel] units.
This is much clearer than iOS’ layout.
The section on icon design is decidedly less clear, especially in the Launchericon style. There’s an ill-considered mix of photorealistic icons, ones that look like clipart, and others that are effectively flat. Nothing lines up. The colours are inconsistent. This makes any view with those icons look cluttered and messy.
The App Structure page reinforces this system-wide inconsistency:
Google Books’ detail view is all about replicating the experience of reading an actual book. The page-flip animation reinforces that notion.
This counters what Matias Duarte said when interviewed by Josh Topolsky:
“Right now if you look at all of these applications that are designed in this real-objecty, faux wood paneling, faux brushed metal, faux jelly button kind of thing… if you step back and you really look at them, they look kind of juvenile. They’re not photorealistic, they’re illustrations.”
He’s on a roll now. Clearly Matias has spent a lot of time thinking about what he doesn’t like.
“If you look back at the web, people did the same thing. All these cartoony things hanging off a page. If you tried that today, people would be laughing, unless you were doing it in a kitsch, poking-fun-at-yourself, retro art way.”
He then goes on to say that taking the Microsoft approach of stark minimalism is too constraining, but in the opposite direction. The threshold for Android is clearly somewhere along those lines, but what Google is recommending is clearly more cartoonish than the actual UI that Apple ships, and which Duarte called “cartoony”.
From the Writing Style page:
Be friendly. [This d]ialog that appears when an application crashes [is] confusing and annoying — “Sorry” just rubs salt in the wound.
I don’t know when it became trendy to make error messages cuddly, but it’s irritating. Good on Google for clarifying this. On the other hand, I’m surprised Android apps display any crash dialogue at all. It isn’t 1998 any more; applications have the ability automatically send crash reports.
Speaking of crash messages, Google seems to be unclear on what they intend. On the Writing Style page, they would like developers to be clear, concise and friendly. However, on the Dialogspage, one of the examples notes that “the process com.android.phone has stopped”. How is that friendly?
The Pure Android page cracked me up. It’s clearly an attempt to caution developers that Android is not iOS, and designing for it requires different elements with different conventions. For the most part, it avoids ragging on iOS, but there’s a cute dig on one of the items:
A common pattern on other platforms is the display of right-pointing carets on line items that allow the user to drill deeper into additional content.
Android does not use such indicators on drill-down line items. Avoid them to stay consistent with the platform and in order to not have the user guess as to what the meaning of those carets may be.
But barely-readable sliders and unclear WiFi connection status is not confusing. Got it. Unclear, convoluted difference between back and up? Not a problem. An up arrow that causes a descending action? Perfectly fine.
By the way, what about the reverse, where an application is developed for Android and then ported to iOS? Shouldn’t a Google-developed app adopt the conventions of the platform too? As Alan Zeino points out, this doesn’t seem to be a priority.
I recommend flipping through the entire guide, if only for the use of Hipster Ipsum on many of the pages. It’s too bad these guidelines won’t be enforced. It’s an incredibly well-written and clearly annotated site, but it bears little relevance if these principles don’t gain widespread adoption.
[I posted earlier about Google’s new …]
Half-Assed [Nick Heer, Jan 12, 2012]
On one hand:
Android OEMs and app developers will be provided with a set of in-depth guidelines on how to build atop of Android.
The initial version of the guide includes information like typography, color palettes, and other stylistic advice, as well as a breakdown of the components making up the Android UI.
That’s great for everyone. Developers get a clear idea of what an Android app should look like, and how it should behave. Users get a consistent, reliable experience.
On the other hand, though:
Matias stresses that what we’re seeing today is a purely optional aid for Android designers, not something that Google will seek to enforce.
Half-assed.
The Pure Android page is a wise attempt to note Android conventions and to try to convince developers not to adopt iOS conventions. It’s a good guide throughout, but without more direct intervention from Google, Android will remain a convoluted and fragmented platform.
VIZIO’s two pronged strategy: Android based V.I.A. Plus device ecosystem + Windows based premium PC entertainment
The VIZIO Internet Apps® Plus (“V.I.A. Plus”) ecosystem of devices was launched on June 28, 2011 with the introduction of VIZIO’s first tablet. Each VIZIO V.I.A. Plus product features a VIZIO-designed user interface that is not only intuitive but also consistent across screens, for superior ease-of-use for the casual, non-technical user. It is built on the Android™ platform. All the information about that innovative ecosystem is available in an earlier “collection post” on this blog: Innovative entertainment class [Android] tablet from VIZIO plus a unified UX for all cloud based CE devices, from TVs to smartphones [Aug 21, 2011].
We will look into the essential expansion of V.I.A. Plus announced at CES 2012 later. Here is sufficient to include just a short piece from the above mentioned collection in order to make the concept of V.I.A. Plus ecosystem absolutely clear (before we will go into the details of the brand new Windows based premium PC entertainment from VIZIO):
VIZIO Tablet [VIZIO video, Aug 1, 2011]: the value proposition video from the vendor which is extremely well demonstrating not only the VIZIO-specific V.I.A. Plus UI but the whole new user experience:
This week Vizio has added the alternative, Windows based PC entertainment to its portfolio as well: VIZIO Bursts Into the Computing Realm with Five Innovative and Sleek PCs Set to Redefine Consumer Entertainment [VIZIO press release, Jan 9, 2011]
CES — VIZIO, America’s #1 LCD HDTV Company*, announced today an innovative line of five premium personal computers designed to turn the PC market upside down and accommodate the entertainment needs and wants demanded by consumers. Set to launch with Windows 7 in spring 2012, the elegantly designed PCs will provide an entertainment experience only VIZIO can deliver, complete with top notch 2.1 audio and video quality. The personal computing line consists of two all-in-one computers, two thin + light notebooks and one notebook. VIZIO’s line was developed to raise the bar in personal and home entertainment while also keeping powerful performance at the forefront.
Much like its entrance into the HDTV category nearly a decade ago, VIZIO believes it has identified a need in the PC world for a device that addresses a recent change in consumer behavior. Growing popularity in video streaming services has resulted in the need for personal computers that can stream content for a family movie night and put together an important business presentation the following day. The VIZIO PCs address this change by meeting both the entertainment and productivity demands.
VIZIO PCs will be a continued progression of the VIZIO Internet Apps (V.I.A.) Ecosystem, which provides a seamless, cohesive entertainment experience across multiple screens. As the V.I.A. experience spans across the brand’s HDTVs, Blu-Ray players, tablets and more, today’s announcement represents a natural extension of the experience over to the PC as well. Together with Windows, VIZIO’s PCs will deliver power, mobility and familiar ease of use, ensuring a fast, fluid and immersive user experience that distinguishes them from devices that function and those that are truly entertaining.
“PCs are often associated with productivity and the workplace, routinely lacking the excitement that would be expected with what and how consumers want to use their PCs today – as an extension of their entertainment experience,” said Matt McRae, Chief Technology Officer. “VIZIO wanted to change that. Our new line of VIZIO PCs are truly high quality and consumer focused, delivering enhanced multimedia capabilities while upholding our high standards of performance, style and design.”
Complete with high-performance hardware, the VIZIO PCs boast a clean system image optimized by Microsoft and an elegant industrial design incorporating authentic, high-quality materials that is sure to turn heads both on-the-go and in the living room. Known for HDTVs that boast stunning high-definition pictures, VIZIO engineered its new line of PCs to meet the same high-quality standards.
Always committed to pushing the envelope, VIZIO believes their groundbreaking PCs will alter the way consumers view computing. With entertainment at the heart of the VIZIO PCs, users will find that consuming content will be just as desirable as on their HDTV. With an already high demand for devices that are able to multitask between work and play, the consumer’s choices are limited. VIZIO accepted the challenge and has elegantly bridged both worlds to provide a Windows-based PC that offers a rich entertainment experience alongside tools needed for getting work done.
“We’re excited to see VIZIO enter the PC market and the positive impact they will have on the Windows ecosystem,” said Steven Guggenheimer, CVP OEM Division, Microsoft. “With their expertise in providing connected entertainment experiences and an innovative go-to-market approach, we look forward to working with VIZIO to bring premium consumer PCs to market.”
VIZIO anticipates its entry into the PC category will challenge consumers to expect more from their computers enabling them to play as hard as they work. Discover more at http://www.vizio.com/CES.
*Source: IHS iSuppli Corporation Research Q4 2011 Market Tracker Report of Q4 2010 – Q3 2011.
About VIZIO
VIZIO, Inc., “Entertainment Freedom For All,” headquartered in Irvine, California, is America’s #1 LCD HDTV Company. In Q2 2007, VIZIO skyrocketed to the top by becoming the #1 shipping brand of flat panel HDTVs in North America and in Q3 2007 became the first American brand in over a decade to lead in U.S. LCD HDTV shipments. Since 2007 VIZIO LCD HDTV shipments remain in the top ranks in the U.S. and were #1 for the total year in 2009 and 2010. VIZIO is committed to bringing feature-rich consumer electronics to market at a value through practical innovation. VIZIO offers a broad range of award winning consumer electronics. VIZIO’s products are found at Costco Wholesale, Sam’s Club, Walmart, Target, BJ’s Wholesale, and other retailers nationwide along with authorized online partners. VIZIO has won numerous awards including a #1 ranking in the Inc. 500 for Top Companies in Computers and Electronics, Fast Company’s 6th Most Innovative CE Company of 2009, and made the lists of Ad Age’s Hottest Brands, CNET’s Editor’s Choice, CNET Best of CES 2011 – Television, IGN Best of CES – Television, Bluetooth.org Best of CES, Good Housekeeping’s Best Big-Screens, PC World’s Best Buy, Popular Mechanics Editor’s Choice and OC Metro’s 10 Most Trustworthy Brands among many other prestigious honors. For more information, please call 888-VIZIOCE or visit on the web at www.VIZIO.com.The V, VIZIO, VIZIO Internet Apps, Theater 3D, CinemaWide HDTV, Full Array TruLED, Edge Lit Razor LED, 240Hz SPS, 480Hz SPS, Entertainment Freedom and Entertainment Freedom for All names, logos and phrase are registered or unregistered trademarks of VIZIO, Inc. All other trademarks may be the property of their respective holders.
SOURCE VIZIO, Inc.
Brand New Line of Gorgeous Vizio Products from CES 2012! [TEKHD, Jan 10, 2012]
CES 2012: Vizio takes on the iMac [IGNentertainment, Jan 9, 2012]
Note that there is certainly an outstanding design professional behind these products: Scott McManigal, Senior Director of Global Design who has been with VIZIO since June 2009. Before he had been with OpenPeak, Herbst LaZar Bell, BMW Group DesignworksUSA (10 years!), Mattel Toys and Patton Design. It is no wonder that the new PCs got immediate recognition from media with headlines like:
– The New Vizio PCs and Notebooks Are Worthy of Apple [Gizmodo, Jan 9, 2012]
– Vizio PCs and Laptops are the closest to Apple when it comes to style [Newlaunches.com, Jan 9, 2012]
A First Look at Vizio’s new line of ultrabooks [CNETTV, Jan 10, 2012]
CES 2012: Vizio Takes On the MacBook Air [IGNentertainment, Jan 9, 2012]
So far there are no tablets among these premium PC entertainment offerings. VIZIO will introduce them surely when Windows 8 will be launched late summer as the earliest.
The CES 2012 expansion of the V.I.A. Plus
From the V.I.A. Plus related press release (see later): Among the V.I.A. Plus products to be included in VIZIO’s Las Vegas showcase are the 65-inch, 55-inch and 47-inch V.I.A. Plus HDTVs with Theater 3D™, the VBR430 Blu-ray Player and the VAP430 Stream Player, all of which incorporate the latest Google TV experience. VIZIO will also show two V.I.A. Plus enabled [Android] tablets—the current VTAB1008 and the new 10″ VTAB3010. [The tablets are Android based (as all of the V.I.A. Plus system). Detailed information on that: Innovative entertainment class [Android] tablet from VIZIO plus a unified UX for all cloud based CE devices, from TVs to smartphones [Aug 21, 2011].]
Vizio 10 inch tablet hands on [AndroidCentral, Jan 10, 2012]
Vizio 10-inch tablet preview [TheVerge, Jan 10, 2012]
Vizio’s New 10-inch Tablet to Have Intel Chip, Android [IDG News, Jan 10, 2012]
A new tablet from Vizio will come with Intel’s upcoming Atom chip, code-named Medfield, and will run Google’s Android operating system, a source with knowledge of the product plans said.
The M-Series tablet with a 10-inch screen was announced by Vizio at the Consumer Electronics Show, and the device will be “coming soon,” according to Vizio’s website. The tablet is being shown at the trade show in Las Vegas this week.
Vizio has not shared further details on the tablet, saying it is “powerful” and has Wi-Fi. The tablet provides “a world of entertainment right at your fingertips,” according to the company’s website.
The Vizio tablet could be the launching pad for Intel’s Medfield chip, which is not yet available in devices. The Medfield chip has been designed for smartphones and tablets, and Intel later this week is also expected to announce its first smartphone customers for the chip.
Intel’s Medfield & Atom Z2460 Arrive for Smartphones: It’s Finally Here [AnandTech, Jan 11, 2012]
It’s here. Intel’s first smartphone SoC that you’ll actually be able to buy in a device before the end of the year. The platform is called Medfield and Paul Otellini just announced its first device partners.
Medfield starts out as a bonafide mobile SoC. Whereas Moorestown was a “two-chip” solution, Medfield is just one – the Penwell SoC:
…
There’s only a single version of Medfield being announced today: the Intel Atom Z2460. The Z2460 features a single Atom core with a 512KB L2 cache, a PowerVR SGX 540 GPU and a dual-channel LPDDR2 memory interface. In a world where talking about four Cortex A9s and PowerVR SGX 544MP2s isn’t uncommon, Medfield starts out almost sounding a bit…tame. But then you see its performance:
Although running what appears to be a stock Gingerbread browser, Intel’s Medfield reference platform posts SunSpider performance better than any other smartphone we’ve tested – including the Galaxy Nexus running Ice Cream Sandwich. Intel promises that Medfield’s performance will scale on ICS as well – the gap should be maintained. We’ve seen high results from reference designs in the past, but the Medfield platform is a little different as you’ll soon see – it’s a complete smartphone design that should be representative of handsets that hit the market later this year.
Medfield isn’t a one trick pony either, performance is similarly dominating under BrowserMark:
These are tablet-like scores. Here the Galaxy Nexus running ICS comes close, but once again Intel expects that on the same OS Medfield should be faster than any of the currently available SoCs.
I asked Intel where its SunSpider and BrowserMark performance advantages came from, especially considering we’ve typically only seen huge gains with new browsers and not new SoCs. Their response pointed to a bunch of factors, but one stand out issue was the A9 has a great execution core but seems to be more limited on the memory interface. Atom can support far more outstanding misses in L2 than the Cortex A9, which chokes bandwidth to the processor for anything not already in the L2 cache. This may be one of the reasons why we’ve never been able to get really high bandwidth numbers out of A9 based SoCs. It’s probably safe to assume that things will be different with the Cortex A15, but for now it’s little things like this that give Medfield a performance advantage.
GPU performance is understandably not as impressive. We couldn’t get offscreen numbers of GLBenchmark 2.1 but we did get results at the device’s native resolution (1024 x 600):
3D performance is better than the OMAP 4460 due to Medfield’s 400MHz GPU clock compared to ~300MHz in most OMAP4 devices.
Performance without power considerations is meaningless, especially in the smartphone world. Luckily for Intel, Medfield seems very competitive there as well. …
…
Medfield, at least in Intel’s reference platform, looks very good.
The actual values are pretty astonishing as well. Sub 20mW idle, sub 750mW during a call on 3G and although not pictured here, Intel’s internal data suggests ~1W power consumption while browsing the web compared to ~1.3W on the iPhone 4S and Galaxy S 2. I’ve done my own measurements on 4S web browsing and came up with a very similar value.
Intel Measured Smartphone Power Consumption
(Identical Display Brightness)
Standby (3G) Talk (3G) Browsing (3G) Video Playback 720p Apple iPhone 4S ~38mW ~800mW ~1.3W ~500mW Intel Medfield Reference ~18mW ~700mW ~1.0W ~850mW Samsung Galaxy S II ~19mW ~675mW ~1.2W ~650mW The performance and power data both look great for Medfield. You would think that this data, assuming there’s nothing fundamentally wrong, would be enough to convince a handset maker to actually give Intel a shot. You’d be right.
In addition to disclosing Medfield performance data, Intel is also announcing partnerships with both Motorola and Lenovo. The former is a broad, multi-year agreement stating that Motorola plans on creating many devices based on Intel silicon – the first of which will be a smartphone due out before the end of the year. Tablets will follow at some point as well.
Lenovo on the other hand will actually be taking and tweaking Intel’s own Medfield reference platform, and releasing it in China in Q2.
All of this is exactly what Intel needed: a start.
The CPU
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The GPU, Process & Roadmap
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What’s Different This Time Around: Google & A Sweet Reference Platform
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ARM Compatibility: Binary Translation
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Final Words
…
Medfield and the Atom Z2460 are a solid starting point. Intel finally has a chip that they can deliver to the market and partners to carry it in. Intel also built a very impressive reference platform that could lead to some very interesting disruptions in the market.
…
VIZIO and Google TV Join Forces to Create a State of the Art Stream Player [VIZIO press release, Jan 10, 2011]
– New stream player turns any HDTV into an enhanced smart TV with access to countless entertainment content and online services as well as powerful search and web browsing capabilities
– Part of the VIZIO Internet Apps Plus ecosystem, the new VIZIO Stream Player incorporates the power of the latest Google TV in combination with premium setup experience and included Bluetooth universal remote with touchpad control
– Integrated app and TV watching experiencelet users multitask seamlessly and access photos, audio and video stored on networked computers, hard drives and smart phonesVIZIO and Google today jointly announced the introduction of the VIZIO VAP430 Stream Player, an innovative stream player that turns any HDTV into an enhanced VIZIO Internet Apps Plus® (V.I.A. Plus) smart TV that incorporates the latest Google TV. The Stream Player allows consumers to access countless entertainment content and online services with web access through a fully capable Chrome browser, and to also enjoy photos, music and video stored on any computer, hard drive or smart phoneconnected to a local network and/or the cloud.*
With the VAP430 connected to an HDTV over an HDMI cable, users can quickly and seamlessly access content and services from their favorite apps and websites using the included Bluetooth premium universal remote control with integrated touchpad. In addition to movies, TV shows and music on demand, the VAP430 lets users search the web for even more entertainment options using the Flash-capable Chrome browser.
“We’re excited about what Google TV brings to our new VAP430 Stream Player,” says Matthew McRae, VIZIO’s Chief Technology Officer. “This isn’t just an ordinary streaming box that accesses a few predetermined video services. It’s a true entertainment portal that opens up everything the Web has to offer, as well as all the content consumers already have stored on computers and hard drives. And the incorporation of Google TV and our V.I.A. Plus interfacemakes it all incredibly easy to setup and a joy to use.”
Using the included premium remote with QWERTY keypad and integrated touchpad, viewers can easily search for any program or content they want from their favorite apps or the Internet. Users can also check out new apps from an ever-expanding Android Market, or access personal medialike videos, photos and music that are stored on devices connected to the same home network as the stream player. Images are displayed right on a connected TV set, and sound plays through the TV or a connected audio system.
“We’re thrilled to partner with VIZIO on the launch of their Stream Player,” said Mario Queiroz, head of Google TV. “VIZIO has established itself as a leader in the consumer electronics market. Combining Google TV with VIZIO’s innovative, easy-to-use consumer electronic products will bring more great entertainment and Android apps to the living room.”
Painless Setup, Powerful Capabilities
Part of the V.I.A. Plus ecosystem, the slick yet discreet VAP430 can easily compliment any HDTV using an HDMI cable. Installing the VAP430 and connecting it to the Internet is blazingly fast and simple to do with the built-in setup experience and 802.11n WiFi connection.
The VAP430 also has an HDMI pass-through that lets the user connect a cable or satellite box to the stream player and pass the signal over to the TV for a truly integrated TV watching experience. The smart TV interfaceoverlays the live TV signal so multitaskers can search for the next thing to watch without completely stepping away from what they’re currently watching.
Bluetooth capability also makes it simple to enjoy content from smart phones through the connected TV wirelessly. And with the USB input, connecting any USB drive directly to the VAP430 takes only seconds.
VAP430 is the first V.I.A. Plus device to launch this year, followed by the VBR430 3D Blu-ray player, which combines the features of the VAP430 with Blu-ray’s state-of-the-art high-definition video and audio playback capabilities.
Preorders for the VAP430 will begin this spring 2012. Find out more and sign up to be the first at www.vizio.com/ces
* The VIZIO Internet Apps® (V.I.A.) platform requires Internet access, equipment and subscription services that are not provided.
See also (especially because VAP430 is likely based on Marvell’s platform): Google’s revitalization of its Android-based TV effort via Marvell SoC and reference design[Jan 5, 2012]
VIZIO Expands the Next-Generation VIZIO Internet Apps Plus® (V.I.A. Plus) Ecosystem, Announcing New HDTV, Blu-ray Player, Stream Player and Tablet Products That Share a Unified User Experience Across All Screens [VIZIO press release, Jan 10, 2011]
– V.I.A. Plus provides access to a world of apps on each device with attention to details that optimize the entertainment experience on each and every screen
– V.I.A. Plus offers today’s most advanced and functional smart TV user experience, with an intuitive, app-centric interface optimized for the 10-foot viewing experience
– New V.I.A. partners to include iHeartRadio®, The Wall Street Journal® and M-GO®
– VIZIO’s expanded line-up incorporating the Google TV platform include the 65-inch, 55-inch and 47-inch HDTVs with Theater 3D, the VBR430 Blu-ray player, and the VAP430 Stream PlayerVIZIO, America’s #1 HDTV Company*, announces the continued expansion of its next generation of the award-winning VIZIO Internet Apps® platform: VIZIO Internet Apps Plus (V.I.A. Plus). V.I.A. Plus brings a unified user experience to a wide range of devices that include HDTVs, Tablets, Blu-ray players, Media Players and more. From the big screen to mobile devices, V.I.A. Plus bridges the worlds of entertainment, content and services with one sophisticated and intuitive interface. V.I.A. Plus accesses a world of apps on each device, with attention to details that optimize the entertainment experience on each screen.
Among the V.I.A. Plus products to be included in VIZIO’s Las Vegas showcase are the 65-inch, 55-inch and 47-inch V.I.A. Plus HDTVs with Theater 3D™, the VBR430 Blu-ray Player and the VAP430 Stream Player, all of which incorporate the latest Google TV experience. VIZIO will also show two V.I.A. Plus enabled tablets—the current VTAB1008 and the new 10″ VTAB3010.
“The way users consume content has changed drastically over recent years. Technology has enabled nearly every device with a screen to connect to some form of delivery platform, each with its own mechanism for searching, browsing and viewing content.” said Matthew McRae, Chief Technology Officer, VIZIO. “V.I.A. Plus focuses entirely on what users care about – their content. By delivering a seamless, intuitive experience that is consistent across multiple screens, V.I.A. Plus products distinguish themselves from devices that function and those that are truly entertaining.”
The V.I.A. Plus experience features an intuitive, app-centric interface on every device, making it easy for consumers to understand and navigate as they move between devices. Users can also access thousands of apps from the Android Market™ for even more entertainment options.
“We’re thrilled to partner with VIZIO on the launch of the Stream Player,” said Mario Queiroz, head of Google TV. “VIZIO has established itself as a leader in the consumer electronics market. Combining Google TV with VIZIO’s innovative, easy-to-use consumer electronic products will bring more great entertainment and Android apps to the living room.”
In addition, VIZIO is announcing new partners who are collaborating to bring their content and services to the V.I.A. Platform, including:
iHeart Radio– iHeartRadio, Clear Channel’s industry-leading digital radio service, brings users a best-in-class customizable digital listening experience, one which combines the best of both worlds to deliver everything listeners want in one free, fully-integrated service: More than 800 of the nation’s most popular live broadcast and digital-only radio stations from 150 cities, plus user-created Custom Stations which provide listeners more songs, better music intelligence, more user control and deeper social media integration.
The Wall Street Journal®– WSJ Live from The Wall Street Journal offers up to four total hours of live video programming each business day from across The Wall Street Journal Digital Network, including the Journal, Dow Jones® Newswires, Barron’s™, MarketWatch®, SmartMoney® and AllThingsD.com. Users can access seven half-hour live shows, breaking news updates, exclusive interviews, and special events coverage. The service also offers more than 2,000 videos per month from an extensive library of on-demand content.
M-GO™ video-on-demand– M-GO from Technicolor is a next-generation app that combines all of your media including movies, music, apps, live TV, and more. M-GO will come pre-loaded on VIZIO HDTVs and Blu-ray Players with VIZIO Internet Apps or VIZIO Internet Apps Plus. The app will help consumers find the content they’re looking for through its extensive content library and state-of-the-art discovery engine, while also providing a unique second screen functionality for searching additional content.
“We are extremely excited to be partnering with VIZIO to bring consumers all of their media anywhere, anytime, and anyway they want it,” said John Batter, CEO of M-GO. “As consumers continue to access digital media at home and on the go, it is even more important to provide them with a consistent experience that is easy to navigate and convenient to use. VIZIO’s technology combined with our accessibility to content does just that.”
On V.I.A. Plus enabled HDTVs, Blu-ray players and Media Players, users can multitask between apps and traditional TV content through an interface designed for the 10-foot viewing experience, created specifically for situations where users want to sit back and enjoy the ultimate in channel and web surfing. Users can also complement their entertainment experience with VIZIO tablets for seamless access to their favorite apps and content in any room in the home or on the road.
With a wide range of apps on each device, V.I.A. Plus enables consumers to choose from a new universe of entertainment options, redefining the TV experience with multi-screen access, gaming, full browsing and enhanced search capabilities, and the ability to view live events streamed over the Internet.
Navigating V.I.A. Plus is simple and intuitive, using the QWERTY keypad and integrated touchpadthat’s built into the premium Bluetooth remote control included with every V.I.A. Plus product. Users need no technical know-how to get their new devices online, thanks to the advanced wireless Internet access and simplified onscreen setup.
Smart Blu-ray
The VBR430 Blu-ray player is the most advanced on the market today. Not only does it offer the incomparable entertainment power of V.I.A. Plus with Google TV, the player comes with a touchpad universal remote with QWERTY keypad that makes it easy to control apps, content and other functions. As part of the VIZIO Internet Apps Plus ecosystem, the VBR430 also lets users access video, audio and photos stored on any DLNA-compatible computer, network-connected hard drive or cell phone connected to a home network. Built-in WiFi makes network connection easy, and Bluetooth capability provides yet another conduit for streaming media from cell phones and computers.
Smart TV Plus 3D
VIZIO’s V.I.A. Plus products will also include Theater 3D technology, for crystal clear, brighter and flicker-free 3D, viewable with lightweight, comfortable, battery-free 3D glasses. The TVs feature LED backlighting with smart dimming technology to achieve dynamic contrast ratios of 1,000,000:1 or greater.
The Ultimate Stream Player
The VAP430 Stream Player with Google TV is an innovative media player that turns any HDTV into an enhanced VIZIO Internet Apps Plus (V.I.A. Plus) smart TV. As sales of stream players are poised to pass Blu-ray players in unit volume sales (by 2013, according the CEA U.S. Unit Shipment Forecast of January 2011), the VAP430 is the perfect solution for media multitaskers who consume most of their media over the Internet. The VAP430 is the one of the most advanced Stream Players with built-in HDMI ports that lets users connect existing components like gaming consoles or set-top boxes for unified access to all media sources through the VI.A. Plus touchpad remote. It even supports 3D content and 3D streaming.
Many of the new VIZIO V.I.A. Plus products will be on display at the Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas during the Consumer Electronics Show, January 10 – 13, 2012. For more information, please visit www.vizio.com/ces
* Source: IHS iSuppli Corporation Research Q4 2011 Market Tracker Report of Q4 2010 – Q3 2011.
Vizio’s Google TV delayed until early fall, now edge-lit [C|net, Jan 10, 2012]
LAS VEGAS–Google TV has a way of disappointing expectations, and one strong case in point is the Vizio’s VIA Plus platform for TVs.
At CES 2011 we named the VIA Plus models as our favorite TV product of CES. They used Google TV to deliver what the company described as interoperability between the TV and Android-equipped phones and tablets. Among other features, Via Plus was also said to support the OnLive gaming service. Those extras, along with the same kind of full-array local-dimming backlightwe know and love, was enough to convince us that the so-equipped TVs were going to be pretty awesome.
Unfortunately, because of what Vizio describes as Google TV-related issues beyond its control, they never came out.
We asked about the VIA Plus sets during a pre-CES briefing with Vizio and were told they were still on the company’s product release roadmap. The new release date is “early fall.” They will have different model numbers and at least one change for the worse: that backlight is now an edge-lit affair. Vizio further specified that the new VIA Plus models would have a 240Hz refresh rate, passive 3D, and three screen sizes: 47-, 55-, and a new 65-inch option.
On the bright side, maybe having all that extra time to perfect VIA Plus will allow Vizio to do something really special with Google TV’s Honeycomb customizations. We’ll see.
Strong business backings from Taiwan that enable such bold strategy expansion for VIZIO
Vizio sees 2012 with optimism [Nov 2, 2011]
TV brand Vizio has indicated sales of Japan-based brands such as Sony, Panasonic and Sharp have been weak. However, South Korea-based brands such as Samsung and LG have been growing becoming Vizio’s biggest competitors. Vizio estimates 2011 shipments of LCD TVs to reach over six million units.
According to William Wang, CEO and founder of Vizio, the strategy to face the South Korea-based players is to improve products, such as by providing customers with the best 3D TV. If products can be sold with cheaper retail prices, then do it.
Wang indicated Vizio’s biggest partner is still Taiwan-based Amtran Technology, which accounts for 70-80% of Vizio’s OEM orders. Foxconn is responsible for small-size products. Wang complimented Taiwan’s technology, innovation and product quality.
The recent weak demand in the TV market has been causing panel makers to suffer huge losses, Vizio stated. Except for shipments in the first quarter 2011 which were comparable to those of 2010, the rest of the quarters in 2011 have all seen declining shipments.
Wang concluded that panel makers have been suffering due to oversupply and lack of consumer confidence due to weak economic conditions in Europe and the US. However, 2011 should be the year when the industry hits rock bottom, which means firms should face 2012 with optimism.
CES: Value Outweighs Price, AmTran Says [excerpt on the VIZIO site, Jan 6, 2010]
Behind Vizio’s success is a partnership with Taipei-based AmTran Technology, a contract manufacturer that specializes in computer monitors and televisions. The company, which owns a 23% stake [i.e. majority] in Vizio, now makes annual revenue of about $2 billion, more than quadruple the $428 million it reported in 2004.
To read more about this article please click here.
[Hon Hai/Foxconn is said to be the 2nd largest shareholder ov VIZIO as well as having 10% of shares of AmTran]
[click here >> WSJ Blogs, Jan 7, 2010]
In a rare interview, its chief executive and chairman Alpha Wu spoke to The Wall Street Journal about his views on the fast-changing industry at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas
The Wall Street Journal: Why have your products been so successful?
Mr. Wu: We think very simply about how we can provide the best value to customers world-wide. I have pretty good relationships with key component makers in Japan, Taiwan, China and now Korea, and I make sure we get high-quality components, so we can provide high-quality displays. We try to have attractive prices, but that can’t be the only reason for customers to buy. Value is more important than anything. We try to provide attractive prices, but that can’t be the only reason for customers to buy.
We also keep very tight production schedules. We learned from our customers that we must meet schedules. As long as we have discipline over our schedule, we can compete against anybodybecause when a rival announces a new technology, we can develop similar products quickly and take the market.
WSJ: Why do you think the traditional television makers in Japan are having such a hard time in the television market, particularly in the U.S.?
Mr. Wu: To be a pure original equipment manufacturer is a tough business. That’s why we teamed up with Vizio. The Japanese engineers work hard and demand perfect products, but they don’t know the market very much. In the U.S., people don’t want very high-end products especially in the current economic situation. Japanese consumers, however, are more willing to invest in expensive products.
Products that are made in Japan with Japanese components by Japanese suppliers are very important to them, but their factories aren’t as advanced as ours because they’re old. An older managementalso makes them less able to accept new technologies and innovation.
WSJ: 3D televisions are expected to be big news at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show. How soon do you expect this technology to take off?
Mr. Wu:3D movies are absolutely coming. 3D televisions might take two or three years. One big problem that has to be overcome is glasses. No one wants to wear glasses to watch TV. Plus if you have five people in the family you need five pairs of glasses. The technology is also not mature yet.
WSJ: What is your vision for AmTran’s future?
Mr. Wu: We want to support the best brand with the best technology products. We are trying to do it in different regions, step by step. We’re trying in Taiwan, Japan and China. Maybe someday we’ll try in Europe.
One of our customers, Bang & Olufsen, has a remote control that I use at home every day to control the curtains, lighting, television and audio. That’s our dream too, but to provide it to the mass market.
WSJ: What kind of opportunity do you see in the Chinese market?
Mr. Wu: By 2011, China’s market for televisions will be bigger than the U.S. From our point of view, we have some advantages — we know China better than people in other countries. Whoever can become No. 1 in China and in the U.S. will be No. 1 in the world.
Amtran Technology Co Ltd (2489.TW) – Overview – Full Description [Reuters, excerpted on Jan 10, 2012]
AMTRAN TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD. is principally engaged in the manufacture and distribution of monitors and digital televisions. The Company provides liquid crystal display (LCD) monitors, which are applied in personal computers (PCs), workstations, automobile instruments, point of sale (POS) equipment and automatic teller machines (ATMs), among others, as well as LCD televisions. During the year ended December 31, 2010, the Company obtained approximately 94.89% of its total revenue from digital televisions. The Company distributes its products primarily in Japan, Europe and the Americas.
» Full Overview of 2489.TW
Amtran sees increased 4Q11 revenues [Jan 10, 2012]
Taiwan-based TV OEM firm Amtran reported December revenues of NT$6.44 billion (US$214 million). Fourth quarter revenues reached NT$19.66 billion, the highest quarterly revenues in 2011, accounting for 35% of 2011 total revenues.
Due to sales during the year-end holiday season in the North America market, total shipments in December reached 660,000 units while total shipments in fourth quarter reached 1.94 million units, outperforming the previous three quarters in 2011. According to Amtran, total shipments in 2011 reached 5.35 million units. Shipments of products in the range of 32-37 inch accounted for 54% of the firm’s total flat TV shipments. Amtran noted that sales of large-size products (42-, 47-, 55-, and 65-inch) LCD TVs accounted for 46% of total revenues.
Amtran expects LCD TV shipments to increase as the firm develops products such as internet TV, smart TV and 3D TV.
Amtran faces challenge to attain 2011 LCD TV goal [Aug 17, 2011]
Taiwan-based Amtran Technology’s LCD TV shipments reached nearly two million units in the first half of 2011, according to industry sources. But the maker may have difficulties achieving its shipment goal of five million units for the entire 2011 given that its major market, North America, has been weak.
Amtran, the chief manufacturer for Vizio, shipped a total 4.2 million units of LCD TVs worldwide in 2010.
The new, high-volume market in China is ready to define the 2012 smartphone war
Follow-up: Boosting the MediaTek MT6575 success story with the MT6577 announcement [June 27, 2012]
– China TD-SCDMA and W-CDMA 3G subscribers by the end of 2011: China Mobile lost its original growth momentum [Jan 21, 2011]
Updates: China market: Local vendors to roll out CNY300 smartphones [DIGITIMES, July 13, 2012]
China-based handset makers are ready to begin volume shipments of smartphones priced at CNY300 (US$50) in the second half of 2012 compared to the previous focus on CNY600 models in the first half of the year, according to industry sources.
Competition among chipset solution vendors, promotions by telecom carriers, and the rise of new brands in China have contributed to the rapid decline in prices of smartphones in China, the sources revealed.
The top-3 telecom carriers had previously focused purchases on smartphones with a price tag of CNY1,000, but some local handset makers are now willing to offer quotes at around CNY500 in order to win orders, said the sources, adding that the pricing will serve as an indication for channel operators to follow.
While quotes for 2G smartphones in China have already dropped to below US$50, prices for 3G models currently range from US$60-80 and are expected to reach US$50 soon, the sources asserted.
Sub-CNY1,000 smartphones accounted for 21% of all smartphones sold in China in the first quarter of 2012, compared to a ratio of 12% a year earlier, according to IDC.
– China market: Nearly 195 million handsets shipped in 1H12 [DIGITIMES, July 10, 2012]
There were 194.913 million handsets shipped in the China market during the first half of 2012, consisting of 106.874 million (54.83%) 3G handsets in 801 models and 88.039 million (45.17%) 2G handsets in 1,298 models, according to statistics published by the China Academy of Telecommunication Research (CATR) under the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT).
Of the shipment volume, 94.855 million or 48.67% were smartphones in 822 models of which 801 models or 97.44% were based on Android. China-based vendors accounted for 75.16% of the half-year shipment volume, and international vendors 24.84%.
The monthly shipment volume of smartphones exceeded that of feature phones for the first time in April 2012, with the corresponding proportion increasing to 56.9% in June.
China market: Breakdown of total handset shipment volume, 1H12 Generation Technology standard
Number of models
Shipment volume (m handsets)
3G WCDMA (China Unicom)
476
53.099
CDMA2000 (China Telecom)
174
28.197
TD-SCDMA (China Mobile)
151
25.578
2G GSM
1,272
81.915
CDMA1x
26
6.076
Source: CATR under MIIT, compiled by Digitimes, July 2012
– Second- and third-tier handset makers in China may not adopt Windows Phone 8 platform [DIGITIMES, July 5, 2012]
Microsoft has been eager to promote Windows Phone 8, Windows 8 and Windows RT. Despite having partners such as Nokia, Samsung, and HTC for Windows Phone 8, severe price competition in China will likely prevent second- and third-tier handset makers from switching from Google’s Android.
China-based handset makers have been aiming at customers switching from feature phones to smartphones for the first time and hence have little desire to adopt new platforms.
Industry sources indicated that competition in China’s smartphone market has been cutthroat. First-tier brands such as ZTE, Huawei, Coolpad and Lenovo have been introducing models at the price range of CNY1,000 (US$157). To increase market exposure, second-tier brands such as Haier and Konka have been introducing models below CNY500 in efforts to obtain cooperation with telecommunications service providers. The price difference is significant, said industry sources.
Microsoft hopes to increase market share in China’s smartphone market. However, Windows Phone 8 is unlikely to compete with Android in features such as localized applications and marketing resources, added industry sources.
Nevertheless, Microsoft has been adding new alliances such as Huawei and ZTE. Industry sources believe the two firms hope to generate more profits by providing products with different platforms.
– China smartphone market 2012: Trends and analysis [DIGITIMES Research, July 3, 2012]
Abstract
The China handset market has exhibited strong growth, with the total number of mobile users in the country reaching 980 million people according to figures from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), an increase of 130 million over the 2010 figure. Digitimes Research estimates that mobile user numbers could top 1.13 billion in 2012.
Digitimes Research estimates that the China handset market reached some 390 million units in 2011, representing 16% growth on 2010; the market is likely to grow to 430 million units in 2012, representing further growth of 9%. Thanks to the expansion of 3G service coverage and further falls in budget smartphone prices, the share of the handset market accounted for by smartphones is likely to reach 32% or around 143 million units, 70% of which will be Android handsets.
Digitimes Research believes that market share rankings for the China smartphone market will change significantly during 2012. Samsung and Apple will take the top two places, while the big four China-based brands – Huawei, ZTE, Lenovo and Coolpad – will take third to sixth places, while Nokia will drop to seventh; these seven firms will collectively account for 85% of shipments.
In other words, the many other brands hoping to seize a share of the market will essentially be confined to competing for a potential market of just 15% of overall shipments or around 21 million handsets. Given such a situation, Digitimes Research projects that many of China’s best known smaller brands such as Xiaomi, TCL, Gionee, Tianyu, Oppo and BBK will see shipments of no more than a few million handsets.
– China-based white-box vendors expected to ship 200 million smartphones [DIGITIMES, April 17, 2012]
China-based white-box vendors, mainly due to the availability of inexpensive new chip solutions, have been increasing the production of smartphones, with the total shipment volume expected to reach 200 million units in 2012, according to industry sources in Taiwan.
Taiwan-based MediaTek is offering the makers its MT6575 a chip solution for use in entry-level smartphones in the first quarter of 2012 and will offer the MT6577, a solution for high-level smartphones, in the middle of the third quarter of 2012, the sources indicated. MediaTek will ship 50-70 million chips to China-based white-box vendors to account for nearly 30% of smartphones to be shipped by these vendors in 2012.
In addition, Qualcomm has strengthened its marketing in the China market by offering turn-key solutions to white-box vendors, with prices for a chips lowered to US$6, the sources cited eMedia Asia as indicating.
China-based white-box vendors sell more than 60% of their smartphone output to overseas markets, including 2.5G models for markets where deployment of 3G networks is not mature yet, the sources indicated. White-box vendors are expected to see larger market demand if their production costs for entry-, medium- and high-level smartphones drop to US$60, US$85 and US$130 respectively, the sources pointed out.
– China market: Handset makers upgrading hardware specifications of sub-CNY1,000 smartphone models [Feb 17, 2012]
China-based handset makers, including ZTE, Huawei Device, Lenovo and Coolpad, have continued to upgrade the hardware specifications of their sub-CNY1,000 (US$159) smartphone models due to intensifying competition in the segment, according to industry sources.
With the introduction of dual-core 1GHz CPUs for high-end models in 2011, the single-core 1GHz CPU is likely to become one of the standards for entry-level smartphones in China this year, the sources indicated.
Additionally, some vendors have also begun to adopt 4-inch displays for their sub-CNY1,000 models, instead of 3.5-inch displays used previously, the sources added.
Coolpad has recently launched a 4-inch model, the 7260, and saw sales of the model reach 30,000 units a month in the initial period, the sources revealed, adding that monthly shipments of the 7260 may top 100,000 units soon.
– China handset makers to push sales of sub-CNY1,000 smartphones to mature markets [Feb 16, 2012]
Having mass-produced smartphones with a price tag of around CNY1,000 (US$159) for the China market since 2011, China-based handset makers ZTE, Huawei Device, Lenovo and Coolpad plan to push the sale of sub-CNY1,000 smartphones to mature markets including North America and Taiwan, according to industry sources.
Sales of smartphones by Coolpad, Lenovo, ZTE and Huawei combined currently account for 30-40% of China’s smartphone market, with the ratio likely to surpass 50% by year-end 2012, the sources estimated.
In the Taiwan market, Coolpad has recently a WCDMA model with a suggested retail price of NT$5,990 (US$203). However, the company plans to launch more entry-level smartphones later and aims to take up a 3-5% share in the segment. Coolpad shipped about 270,000-280,000 CDMA models in Taiwan in 2011, the sources revealed.
– Chinese smartphone market sees explosive growth [Feb 16, 2012]
Judging from the structure of the smartphone market in 2011, Chinese smart terminals brands such as ZTE and Huawei seem to be on a trend of full-scale explosion. Having been suppressed by foreign brands for a long time, Chinese smartphones begin to take a solid footstep in the smartphone market by working closely with telecommunication operators and making full use of their “Chinese characteristics”, breaking the old pattern of market that has long been dominated by foreign brands. According to industrial participants, Chinese brands are rising in the 3G era.
According to media report, the Coolpad 7260, one of China Unicom’s 1000-Yuan smartphones, created a record sales of 110,000 units three days after it was put on the market, refreshing the shipment volume record of 1000-Yuan Chinese 3G smartphones, scoring a victory in its first battle. Also, this number gives the market more expectation for Unicom’s 8 new models of 4.0 series “WO 3G” 1000-Yuan smartphones that are co-launched by China Unicom and technology-intensive Chinese mobile phone manufacturers.
It is learned that these new 4.0 series 1000-Yuan phones boast three major features: big, fast, and HD. Big screens, previous 3.5-inch screens are replaced by 4-inch screens; fast processing speed, previous 600MHz CPUs are replaced by CPUs that are higher than 800MHz now; fast upload speed, supporting HSUPV; fast running speed, memory upgrades from 256M in the past to 512M now. High-definition picture taking, camera are required to increase from 2-3 million pixels to 3-5 million pixels.
According to person from China Unicom, the re-defined 1000-Yuan smart terminals introduced by China Unicom in May, 2011, and the numerous star terminals subsequently co-produced by China Unicom and Chinese mobile phones manufacturers have won excellent market response. Among these products, ZTE’s V880 scored daily sales of more than 10,000 units and monthly sales of more than 300,000 units. After months of promotion, the 1000-Yuan smartphones strategy remains effective, propelling the fast growth of China Unicom’s 3G subscribers.
In November, Unicom’s net growth of 3G subscribers was as high as 3.384 million with total 3G subscribers amounting to 36.534 million, making it the operator with the fastest 3G subscriber growth rate. This indicates that 1000-Yuan phones have accumulated significant subscriber base in the market and have established some brand effect. Presently, China Unicom makes use of the favorable conditions and defines the standards of 4.0 series 1000-Yuan smartphones, and offers high subsidy for the newly defined 4.0 series phones, with the purpose of making deployment in the middle-end market and grab a say of Chinese smart terminals in advance.
According to industrial participants, “users-friendly price and high-end experience” is the key to the success of China Unicom’s customized 1000-Yuan smartphones. Consumers’ favor for China Unicom’s customized terminals comes from its preferential subsidy policy, rather high-end configuration, and the user experience brought by the WCDMA network. Market research statistics show that the number of 3G subscribers worldwide in 2011 approached 1.3 billion, of which WCDMA subscribers accounted for 76 percent. In China, as per October 2011, WCDMA smartphones accounted for 69 percent of all 3G smartphones. Currently, China has become the largest smartphone market in the world, with nearly 70 percent of the phones being WCMDA. It is thus quite clear that WCDMA mobile phones are the mainstream in China and even all over the world.
Industrial participants point out that with the rapid development of smart terminals in the 3G era, the competition pattern of the mobile phone market will become even more complicated. In the meantime, the industry thinks positively of the marriage between domestic mobile phones and China Unicom’s WCDMA. Amidst the fierce competition of the terminal market globally, however, Chinese smartphones need to understand the market better, and puts more efforts in products R&D and brand image improvement, hoping to evolve from the “copycat” image to a national brand as soon as possible.
End of updates
The new high-volume smartphone market has been established by China Unicom with Lenovo and ZTE involvement from August 2011 on under the so called ‘RMB 1000’ [US$158] inititiative of the carrier.
As visible on the chart (see left) China Unicom was able to return to the previous 10% month/month growth rate of the 3G subscribers as the result of this approach. Unicom’s main rival the much bigger China Mobile was, however, unable to sustain that growth rate. One of the reasons is certainly the fact that China Unicom has so far been the only Chinese operator with official iPhone offerings. By looking to the enlarged picture of the chart for the August-November period one can nevertheless see that the gap in month/month growth rates of the two companies has been steadily growing. This cannot be explained in other ways than by this 1st stage of the ‘RMB 1000’ initiative. Since in the end of December the initiative has been extended to the RMB 1500 [US$238] price cap with not less than 8 models joing the offerings under this umbrella, this will define an obvious smartphone war for 2012.
The first stage of this initiative has already radically redefined the 3G smartphone market for W-CDMA customers in China:
– the ‘RMB 1000’ [US$158] Android phone (Lenovo A60) has slightly better graphics performance than either the 4.26x more pricey iPhone 3G S or the 1.62x more pricey best classic Android phone (Sony Ericsson WT19i)
– the Dhrystone performance of that phone is quite enough comparing to both (2/3d of the iPhone and 4/10th of the Sony Ericsson device)
| Smartphone and its availability (+ recent price) |
Lenovo A60
|
Sony Ericsson WT19i
|
Apple iPhone 3G S
|
| DMIPS | 812.5 | 2100 | 1200 |
GLBenchmark 2.1 Egypt High
|
|||
|
2787 (3174) | 2653 (4806) | 2714 (3352) |
|
2765 (3159) | 2653 (4806) | 2646 (2913) |
|
2757 (3155) | 2653 (4806) | 2646 (3257) |
| Screen size | 480 x 320 | 480 x 320 | 480 x 320 |
| SoC w/ core inside |
MediaTek MT6573 w/ 650MHz ARM11 |
Qualcomm MSM8255 w/ 1GHz Scorpion |
Samsung S5PC100 w/
|
| GPU inside the SoC |
PowerVR SGX 531 |
Adreno 205 |
PowerVR SGX 535 |
Note: For realistic graphics performance the results of the ‘High’ version of the GLBenchmark 2.1 are used here since this is showing how the GPU is performing in high-quality rendering with “multi-sample anti-aliasing and at least 24 bits of color- and Z-buffer depths”. Also the results are shown here for the so called ‘Egypt’ benchmark as it “tests OpenGL ES 2.0 and represents the newest and most demanding benchmark” according to Anandtech. To understand what we are talking about here is also a video demonstration of the 2.1 Egypt benchmark by the globally recognized and accepted creator of it, Kishonti Informatics Ltd:
Since China Unicom launched the second stage of its ‘RMB 1000’ in the end of December, when not less than 8 models with a higher, 1500 [US$238] price cap have been joining the offerings, we can safely argue that what is happening now in China will apply to the global markets as well. We have already shown in an earlier post that China becoming the lead market for mobile Internet in 2012/13 [Dec 1, 2011], so there is no question about that.
Please find below a collection of all related information. It is necessary to highlight here the fact that with the higher, 1500 [US$238] price cap we are already in the 1.0 GHz Cortex-A9 and A5 CPU performance territories which mean 2500 and 1570 DMIPS respectively. The screen is also larger, 4” as well as the resolution is 800×480.
Another thing that needs to be highlighted here is China Unicom’s very attractive contract plan, described below as:
Customers who select the RMB 96 [US$15] per month two-year contract plan can receive the handset for free with a RMB 1,599 prepaid deposit. Users who purchase a smartphone without a contract plan for RMB 1,299 can later select a two-year contract plan starting at RMB 46 [US$7.3] per month and receive free calling credit.
NOW THE DETAILED COLLECTION
China Unicom Releases Eight Low-cost 3G Smartphones [Marbridge Daily, Jan 4, 2012]
During a recent [Dec 26, 2011] event in Beijing, China Unicom (NYSE: CHU; 0762.HK; 600050.SH) unveiled eight new “RMB 1,000” smartphones with 4-inch displays and CPUs clocking up to 1 GHz, as well as announcing its 3G smartphone policy for 2012.
The eight phones, all priced under RMB 1,500 [US$238], including China Wireless Technologies (2369.HK) subsidiary Yulong’s Coolpad 7260, the Hisense (600060.SH) HS-U8, ZTE (0763.HK; 000063.SZ) V889D, Huawei U8818, Lenovo (0992.HK) A750, TCL Communication Technology (2618.HK) W989, Amoi N89, and Philips W635. The Coolpad 7260 and Hisense HS-U8 hit the market in late December 2011.
Unicom expects China’s RMB 1,000 smartphone market to reach 90 mln units sold in 2012, while 60 mln smartphones priced between RMB 1,000 and RMB 2,000 will be sold, including both well-known domestic and international brands. Unicom expects the iPhone to continue to be the carrier’s flagship strategic product in the high-end RMB 2,000 or more smartphone market, and Unicom will continue to strengthen its line-up of operator-customized Android smartphones as well as a range of Windows Phone handsets. Unicom will also push dual-mode, dual-standby, dual-SIM smartphones.
The WCDMA/GSM dual-SIM, dual-standby Coolpad 7260 features a 4-inch WVGA 16 mln color HD multitouch display, Android 2.3, and Coolpad’s secure cloud services. The Hisense HS-U8 WCDMA/GSM dual-SIM, dual-standby smartphone is 1.6 mm thick and features a 5 MP autofocus camera and 3 MP front-facing camera. Both are available with contract plans. Customers who select the RMB 96 [US$15] per month two-year contract plan can receive the handset for free with a RMB 1,599 prepaid deposit. Users who purchase a smartphone without a contract plan for RMB 1,299 can later select a two-year contract plan starting at RMB 46 [US$7.3] per month and receive free calling credit.
China Unicom’s 3G network already covers 341 cities and over 95% of county towns nationwide. HSPA+ peak downlink speeds reach up to 21 MB in 56 key cities. Nearly 20,000 Unicom service centers offer 3G services, as well as nearly 10,000 non-operator stores run by hundreds of major retail chains. Unicom 3G service is also available through mainstream e-commerce channels. According to a source within Unicom, non-operator channels contribute over 50% of China Unicom’s 3G growth.
According to an industry source, China has 900 mln handset users, 90% of whom have a handset priced under RMB 2,000.
Regarding the full contract plan the only available information is from the Chinese press release: China Unicom released eight new definition of thousands of intelligent machines new 4.0 series [translated by Google, Dec 26, 2011]
Attachment: Cool 7260, Hisense HS-U8 contract plans
(A) “Stored send phone calls” contract plan
(B) “purchase mobile phones to send calls” contract plan
China Unicom releases low-end smartphones to woo 3G users [Want China Times, Dec 28, 2011 ]
A China Unicom promotion offers free smartphones paired with 3G service packages.China Unicom, one of China’s three major state-run telecom operators, has teamed up with several local cell phone vendors to launch its latest low-end smartphone in a bid to attract more 3G users.
Along with eight handset vendors — including Hisense, ZTE and Huawei — China Unicom on Monday unveiled its latest low-end smartphone, marketed as the “1,000-yuan (US$158) smartphone 4.0.” The new smartphone is equipped with a 1GHz processor and 4.0-inch screen, an improvement over the 3.5-inch screen of an earlier model.
The launch is widely seen as a move to attract more phone users to 3G smartphones. The number of [W-CDMA i.e. China Unicom’s] 3G users in China has increased to over 36 million, just three years after 3G licenses were made available in 2009.
“(The phone) is a win-win situation for chip makers, cell phone manufacturers and distribution vendors, and the boost in the 3G business is attributable to inexpensive cell phones,” said China Unicom general manager Lu Yimin.
“The launch of the inexpensive 4-inch-screen phone signals that the battleground has shifted from high-end phones to mid- to low-end phones,” said Fu Liang, an independent analyst.
Telecom operators agree that lowering the prices of 3G smartphones will be key in bringing the technology to 2G subscribers, who mainly use mobile phones to make calls, the analyst said. They realize that a price tag of 1,000 yuan will be instrumental in initiating that shift, the analyst said.
The boost to business is most obvious among handsets jointly launched by Chinese electronics makers Lenovo and ZTE. The two companies currently lead the market for phones that use the WCDMA network standard, with Lenovo selling 340,000 of its A60 phones and ZTE selling 240,000 of its V880 handsets per month, according to an analyst. In 2012, the analyst estimated, the number of phones priced under 1,000 yuan will climb to 90 million, while those priced between 1,000 and 2,000 yuan (US$316) will number around 60 million.
China Unicom has seen its 3G subscribers rapidly increase since it partnered with cell phone vendors such as Huawei and Lenovo to roll out inexpensive models in China. According to data from the three major telecom operators in China — China Unicom, China Telecom and China Mobile — 3G subscribers using China Unicom’s network increased to by 3.38 million in November, while China Mobile and China Telecom saw their 3G users rise to by 2.68 million and 2.16 million, respectively.
China Unicom today released an upgraded version of the new definition of thousands of intelligent machines 4.0 [Google translation, Dec 26, 2011]
… The first listing contains the models are Coolpad 7260 [酷派 Yulong], Hisense [海信] HS-U8, ZTE [中兴] V889D, Huawei [华为] U8818, Lenovo [联想] A750, TCL A996, Amoi [厦新] N89 and Philips* W635 …
…
* Sang Fei [桑菲通信]:
Sang Fei is one of China’s biggest mobile communication enterprises with a large export market and a fast-emerging domestic brand presence. A core subsidiary of China Electronics Corporation (CEC) [a highly specialized contract manufacturer in Taiwan] and SED Group [Shenzhen SED Industry Co., Ltd., a state-owned enterprise, which contains 20 solely-funded enterprises and Joint Ventures enterprises, is a publicly listed company on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange [from: the staff is over 5000, the yearly turnover is over 1000 million of U.S Dollar]] …
…
Sang Fei has evolved into a multi-million mobile communications player on the international stage since it was established in 1996 as a joint venture between electronics giant Royal Dutch Philips Electronics Ltd and SED. In 2007, its official buyout of Philip’s global mobile phone businessof Philips, backed by decades of knowledge transfer from the Dutch company, marked the beginning of a new chapter in Sang Fei’s history.
Although it has retained the world-famous Philips brand for its mobile phone products, Sang Fei has stamped its own mark on the business. With an accumulated output exceeding tens of millions, its mobile phones are well recognized by both the industry and customers from home and abroad …
Platform Qualcomm Snapdragon S1 [Google translation, Dec 26, 2011]
… Five models are using Qualcomm Snapdragon S1
- Coolpad 7260
[MSM7227T based with 800 MHz ARM11 processor, 4” display],- Hisense HS-U8
[MSM7227A based with Cortex A5 processor],- ZTE V889D
[MSM7227A based with 1.0 GHz Cortex A5 processor, 4” display],- Huawei U8818 [MSM7227A based with 1.0 GHz Cortex A5 processor, 4” display] and
- Philips [Sang Fei] W635 [MSM7227A based with 1.0 GHz Cortex A5 processor, 4” display]. …
[i.e. Lenovo A750, TCL A996 and Amoi N89 are not:
- Lenovo A750 has MediaTek MT6575 SoC with a 1.0 GHz Cortex-A9 core and HSPA+ support, and 4” display
- Amoi N89 quite probably has MediaTek MT6575 SoC with a 1.0 GHz Cortex-A9 core … as well
- TCL A996, meanwhile has the following specifications:
- Network standard: GSM / WCDMA
- Size: 123 × 65.5 × 12.9mm
- Screen: 4.0 inch IPScapacitive screen resolution of WVGA (480 × 800)
- Battery Capacity: 1500mAh
- Standby time: 300 hours
- Talk time: 4 hours
- Operating System: Android 2.3
- Processor: [Broadcom ARM11-based] BCM 21552
- Memory: RAM 512MB/ROM 512MB, support Micro SD expansion (up to 32GB)
TCL increases smartphone sales 24x to over 1 mln units [Dec 9, 2011]
Chinese handset maker TCL shipped 1.1 million smartphones as part of the 39.15 million units of mobile phones and other products it sold in January-November, 24 times more than the 42,384 smartphones it shipped in the year-earlier period, when total product shipments stood at 39.15 million units. Due to the increasing popularity of handsets that carry social networking functions, the group continued to launch more Facebook phones, strengthening its brand reputation and expanding market share. In November, FrenchTelecom-Orange announced that it would launch the first of three new phones featuring a Facebook key, the Alcatel One Touch 908F. TCL said that the Alcatel phones with Facebook keys are set to be launched across Africa and Europe before the end of the year. TCL, which produced the Vodafone 555 Blue phone as a white-label product, expects its Alcatel One Touch branded phones to raise the product mix towards higher revenue-earning smartphones. TCL is also involved in future mobile technologies, including Terahertz spectrum (0.1-10THz). Still not fully utitilised, the band is being considered in China where TCL has produced a phone supporting THz communications, the Xianguyn A919.
Top TCL Executive Visits Taiwan’s Electronics Makers With Huge Procurement Hint [Dec 7, 2011]
Taipei, Dec. 7, 2011 (CENS)–TCL Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Li Dongsheng said his company will not limit spending on procurements of Taiwan’s electronics products when recently visiting some Taiwanese electronics heavyweights, including chip vendor MediaTek Inc.
TCL, currently the world’s 25th biggest producer of household appliances, plans to ship 12 million LCD TVs and 50 million mobile phones in 2012. Industry executives estimated the company to budget more than US$1 billion for sourcing Taiwan’s electronics products next year.
Among Taiwan’s contract suppliers on TCL’s outsourcing lists are MediaTek Inc., AU Optronics Corp. (AUO), and Chimei Innolux Corp. Li visited MediaTek’s and AUO’s Taiwan headquarters a few days ago. He said his talk with MediaTek Chairman M.K. Cai mainly focused on cooperation over smartphone development.
However, both AUO and MediaTek executives declined to comment on the meetings.
TCL is now MediaTek’s biggest customer, purchasing up to 30 million mobile phone chipsets from MediaTek in 2010. Li touted that TCL is already among the mainland’s first-tier handset makers, shipping around 45 million systems in 2011. The company shipped 36.2 million mobile phones in 2010.
Taiwan’s industry executives noted that TCL is also one of MediaTek’s major customers of TV chips. TCL has reportedly designed MediaTek MT6573 chip, MediaTek’s first 3.75G 3.5G smartphone chip unveiled early this year, into its mobile phones. MediaTek’s 3D TV chip launched early this year has also entered into TCL TVs.
Handset chips and TV chips have accounted for over 90% of MediaTek’s revenue.
Li pointed out that unlike tepid LCD TV demands in Europe and North America, the mainland’s LCD TV market will grow at least 10% in 2011. He estimated the mainland to turn out a total of 90 million LCD TVs throughout this year, with nearly half of which set aside for the mainland’s domestic market. Although TCL has secured supply of 30 million LCD panels with LCD maker BOE Co., Ltd. of the mainland, the volume is far short of its demand.
Li stressed that his company has entered into cooperation with LCD maker AUO and several Taiwanese LED makers to ensure steady supplies for its TVs.
Backend firms gearing up for new MediaTek solution [Dec 23, 2011]
IC packagers Advanced Semiconductor Engineering (ASE) and Siliconware Precision Industries (SPIL), and substrate makers Unimicron Technology and Kinsus Interconnect Technology are all getting ready for the launch of MediaTek’s MT6575 single-chip solution, according to industry sources.
The upcoming MT6575 will run at 1GHz – an upgrade from 650MHz that the predecessor MT6573 has – targeting growing demand for low-cost smartphones. MediaTek adopts the advanced 40nm process for its MT6575 chip line, and uses wire bonding instead of flip-chip packaging in the products for cost reasons, the sources indicated.
[from: MediaTek MT6575 chips [are] using the new 40-nanometer process, compared with the previous generation chip [the] MT6573 [is] smaller, [the] single-wafer die production is up to 1,200 pieces, [which is] an increase of nearly 50%, [thus] help[ing to] reduce costs.]MediaTek has delivered samples of the new MT6575 solution for design-in to about 40 companies since December, the sources said. It expects to start shipping in volume to customers between January and February 2012, the sources noted. [from: first in December for a small amount of trial production, about 400,000 single month]
Shipments of MediaTek’s MT6575 solution are likely to top 1.5 million units in January, and further expand to three million in February, the sources estimated. The anticipated boost in shipments will buoy sales at its backend suppliers in the first quarter of 2012, the sources said.
ASE remarked at its most recent investors meeting that shipments would decrease 3-4% sequentially in the last quarter of 2011. Looking forward, fewer working days in January might affect the company’s sales performance, said ASE, without elaborating further.
Kinsus has estimated flat sequential growth in fourth-quarter sales. Sales for the first quarter of 2012 would slide as a result of seasonal factors, the company said.
From a MediaTek product document:
MT6573(ap+modem+pmu) + MT6162(rf) + MT662(wifi,gps,bt,fm)
MT6573: ARM11 AP, ARM9 Modem processor,HSPA。
MT6573: 8 Mega pixel camera, OpenGL ES2.0MediaTek MT6573 is a highly integrated 3G system-on-chip (SOC) which incorporates advanced features like HSPA R6 modem, 650MHz ARM11 CPU, 3D graphics(OpenGL|ES 2.0), 8M camera ISP, LPDDR 400MHz, FWVGA(854×480) video decoder. MT6573 can helps phone manufacturers build high performance 3G smart phone with PC-like browser, 3D gaming and cinema class home entertainment experience.
World-Leading Technology:
Based on MediaTek’s world-leading mobile chip SOC architecture and 65nm advanced process, the MT6573 is the grand new generation smart phone SOC. It integrates the MediaTek HSPA R6 modem, 650MHz CPU, 3D graphics, FWVGA video decoder and power management unit.
Rich Feature for High Valued Product:
To enrich camera feature, MT6573 equips a 8M camera ISP with advanced features like auto focus, anti-handshake, continuous video AF, face detection, burst shot, optical zoom, panorama view and 3D photo.
Incredible Browser experience:
The 650MHz CPU brings PC-like browser experience and help accelerate OpenGL|ES 2.0 3D Adobe Flash 10 rendering performance to an unbeatable level.
3G chip market opening price war or acceleration of intelligent mobile phone [Dec 15, 2011]
… With MT6573 scenery, MediaTek then released their latest MT6575, treatment efficacy faster, as high chip MSM7227A. Frequency up to 1GHz, using ARM CortexA9, support for HSPA+. By comparison, MT6573 is inferior many, the chip using ARM11 AP processor frequency is 650 MHz, modem support HSPA speed of 7.2Mbps / 5.76Mbps. …
MediaTek reiterates 4Q11 sales guidance [Dec 29, 2011]
Following a report regarding falling feature phone and smartphone demand in China, MediaTek has said its sales guidance for the current fourth quarter should remain on track. MediaTek expects fourth-quarter sales to fall somewhere between a decrease of 2% to an increase of 5% sequentially.
MediaTek’s consolidated revenues for October and November totaled NT$15.16 billion, already making up 62-66% of the company’s targeted NT$22.9-24.5 billion for the fourth quarter.
Industry sources were quoted in a recent report suggesting a recent slowdown in chip orders from China’s handset market would imply an early arrival of the low season. Many Taiwan-based handset chip suppliers, which rely heavily on the China market, might report 5-10% sequential decreases in December revenues, the sources were quoted as saying.
Qualcomm cuts chip prices for Chinese smartphones [Dec 25, 2011]
Deep price cuts in new dual-core chips produced by American telecom equipment manufacturer Qualcommand used in smartphones produced in China could intensify competition between the company and Taiwan-based integrated circuit designer MediaTek.
The move marks the beginning of a new round of price slashing, Gao Guiming, senior vice president of A’Hong Communication & Digital Information, told the Shanghai-based First Financial Daily.
The US$7 reduction in the price of Qualcomm’s new dual-core chips will pit the company in direct competition with MediaTek in the market for smartphones priced at around 1,000 yuan (US$158). Gao pointed out that MediaTek remains a follower in the smartphone market and that Qualcomm’s price cut will force the Taiwanese firm to follow suit in order to expand its market share in China.
Smartphone shipments in China reached 24 million units in the third quarter of 2011, surging 58% from the second quarter and leading the country to pass the US as the world’s biggest market for the devices, according to data compiled by research and consulting firm Strategy Analytics. Total sales volume in China is projected to expand to 153 million phones in 2012.
Qualcomm’s latest price cut signals its plan to supply smartphone manufacturers with “public boards” designed for common use by various producers to quickly develop low-cost handsets.
Qian Zhijun, product director at Qualcomm China, revealed at a summit on smartphones held in Shenzhen last month that his company’s new research and development center in Shanghai will help producers shorten the time needed to roll out new products. Qualcomm aims to use its QRD development platform to help producers put new models on the market within 30-60 days, compared with the more than six months required today.
Sources at MediaTek say there is still no news about the company’s possible plans to cut prices in response. MediaTek president Hsieh Ching-chiang stressed in November that providing customers with low-cost customized chips has long been the company’s forte and that the smartphone sector will see little change.
Hsieh implied that MediaTek still has an advantage over Qualcomm in terms of offering more comprehensive services to clients. He revealed that MediaTek has shifted most of its resources to the smartphone sector. Hsieh expects the company’s shipments of dual-core chips for intelligent handsets to double to 20 million sets in 2012.
Liu Wenquan, an industry analyst based in Shenzhen, says an intense price war is unlikely in the near future as aggressive promotion by Chinese telecom service carriers has brought about skyrocketing demand for low-cost smartphones. MediaTek’s MT6573 chips are still in short supply, he said.
Analysts said Qualcomm’s major targets in China are larger smartphone producers, not mobile phone copycats. Senior vice president Jeff Lorbeck stated that the QRD development platform will be open mainly to companies that have already won Qualcomm technology certification and authorization.
Further, Qualcomm’s price still hovers about US$10 higher than similar products from MediaTek, which maintains the advantage of higher flexibility as well as closer and smoother communication with Chinese smartphone manufacturers.
Gu Wenjun, an analyst at market research firm iSuppli, said the Chinese market is too big and diverse for any single chip supplier to maintain a dominant role. The best policy for Qualcomm and MediaTek is to take better care of their largest clients, he suggested. Smartphone manufacturers are expected to continue the policy of choosing two or even three core chip suppliers in order to produce a variety of smartphones to satisfy consumers’ tastes, added Gu.
ZTE Skate [V960] Review CNET [cnetuk, Nov 23, 2011]
In this video review, Amie Parker-Williams does a double take when she gets her mitts on the ZTE Skate, the identical twin of the Orange Monte Carlo. While the two phones may have been cast in the same mold in terms of design, the Skate thankfully comes without the Orange bloatware, and is better off for it. Hit play to take a closer look at this glossy Android blower.
China Unicom Hopes To Sell Cheaper Phones Next Year [Dec 20, 2011]
Chinese telecom operator China Unicom announced its strategic focus for 2012 and said it will focus on the sales of phones with the prices between CNY1,000 and CNY2,000.
On December 12, 2011, China Unicom and ZTE, the Chinese telecom equipment maker, jointly launched a customized phone named Skate V960, which is recognized as a strategic productby Yu Yingtao, general manager for the sales department of China Unicom.
Yu previously revealed during an interview that many manufacturers were developing phones with the prices between CNY1,000 and CNY2,000 and China Unicom will bring surprises to users in 2012. The company plans to introduce more cost-effective products then.
Following the launch of Skate V960, other Chinese and International makers such as Huawei, Motorola, HTC, and Samsung will provide more options in this price range, said Yu. Products of this price range hold a 20% share of the market in China, which means a user group of about 50 million people. Therefore, China Unicom will cooperate with first-class makers in China and the world to meet the demands of these consumers.
However, Yu pointed out that it does not mean the company will focus less on smartphones with prices lower than CNY1,000, because these products own 63% share of the market and more international brands expressed their intention to launch CNY1,000 smartphones. According to Yu, for the year 2011, China Unicom’s sales of CNY1,000 smartphones made by ZTE, Huawei, Lenovo, Coolpad, and Amoi is expected to be over 10 million units.
ZTE SKATE [V960], Smart Choice, Bright Life [ZTEGlobal, Sept 22, 2011]
ZTE Smartphone Sales Top 12M Units [Dec 13, 2011]
ZTE Corporation (000063, 0763.HK) has met its 2011 annual sales target of 12 million smartphones, reports 163.com, citing company vice president He Shiyou. The companysold three million smartphones last year.
He said ZTE is currently planning its 2012 sales target, and that there will be more than a doublingof the smartphone sales target.
ZTE and China Unicom (600050, 0762.HK) jointly launched the Skate V960 smartphone priced at 1,499 yuanon December 12.
The Skate V960 mobile phone was first rolled out in overseas markets, including Brazil, Spain, Hong Kong, Germany and the U.S., before its launch in the domestic market.
He said ZTE will continue to cooperate with operators in terminal sales, and will develop other sales channels as well.
ZTE Skate – Light your smart world [ZTEGlobal, Oct 13, 2011]
ZTE V960 [= Skate] product page[translated by Google, Sept 23, 2011]
- Frequency range GSM: 900/1800/1900 UMTS: 900/2100 HSDPA: 7.2Mbps DL
- Chipset Qualcomm MSM7227-T [800 MHz]
- Size 126.5 * 68 * 11.2mm
- Weight 140g (with battery)
- Antenna comes with built-in antenna modeling straight memory
- Memory: 200 MB of available space is greater than the available expansion card memory MicroSD memory card expansion (up to 32 GB)
- The main screen 800 * 480 pixels, 262K TFT color screen, 4.3-inch external screen without camera
- 5M pixel camera take a picture: up to 2560 * 1920,
- Shooting video: up to 640 * 480
- Digital zoom: 1.6 times
- Battery Standard battery: Li-ion 1400 mAh
- Side keys (volume keys) with the keyboard menu, home, back
- Touch-screen full-touch capacitive touch-screen interface,
- Bluetooth extension, MicroSD card, USB 2.0 Full Speed
- SIM card insertion, 3V, 1.8V
- Stereo headphones with a microphone headset hands-free speaker with charger 5pin Micro-USB
- Sensor support gravity sensor, light sensor, proximity sensor
China-based branded smartphone vendors to produce sub-US$100 models [Nov 3, 2011]
China-based branded handset vendors including Lenovo, ZTE and Huawei Technologies are expected to venture into the production of smartphone models with a price tag of around US$100 in 2012 – a move which will add pressure on white-box vendorsin China as well as on upstream parts and components suppliers, according to industry sources.
The China-based makers are responding to growing competition from foreign branded smartphones vendors including HTC, Apple and Samsung Electronics, which have recently expanded their product lineups for the entry-level and mid-range markets, the sources noted.
Although HTC has refuted market rumors that it plans to launch smartphones for the US$100 segment, the sources said HTC has been trying to reduce its production costs by introducing models with comparable hardware specifications but running on different operating systems.
Taking the HTC Titan and HTC Sensational XL for example, the hardware specifications of the two models are comparable, but the HTC Titan runs on Windows Phone platform, while the HTC Sensational XL is powered by Android 2.3.4.
Apple’s launch of 8GB iPhone 4 and iPhone 3GS is also a vivid indication of the vendor’s ambition to expand its share in the entry-level and mid-range smartphone segments, the sources commented.
Qualcomm competing with MediaTek in China market with price competition [Dec 6, 2011]
In view of increasing adoption of the MT6575, a 1GHz chip solution developed by Taiwan-based MediaTek for use in 3G handsets and smartphones, by several China-based vendors and white-box clients, Qualcomm has lowered its quotes by keeping them close to MediaTek in order to strengthen its price competitiveness, according to China-based white-box vendors.
Following selling the 650MHz chip MT6573 in the China market during early October peak sales period, MediaTek has begun offering the MT6575featuring mainstream a computing speed of 1GHz and four functions, GPS, FM, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, in one chip. The specifications plus price and rich content available on MediaTek’s handset development platform have made M6575 strongly competitive in the China market, the sources indicated.
Qualcomm has had its MSM7727 and MSM7727Acompete with MediaTek’s MT6573 and MT6575 respectively, the sources noted.
Based on a general price level of about US$10 for a 3G handset chip, the MT6575 is competitive enough in price, the sources indicated. To be competitive, Qualcomm has to decrease prices because its quotes for 3G handset chip solutions are mostly higher than MediaTek by more than 20%, the sources pointed out.
The competition for 3G handset chip solutions between Qualcomm and MediaTek will extend from China to emerging markets in 2012, the sources indicated.
The new frontier in mobile computing: Q&A with Qualcomm EVP Steve Mollenkopf [May 31, 2011]
…
Q: Convergence has been talked about for years, why is now such a critical time in the evolution of the market?
A: If you look at the current market situation, there are there are three areas that have driven the industry to reach critical mass.
First of all, advancements in semiconductor designhave substantially increased the amount of computing power that you be put into the small thermal envelope needed to efficiently power a mobile phone or portable device. What this means is that you can now put the same processing power in a smartphone or another type of handheld device that used to be in a notebook, and that is really opening up the market to new designs and usage models.
The second thing that is shaping the current market is that the shift to next-generation mobile networkshas meant that a lot of data can be quickly delivered to – and enjoyed by – mobile devices, with multimedia and Internet content driving demand. High-speed 3G and 4G networks really enable an enormous amount of connectivity to occur with mobile devices.
The third area where the market is really evolving is that the dynamics of the software markethave changed a great deal. Most developers used to focus on the PC ecosystem, and a major priority driving software vendors in the past was making sure that they maintained backward compatibility for their applications. If you look at the market now, most people are developing for smartphone platforms and those platforms are migrating up. This has broken the link of being encumbered by legacy applications. This phenomena is only going to accelerate even more as we move into cloud computing and most user data and applications end up being positioned somewhere in the cloud.
So what this means is that currently there is a kind of perfect stormin the mobile environment that is bringing the best of all worlds together. It is really going to change the way mobile devices are used and it is also going to change the technology in them.
Q: While users are expecting more from their mobile devices, system providers have to deal with more complexity, making it harder to quickly deliver products to market. Can you explain how Qualcomm can help enable its partners in this area?
A: It’s true. What you see, particularly as you start moving into mobile computing is that the devices are very complex. For market players, this means that your solution needs to excel along many different vectors. It has to have a high-performing processor. It has to have a high-performing graphics engine. It has to have a high-performing modem. It has to be a high performing connectivity solution.
Moreover, all of those areas need to be blended together in an optimal manner. It doesn’t make sense for a device to simply be a collection of assets. All the areas need to work properly together for that system to be a success. What that means for semiconductor solution providers is that you need to have all of these assets in house in order to best enable your customers.
Really, when the complexity of the solution becomes quite high, it is going to be very difficult for many players to deliver that system solution efficiently and at the speed that is required in order to be competitive in the market. A lot of solution providers may excel in one area or another, but not really in all areas. This makes things more difficult for downstream system providers. What Qualcomm has endeavored to achieve is to try to excel across multiple vectors. We have been lucky in that we have had the scale to invest, to allow us to be successful.
Q: Can you tell us a bit about your hardware features, especially Snapdragon?
A: Referring back to Qualcomm being able to succeed across multiple vectors, the Snapdragon is a perfect example. One misconception many users have about Snapdragon is that it is a processor but Snapdragon is an integrated system. It doesn’t refer solely to the processor or to the graphics engine. It doesn’t refer to the connectivity assetsor the modem individually. It refers to all of them together in an integrated solution.
Looking back at the first Snapdragon we did, which was really the first 1GhHz processor in a mobile phone; that was when we really began enabling the market with a much differentiated product relative to what the market had seen before. We are now on our fourth generation productand we will continue investing heavily in the platform as we move forward.
In terms of processing on the ARM-based Snapdragon platform, we currently have a mix of the highest performance and lowest power mix in the industry with our 28nm versions of the device. On the network side, Qualcomm has always been known as a leading modem company and we integrate the modem into the processor. Together with the GPU, the SoC (system on chip) family of solutions delivers one of the most integrated solutions today. In addition to providing us with a leadership position, this is pretty important because it allows our partners to develop unique designs. For example, the first LTE smartphone from Verizon is built around our Snapdragon platform.
And it is not just about hardware. A solution provider needs to be able to deliver software support as well. For example, currently we deliver Android over multiple chipsets at the same time. This is important because there are many tiers of devices, from high-end tablets down to entry level smartphones. With Qualcomm being able to deliver solutions that cover all market segments, we enable our partners to be competitive with a full range of products as well.
We started talking about complexity and finished with integration, but integration is really just the ability to pull together many different types of technologies into one easily deliverable package, whether it is one physical package or one system solution tied together by one set of software. As the market progresses and becomes more complex, fewer companies can deliver on this. That is why Qualcomm is leading the way.
Q: How does this level of integration help you enable your partners?
A:Combining all the levels of integration in our family of solutions allows for more creativity for system houses. OEMs can spend their resources and investment in areas that help differentiate their products. It is a much more efficient way to deliver technology.
In addition, our highly integrated solution actually expands the market by enabling more partners to participate in system design. By providing so much to our partners, we don’t limit our customer base to companies with very large engineering teams only. Many more companies are able to go to market with our products.
…
Taiwan foundries cut prices 10-15% [Dec 30, 2011]
Taiwan-based foundry service providers have cut their prices for wafers built on mature node processes to reflect lower production costs, according to sources at IC design firm. The move is also aimed to encourage customers to build inventory, the sources said.
Some fabless IC firms tend to accept their foundry partners’ low-price offerings in consideration of their long-term relationships, the sources indicated.
Chip inventories throughout the supply chain have actually been lowered to safe levels, the sources said. However, companies hold a wait-and-see attitude rather than restocking because of an uncertain business outlook, the sources pointed out.
Inventories climbed to excessive levels between the end of the second quarter and the beginning of the third quarter, due to a combination of negative macroeconomic factors such as weak consumer confidence in the US and the European crisis.
In other news, despite slow demand for mature process manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) continues to see orders heat up for advanced 28nm technology, according to sources at non Taiwan-based chip suppliers.
Foundry orders losing momentum [Nov 22, 2011]
Foundry chipmakers have seen short lead-time orders lose momentum, according to industry sources. Short lead-time orders were a key factor contributing to their revenue growth in October and better-than-expected results in the third quarter.
A surge of short lead-time orders was previously expected to emerge around this time amid low inventories in the semiconductor supply chain, the sources pointed out.
But fabless IC clients are now unable to meet order estimates placed earlier with the foundries, and have requested delivery to be delayed until after the first quarter of 2012, the sources indicated.
Major foundry players including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) might post double-digit sequential dips in revenues for the first quarter of 2012, due to a slowdown in orders, the sources said. Gross margin and operating margin for the quarter will also come under downward pressure along with their utilitzation rate declines, the sources added.
But starting from the middle of the second quarter, foundries are expected to see orders pick upwith clearer order visibility, the sources believe.
TSMC at its most-recent investors meeting estimated consolidated sales for the fourth quarter of 2011 would slip 1-3% sequentially. The firm reported higher-than-expected results for the third quarter driven short lead-time orders.
UMC has guided wafer shipments for the fourth quarter would decrease about 10% sequentially with ASPs up 5%. It did not provide a revenue guidance.
Both TSMC and UMC have not disclosed their revenue forecast for the first quarter of 2012.
China market: Handset demand weak [Dec 26, 2011]![]()
Demand for feature phones in China has turned weaker than expected since the middle of October, according to sources at Taiwan’s LCD driver IC design houses. Smartphone demand in China is also slowing down recently, bringing further adverse impact to some firms’ sales performance, the sources indicated.
The slowdown in orders reflects an early arrival of the low season, the sources observed.
Many of Taiwan’s handset chip suppliers which rely heavily on the China market are likely to report 5-10% sequential decreases in December revenues, the sources estimated, citing falling demand from the region. Sales might further decline 10% or more sequentially in the first quarter of 2012, as a result of fewer working days during the long Chinese New Year holiday and seasonality, the sources noted.
However, most of Taiwan’s handset chip designers will see their sales recover starting the second quarter of 2012 when China-based handset firms’ inventories will be low, the sources said.
MediaTek likely to post higher revenues in December [Dec 21, 2011]
Brisk orders from China-based smartphone vendors who are preparing for Lunar New Year sales campaignsare buoying MediaTek’s sales in December, according to industry sources. The IC design firm is expected to post sequential growth in consolidated revenues for the month, the sources said.
The sources estimated MediaTek’s December consolidated revenues at between NT$7.7 billion (US$255 million) and NT$9.2 billion [US$305 million].
MediaTek previously guided consolidated sales for the fourth quarter would be NT$22.9-24.5 billion, compared to NT$23.38 billion in the third quarter.
MediaTek accumulated NT$79.36 billion [US$2,628 million] in consolidated sales from January through November, a 24.8% decline from 2010.
MediaTek posts lower-than-expected sales in November [Dec 8, 2011]
MediaTek has reported consolidated revenues grew 1.2% sequentially to NT$7.63 billion (US$252.9 million) in November. The figure came below market watcher estimates of NT$8.5-9.5 billion.
MediaTek’s November sales were affected by its China-based white-box clients’ lower-than-expected smartphone shipments, according to industry sources. Shipments were disrupted by tight supplies of ambient light sensorsfrom Texas Advanced Optoelectronic Solutions (TAOS), the sources revealed.
TAOS’ back-end operations in Thailandhave been suspended causing disruptions to its ambient light sensor shipments to customers, which also include brand-name consumer electronics vendors such as Apple, HTC and Nokia, the sources indicated. With its ambient light sensor availability becoming tight, TAOS is giving priority to orders placed by the first-tier brands, at the expense of those from second-tier and China’s white-box companies, the sources said.
TAOS is unlikely to provide adequate supplies of its ambient light sensors by the end of 2011, which would continue to disrupt certain CE manufacturers’ deliveries, the sources noted.
Previous reports quoted industry sources saying MediaTek had enjoyed brisk demand for its solutions targeting low-cost smartphones, and an influx of short lead-time orders from clients in China after the country’s National Day holidays.
MediaTek sales to top NT$9 billion in November [Dec 5, 2011]
Buoyed by an influx of short lead-time orders from handset clients in China, MediaTek will report better-than-expected sales results for November 2011, industry sources have said.
MediaTek’s consolidated revenues are likely to top NT$9 billion (US$298 million) in November, hitting the highest monthly level for 2011, according to the sources. The company saw its sales decrease about 5% sequentially to NT$7.53 billion in October.
MediaTek reportedly has enjoyed brisk demand for its MT6573 smartphone solution – targeting low-cost smartphones. In particular, demand received a boost driven by orders from China during the country’s National Day holidays in Octonber, the sources observed. Next-generation MT6575 is scheduled to start shipping prior to Lunar New Year, the sources indicated.
The upcoming MT6575 single-chip solution will run at 1GHz, an upgrade from 650MHz that its predecessor has, the sources revealed. In addition to white-box handset makers, a number of brand-name firms targeting the China marketreportedly will adopt the solution from MediaTek, the sources indicated.
MediaTek previously reiterated that its sales estimate of NT$22.9-24.5 billion for the fourth quarter remains unchanged. The company posted consolidated revenues of NT$23.38 billion in the third quarter, up 11.4% sequentially but down 17.1% on year.
Motorola increasing orders to Taiwan production partners, say sources [Dec 6, 2011]
Motorola Mobility has been strengthening its ties with Taiwan-based handset ODMs and parts and components suppliers with procurements from those production partners to increase 10% sequentially in the second half of 2011 and to further expand by 10-15% in 2012, according to sources in the supply chain.
Motorola’s increased orders to Taiwan production partners reflect a steady integration process between Google and Motorola as well as the vendor’s stepped-up efforts to launch new models, including the Razr XT910 flagship model [(Dec) TI OMAP 4430 based, with dual Cortex-A9 @1GHz], the high-end Milestone 3, [ME883 (July), XT860 (Sept) and ME863 (Sept) – all OMAP 4430 based, with dual Cortex-A9 @1GHz], the DEFY+ [MB526 (Sept) OMAP 3620 based, with Cortex-A8 @ 720 MHz] social networking phone and the entry-level XT319 [XT319 (Oct) with Qualcomm MSM7227T @ 800 MHz], in the fourth quarter of 2011, revealed the sources.
Motorola’s ODM handset orders to Taiwan production partners are expected to total 11-13 million units in 2011, of which over 90% are feature phones, estimated the sources, noting that Taiwan ODMs may receive more orders for smartphones from the vendor in 2012.
Motorola’s ODM partners include Arima Communications, Compal Communications and Foxconn International Holdings (FIH), while parts and components suppliers include Merry Electronics and Chi Cheng Enterprise.
Merry has reported consolidated revenues of NT$880 million (US$29.1 million) for November, increasing 25.47% on month and 9.67% on year and representing the highest monthly figures in 47 months, according to a company filing with the Taiwan Stock Exchange (TSE).
MediaTek, Spreadtrum, MStar sharing China market of handset chips [Dec 13, 2011]
Taiwan-based IC design house MediaTek and MStar Semiconductor and China-based fellow company Spreadtrum Communications are sharing the market demand for handset chips, according to China-based white-box vendors of handsets.
MediaTek, following victorious sales of its 3G chip MT6573 during the peak sales period in early October 2011, has launched 1GHz 3G chip MT6575 and received good market response, the sources pointed out. MediaTek’s shipments of MT6575 are expected to peak prior to the 2012 Lunar New Year in late January, the sources indicated.
Spreadtrum has dominated the market segment of TD-SCDMA, China-developed 3G standard, chips, with shipments of TD-SCDMA chip SC8800G on the rise, the sources noted.
While MediaTek and Spreadtrum have shifted focus to 3G chip solutions, MStar has focused on marketing of 2.5/2.75G chips with many new products, the sources indicated. MStar’s monthly shipments of 2.5/2.75G chips have climbed to 5.0 million units, more than triple the level in the first half of 2011, the sources pointed out.
Currently, MediaTek has a market share of 60% for 2.5/2.75G chips, while Spreadtrum and MStar have those of 25% and 10% respectively, the sources noted.
MStar reports on-year revenue growth for November [Dec 9, 2011]
MStar Semiconductor has announced consolidated revenues of NT$3.25 billion (US$107.7 million) for November, down 4.4% on month but up 6.5% on year, according to a company filing the Taiwan Stock Exchange.
For the first 11 months of 2011, revenues amounted to NT$32.52 billion [US$1,077.7 million], increasing 3.5% from a year earlier.
MStar taping out 3.75G [?3.5G?] handset solutions in 4Q11 [Nov 9, 2011]
Taiwan-based IC design house MStar Semiconductor will begin to tape out 3.75G [?3.5G?] handset solutions supporting TD-SCDMA and CDMA technologies soon with end market devices to hit the market in the first quarter of 2012, according to company chairman Wayne Liang.
Shipments of handset solutions will increase 30-50% sequentially in the fourth quarter, pushing handset solution revenues to 15% of the company’s total revenues in the quarter compared to 10% in the third quarter, Liang predicted.
Fourth-quarter revenues are expected to top US$311-329 million, up or down in a range of 3% from the previous quarter, Liang said at an investors conference. Gross margin will range 40-42% in the fourth quarter compared to 42.1% in the last quarter.
Shipments of TV chips will drop slightly in the fourth quarter, and demand for TV chips is expected to continue growing in emerging markets in 2012, but the prospects in the US and Europe are still unclear, said Liang.
MStar posted net profits of NT$1.62 billion (US$53.8 million) in the third quarter, up 7.2% sequentially. Third-quarter earnings translated into an EPS of NT$3.06 compared to NT$3.73 posted by rival MediaTek, according to data from the companies.
China market: 2.5G handset chipset prices falling [Nov 24, 2011]
Prices for 2.5G handset chipsets have slipped more than 10% in the fourth quarter of 2011, and will continue to fall at the same rate in first-quarter 2012 due to continued oversupply in the market, according to sources at white-box handset makersin China.
With branded and white-box handset vendors shifting their focus to smartphones, demand for 2.5G feature phones in China is decelerating, the sources said. Taking sales during China’s National Day holidays last month as an example, supplies were tight for many top-selling smartphones while 2.5G devices were unremarkable, the sources indicated.
As end-market demand began to fall, chipmakers including MediaTek, MStar Semiconductor and Spreadtrum Communications decided to lower their prices for 2.5G solutionsto stimulate demand and protect their market shares, the sources pointed out.
Another cause of the intensified price competition is high similarity of products. MediaTek’s 40nm-made 2.5G chipset that comes with a high level of integration enabled the company to stand out from the crowd in the first half of 2011, when competition with rivals was less fierce, the sources said. However, with MStar and Spreadtrum both launching 40nm, highly-integrated solutions, competition has intensified leading prices to fall in the second half of the year, the sources noted.
In addition, MediaTek, MStar and Spreadtrum have stepped up R&D efforts for the development of 3G WCDMA and TD-SCDMA chipset solutions, according to the sources.
Motorola to adopt MediaTek solutions for WCDMA smartphones, says paper [Oct 14, 2011]
Motorola Mobility will adopt MediaTek’s MT6573 solutions for its WCDMA-enabled smartphones, the Chinese-language Commercial Timescited Daiwa Securities analyst Chen Hui-ming as indicating.
Motorola’s order volume to MediaTek is still unclear as it will depend on market demand during the upcoming Lunar New Year holidays as well as Motorola’s cooperation with China-based telecom carriers, Chen was quoted as saying.
In addition, China-based Huawei Technologies is also likely to adopt smartphone solutions from MediaTek in early 2012, said Chen, but added that Huawei is going to buy MediaTek’s new 3.75G solution, the MT6575, instead of the MT6573. Huawei previously purchased most of its handset solutions from Qualcomm.
MediaTek Pursuing Japan’s 4G Biz [Nov 30, 2011]
… MediaTek President C.J Hsieh touted that MediaTek chipsets are not inferior to Qualcomm’s. MediaTek MT6573, for instance, supports EDGE and WCDMA specifications with its Bluetooth, LAN, GPS and FM wireless designs.
The company plans to ship 20 million smartphone chipsets in 2012, 10 million more than its goal for 2011. Totally, the company will deliver 550 million chipsets for various types of handsets this year. The shipment increase comes against the backdrop of the forecast that global market penetration of smartphones will increase to 50% from 2011’s projected 30%.
Hsieh believed that his company’s smartphone chipsets will be quickly flowing into global markets along with its mainland Chinese customers striving to ship mobile phones to Europe and North America.
Orders for MediaTek 3.75G 3.5G smartphone chip soaring [Oct 13, 2011]
China’s brand-name handset vendors, including Lenovo, ZTE and TCL, have ordered more MT6573 3.75G 3.5G smartphone chips from MediaTek, according to industry sources. To meet the continued rising demand, the fabless IC firm has asked for additional foundry capacity equivalent to 6,000-8,000 12-inch wafers from United Microelectronics Corporation(UMC), the sources indicated.
Backend service providers including Advanced Semiconductor Engineering (ASE), Siliconware Precision Industries (SPIL), King Yuan Electronics (KYEC) and Sigurd Microelectronics are also pinpointed by the sources as beneficiaries of the increased orders.
MediaTek released additional orders to UMC as well as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) for foundry services in August – equivalent to a combined 25,000 12-inch wafers – to satisfy brisk demand for its MT6573 solution, which is gaining acceptance from the company’s principal customers in China, the sources revealed.
MediaTek is expected to see monthly shipments of its MT6573 chipset solutions to reach 1-1.5 million units in October and November, and continue expanding to 3.5-4 million in December, the sources estimated. The growing shipments will boost the company’s sales in the fourth quarter of 2011, the sources said.
In addition, acknowledging the MT6573’s popularity, Huawei Technologies reportedly is asking MediaTek to accelerate development of the chip’s successor, the sources said. Dubbed the MT6575, the next-generation single-chip solution could start shipping as early as the first quarter of 2012, the sources indicated.
MediaTek shares closed up 2% at NT$336 (US$11.10) on the Taiwan Stock Exchange on October 13. The price scored the highest in eight trading days.
In other news, ASE, SPIL, KYEC and Sigurd are likely to see their revenues for the fourth quarter of 2011 stay flat sequentially, the best-case scenario amid a global economic downturn, according to the sources. Orders from MediaTek as well as the depreciation of the NT dollar are seen as the major contributing factors.
MediaTek asks for additional capacity from UMC due to increased orders for MT6573 chip [Aug 24, 2011]
Due higher than expected orders for its MT6573 3.75G smartphone chip, MediaTek has asked for additional foundry capacity equivalent to several thousands of wafers from United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC), according to industry sources.
MT6573 has been adopted by Lenovo and other China-based vendors because its FOB price of US$60-70is much lower than US$100-120 quoted by MediaTek’s competitors and functional performance is better, the sources said. Based on orders received, MediaTek will ship more than one million MT6573 chips in September 2011, with monthly shipments to increase to 2-3 million chips in November and December, the sources indicated.
Due to the additional orders for foundry services, UMC has offered a 10% discount for all orders from MediaTek, the sources indicated. Similarly, MediaTek has asked Advanced Semiconductor Engineering and Siliconware Precision Industries to offer a 10% discount on IC packaging and testing services for the fourth quarter in exchange for additional orders, the sources said.
MediaTek profits improve sequentially in 3Q11 [Oct 28, 2011]
MediaTek has announced net income of NT$4.07 billion (US$135.38 million) for the third quarter of 2011, an increase of 22.4% from the prior quarter, but down 41.6% from the year-ago quarter. Third-quarter EPS were NT$3.73, compared with NT$3.05 in the previous quarter and NT$6.39 of a year earlier.
Consolidated revenues amounted to NT$23.376 billion [US$777.6 million] in the third quarter, up 11.4% sequentially but down 17.1% from a year earlier. The on-quarter revenue growth was mainly driven by seasonality and the increase of handset sales volume.
Third-quarter gross margin was 45.1%, or 0.8pps and 7.1pps lower than the previous quarter and the same period of last year, respectively, due mainly to decreased handset chipset prices.
MediaTek 3.5G-chip shipments likely to hit 1 million mark in September [Sept 30, 2011]
Shipments of MediaTek’s MT6573 3.5G chipset solution approached one million units in August, and are likely to exceed the mark in September, according to industry sources. Shipments have been fueled by roll-outs of new 3G handsets in China.
Monthly shipments of MediaTek’s MT6573 chips are expected to reach 1.5 million units in the fourth quarter, and climb further to two million in 2012, the sources said.
However, MediaTek has internally estimated that its sales for September will decrease slightly from August levels, the sources indicated. The company also maintained its revenue guidance for the third quarter at NT$22-23 billion (US$721.5 million-754.3 million), the sources revealed.
The sources previously predicted that MediaTek’s September sales would post another on-month growth following the 16.3% sequential rise in August. But a number of clients in China had actually made advance orders, which constrained the company’s sales growth in September.
MediaTek’s sales for the fourth quarter are set to decline about 10% sequentially, due to generally low order visibility, the sources said. The company has not given its outlook for the quarter.
Lenovo places short lead-time 3G chipset solution orders with MediaTek, says paper [Sept 27, 2011]
Lenovo has placed short lead-time orders for MT6573 3G solutions with MediaTek recently as the first batch of 500,000 units of its A60 smartphone, priced at CNY1,000 (US$156), have nearly sold out since the device launched in August, according to a Chinese-language Commercial Timesreport.
Due to strong sales of the A60, other vendors in China, including ZTE, Huawei Technologies, and Beijing Tianyu Communication Equipment, plan to launch low-priced smartphones soon, with chipset solutions also coming from MediaTek, the paper said.
MediaTek’s shipments of MT6573 chips are expected to top 1.2-1.3 million units a month prior to the arrival of the Lunar New Year holiday, which begins on January 22, 2012, added the paper.
Short lead-time orders buoying TSMC sales [Sept 14, 2011]
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company ((TSMC) has disclosed that its consolidated revenues for the third quarter of 2011 are expected to exceed its guidance given in July, thanks to some “rush” orders from customers.
Industry sources speculate that the short lead-time orders were placed by the foundry’s fabless clients including Qualcomm, Broadcom, MediaTek and MStarSemiconductor, which enjoyed rising demand for their smartphone solutions targeting China and other emerging markets.
However, demand for smartphones coming from the Europe, Japan and US markets remain sluggish, the sources indicated. The major chip providers actually are bracing for unusual weak demand during the Christmas and year-end shopping season, the sources added.
TSMC’s sales and utilization rate for the fourth quarter may come under downward pressure, as order visibility remains opaque, the sources said.
TSMC reported NT$37.64 billion (US$1.29 billion) in consolidated revenues for August 2011, up 6.2% sequentially. Consolidated sales for July and August totaled NT$73.08 billion, already making up 69-72% of the company’s targeted NT$102-104 billion for the third quarter.
LENOVO LePhone A60 [Sept 9, 2011]
Price: USD169.00
Specifications
- Features
Android 2.3 / Capacitive / Dual-SIM Dual-stanby- Network
GSM + GSM or GSM + WCDMA, WCDMA:900/2100, GPRS/EDGE:900/1800/1900- Processor
MTK MT6573 650MHz / GPU PowerVR SGX 531- RAM
256MB RAM- Flash Memory
512MB ROM- Expansion Memory
Extend Memory up to 32GB micro sd card- Operating System
Androind 2.3- Languages
Multi-language: English, Chinese- Screen
3.5 inch 320x480pixels, Capacitive Multi-Touch screen- Video
rm,.rmvb,rv,.wmv,.mp4,.3gp,.asf, .m4v,.avi,.mov,.mpg.mpeg,.flv,.f4v,.asf,.mkv- Audio
RA, AAC, AAC+, MP3, WMA, WAV, OGG, MIDI, AMR NB,AU,AIFF, M4A, F4A- Peripherals Support
3.5mm Stereo Interface, Micro USB v2.0- Wireless
802.11b/g, Bluetooth, FM radio- GPS
Yes- Camera
Front: 0.3MP, Back: 3.2MP- Color
Black / White- Battery
1500mAH, 3.7V- Size & weight
116.5×60×13.2mm, 135 grams- Package Content
110-230V USB Charger, Battery, USB cable, Earphone
MediaTek buoyed by rising demand for Lenovo smartphones [Sept 15, 2011]
Brisk sales of Lenovo’s A60-series smartphone in China has been boosting MediaTek’s shipments of its 3.5G solution, the MT6573, according to market sources. Order momentum is expected to remain strong to sustain the chip supplier’s sales growth in September and the third quarter.
The new Lenovo smartphone hit store shelves in China earlier in the third quarter, but has been selling well thanks to its rich feature set and affordable price point, the sources said. With demand outpacing supply, the A60 has been quoted at as high as CNY1,100 (US$172) by local channel operators, up about 30% from the just over CNY800 original priced, the sources indicated.
Meanwhile, in view of the Lenovo A60’s rising popularity, China’s channel operators have released more orders for the device prior to China’s National Day holidays, the sources observed. The booming demand will simultaneously push up MediaTek’s sales generated from the orders placed by Lenovo, the sources said.
MediaTek began to ship its MT6573 3.5G chipset solution to China in August. The company was quoted as saying in previous reports that it aims to ship 10 million 3G smartphone solutions in 2011.
MediaTek has estimated consolidated revenues at NT$22-23 billion (US$743-777 million) for the third quarter of 2011. Sales grew 16.3% sequentially to NT$8.31 billion in August, and are expected to post another sequential growth in September.
Market watchers now expect MediaTek to enjoy a more than 15% sequential increase in third-quarter sales, exceeding its guidance of 5-10% growth given previously.
Spreadtrum increases TD-SCDMA chip orders to TSMC, says paper [Sept 29, 2011]
China-based handset solution vendor Spreadtrum Communications will increase its orders for TD-SCDMA baseband chips to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) in the fourth quarter of 2011, according to a Chinese-language Commercial Times report.
Spreadtrum has avoided directly competing with MediaTek in the 3G and 4G segments and instead focuses on TD-SCDMA chips in cooperation with China Mobile. Spreadtrum currently holds 56% of the TD-SCDMA chip market in China, the paper said.
The TD-SCDMA chips will be made on a 40nm process at TSMC, while Advanced Semiconductor Engineering (ASE) will handle the backend packaging and testing, said the paper.
Handset solution vendors competing neck and neck in 3G smartphone market in China [Sept 13, 2011]
Demand for smartphone solutions in emerging markets, particularly in China, is gaining momentum, pushing chipset vendors to compete neck and neck to grab a large piece for the growing market, according to industry sources.
Qualcomm and MediaTek are both targeting the WCDMA solution market in China, and the two companies have landed orders from some branded handset vendorsin China, the sources noted.
China-based chipset vendor Spreadtrum Communications has received orders for TD-SCDMA solutions from Samsung Electronics, while rival Taiwan-based MStar Semiconductor has ventured into the EDGE solution segment.
Qualcomm’s launch of QRD (Qualcomm reference design) in 2010 paved the way for the company to gain more 3G solution orders in 2011, and the US-based solution vendor is expected to further enhance its market leadership with the launch of its next generation QRD, said the sources.
HTC, a strong supporter of Qualcomm, also plans to strengthen its marketing in China in 2012which will also help Qualcomm expand its share in China’s smartphone market, the sources added.
MediaTek has continued to exert efforts to reduce its production costs through integration of hardware, software, firmware and even applications, said sources, noting that MediaTek also reportedly plans to cut the prices of 3G solutions by 10-20% at the end of the third quarter in order to compete with Qualcomm’s forthcoming second-generation QRD.
Meanwhile, MStar‘s shipments of EDGE solutions have reportedly reached over five million units a month recently and will soon become a growth driver for the company, the sources added.
Smartphones moving toward hardware competition [Aug 30, 2011]
The global market competition among iOS, Android, Windows Mango and BlackBerry platforms is expected to heat up in the fourth quarter as international vendors are going to launch flagship smartphone models, with hardware specifications expected to develop toward 1.5GHz dual-core processors, large screens over 4-inch, ultra-slim form-factors and supporting HSPA+download speeds of 21Mbps, according to Taiwan-based handset makers.
Given some mid-range smartphones have already adopted 1GHz processors, the new flagship high-end smartphones are trended towards processors clocking at 1.2-1.5GHz, the sources noted.
In addition to market speculation of dual-core A5 processors for Apple’s forthcoming iPhone 5, new flagship models from Samsung Electronics, HTC and Sony Ericsson will also be powered by dual-core CPUs, the sources added. However, Nokia and RIM (Research in Motion) are not expected to roll out dual-core models until 2012.
HTC, Samsung and LG Electronics (LGE) are also expected to roll out models with display sizes ranging from 4.3- to 4.5-, or even up 4.7 inch, the sources indicated.
Taiwan handset ODMs bracing for structural upheaval [Aug 23, 2011]
Taiwan-based handset ODMs are bracing for repercussions of structural upheaval to be brought by Google’s intention to buy Motorola Mobility and Hewlett-Packard’s (HP’s) plan to stop selling WebOS-based smartphones, according to sources at Taiwan’s handset industry.
Even before the announcements of the latest deals in the hectic smartphone industry, Taiwan-based handset ODMs have mostly failed to perform well due to lackluster sales of smarphones of their branded handset clients, including HP, Dell, Acer, Lenovo and even Motorola and Sony Ericsson, the sources noted.
Although Taiwan handset ODMs have diversified their product roadmapsto include models supporting Android, Windows Mobile and WebOS platforms, their operations would still be affected by Google’s and HP’s stunning announcements, said the sources, adding that Compal Communications and Foxconn International Holding (FIH) are expected to suffer the most.
While some handset ODMs have also ventured into the development of tablet PCs, shipment volume of tablets from those handset ODMs have been smaller than expected due to the dominance of the Apple iPad in the market, the sources pointed out.
Handset vendors reportedly cutting back chipset orders for 4Q11 [Aug 19, 2011]
Some handset solution suppliers have indicated that a number of handset vendors, including Apple and HTC, have scaled down their chipset orders for the fourth quarter as compared with the third on concerns of the global economy, according to sources at Taiwan-based chipset makers.
While most smartphone vendors are likely to reach their shipment targets for the third quarter, they have begun to reduce orders for parts and components for the fourth quarter in preparation for a possible impact from changing economic conditions, the sources noted.
HTC raised its internal shipment target for 2011 to 70 million units in the first quarter, from 50 million units it projected at the end of 2010. However, the company has recently revised downward the target to 50-60 million units, according to sources familiar with HTC’s roadmap.
Sources in the supply chain of iPhone have revealed that Apple has also scaled down its orders for handset parts and components to be shipped at the end of third quarter.
MediaTek to increase investment in 3G, says chairman [July 19, 2011]
MediaTek will further strengthen its deployment in the global 3G chipset market by pouring more capital and resources into the development of platform products and application software, according to company chairman Tsai Ming-kai.
Buoyed by rapid growth in applications for mobile connectivity, the 3G industry and market in China has been developing in a fast manner, and MediaTek aims to grow in tandem with China’s booming 3G industry, Tsai said at a WCDMA supply chain conference held by China Unicom in China recently.
MediaTek will also cooperate with the WCDMA operators and makers of the WCDMA supply chain in China on technology development and marketingto accelerate the advancement of the WCDMA industry in China.
MediaTek has offered its highly integrated MT6268 WCDMA solution plus multiple application software platforms to handset makers to develop and manufacture high performance WCDMA handsets.
MediaTek to ship 3G solutions in August [July 13, 2011]
MediaTek has confirmed that it will begin to ship its HSUPA solution, the MT6573, to clients in August, but the company declined to comment on market speculations that it has landed orders for a quantity of over one million units each from clients including Lenovo and ZTE.
The specifications and performance of the MT6573, which is set to run on Android 2.3.3 platform, are similar to those chips adopted by Apple’s iPhones and HTC’s 3G smartphones, indicating that MediaTek has begun to make inroads into the global 3G chipset market, commented industry sources in Taiwan.
Other China-based handset makers, including Ningbo Bird, China Tianx and Shanghai Ragentek Communication Technology, have also decided to adopt the MT6573 solutions, the sources added.
Qualcomm likely to slash 30% off entry-level 3G solutions in next 9-12 months, says paper [June 16, 2011]
Qualcomm is likely to slash its prices for 3G smartphone solutions by 30% in the next 9-12 months in order to prevent other chipset makers from grabbing its share in the entry-level 3G solution segment, the Chinese-language Commercial Times quoted Michael Chou, a semiconductor analyst with Deutsche Securities in Taipei, as indicating.
More first-tier branded handset vendors are likely to adopt Qualcomm’s solutions for the production of entry-level and mid-range 3G smartphones in the next 12 months as Qualcomm has migrated the production of its chipset solutions to a 40nm processat Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Chou said.
Qualcomm’s price-cutting strategy will affect the performance of Asia-based chipset makers, including MediaTek and MStar Semiconductor. Deutsche Securities has recommended a sell rating on shares of MediaTek and a hold rating on MStar, said the paper.
MT6573 Innovative Platform for Mainstream Smartphones [Feb 11, 2011]
Overview
The MediaTek MT6573 platform incorporates a highly-integrated core chipset, a full range of connectivity solutions and supports the latest versions of the popular AndroidTM operating system. The MT6573 platform supports a quad-band, 3G/HSPA modem with mobile broadband rates of 7.2Mbps in the downlink and 5.76 Mbps uplink, as well as quad-band EDGE. The integrated applications processing system combines a 650 MHz dedicated ARM®11 subsystem for the Android operating system; support for advanced 3D graphics; multi-format video capture and playback up to FWVGA 30fps; high-resolution camera support to 8MP and a high-end FWVGA, touch-screen display. This platform chipset is completed with a full range of connectivity solutions for Bluetooth, WiFi, GPS, FM and Mobile TV from MediaTek.
Key Features
• The core chipset of the MT6573 integrates the modem, applications & multimedia subsystem and all necessary power management functions into a single SOC.
• Combined with a single-chip, multi-mode, multi-band transceiver, it enables extremely small footprints that allow for smaller, more innovative industrial designs and form-factors.
• Additionally, the integrated 3D graphics capability brings gaming and user interface capabilities that were previously available only to high-end smartphones.
• Finally, the platform provides for advanced camera and multimedia features that include smile and face detection, panorama and burst shot, as well as high-resolution video capture and playback.
• The platform can be delivered as a full system solution consisting of hardware reference design and fully-tested, compliant software suite that can improve design efficiency and speed time to market for customers in the rapidly changing smartphone market.
MediaTek’s newly announced MT6573 application processor integrates POWERVR graphics [March 8, 2011]
New SoC brings advanced graphics to mass-market smartphones
MediaTek Inc., a leading fabless semiconductor company for wireless communications and digital multimedia solutions, and Imagination Technologies, a leading multimedia and communications technologies company, announce that MediaTek’s new application processor, features POWERVR graphics acceleration.
The MT6573 incorporates a POWERVR Series5 SGX GPU (graphics processing unit) from Imaginationto enable advanced smartphone graphics applications including gaming, navigation and location-based services, augmented reality and highly visual and dynamic user interfaces for the mainstream volume phone market.
MediaTek delivers innovative, feature-rich yet cost-effective solutions to meet consumer’s entertainment, communication and information needs. MediaTek is launching the MT6573 platform to address the accelerating demand for smartphones with features that can delight users at price points that meet the needs of operators in developed markets and consumers in emerging markets.
Says Hossein Yassaie, CEO, Imagination: “We are delighted that MediaTek has delivered this highly capable new mass-market application processor, which will enable its customers to address new levels of capabilities and meet emerging consumer demands for advanced performance in lower-priced smartphones. We look forward to building on our strategic relationship with this important semiconductor partner.”
Says Jeffrey Ju, General Manager of the Smartphone Business Unit at MediaTek: “MediaTek is committed to ensuring that wireless consumers across the globe can access the most advanced mobile technologies. Imagination delivers industry leading graphics technology and support, as well as an extensive and strong ecosystem of developers capable of utilising the technology. We are thrilled to have POWERVR graphics acceleration in MT6573, and the benefit of Imagination’s insight and experience as a strategic partner going forward.”
MediaTek announced the MT6573 platform for mainstream 3G smartphones [Feb 11] (emphasis is mine):
The MT6573 platform incorporates a highly-integrated, core chipset, a full range of connectivity solutions and supports the latest versions of the popular AndroidTM operating system. The MT6573 platform supports a quad-band [i.e.: all 4 GSM bands, the 850 and 1900 MHz bands – used in Americas – and 900/1800, used elsewhere], 3G/HSPA modem with mobile broadband rates of 7.2Mbps in the downlink and 5.76 Mbps uplink, as well as quad-band EDGE. The integrated applications processing system combines a 650 MHz dedicated ARM®11subsystem for the Android operating system; support for advanced 3D graphics; multi-format video capture and playback up to FWVGA 30fps; high-resolution camera support to 8MP and a high-end FWVGA, touch-screen display. The platform chipset is completed with a full range of connectivity solutions for Bluetooth, WiFi, GPS, FM radio and Mobile TV from MediaTek.
The core chipset of the MT6573 integrates the modem, applications, multimedia subsystem and all necessary power management functions into a single SOC. Combined with a single-chip, multi-mode, multi-band transceiver, it enables extremely small footprints that allow for smaller, more innovative industrial designs and form-factors. Additionally, the integrated 3D graphics capability brings gaming and user interface capabilities that were previously available only to high-end smartphones. Finally, the platform provides advanced camera and multimedia features that include smile and face detection, panorama and burst shot, as well as high-resolution video capture and playback. The platform can be delivered as a full system solution consisting of hardware reference design and fully-tested, compliant software suite that can improve design efficiency and speed time to market for customers in the rapidly changing smartphone market.
… The MT6573 platform is currently sampling to lead customers and will be in mass-production by mid 2011.
Shrinking capital investment in the worldwide LCD industry
Updates: Samsung board approves LCD business spin-off [Feb 21, 2012]
Samsung Electronics has announced that plans to spin off the company’s LCD display business have been approved by its board of directors. The new body will be 100%-held by Samsung, concentrating on developing future display technologies such as OLEDs.
“The display market is undergoing rapid chances with OLED panels expected to fast replace LCD panels to become the mainstream. Amid this structural change of the display industry, adopting measures for change and innovation, including business restructuring, are essential to improve our competitiveness for our display business,” Samsung said in a statement.
The spin-off is scheduled to take effect on April 1, 2012, subject to approval by company shareholders, according to Samsung.
Samsung indicated that running its LCD unit separately will also allow it to make investment and other business decisions efficiently, while strengthening its technological capability and competitiveness.
Tentatively named Samsung Display Company, the new company will be built with paid-in capital of KRW750 billion (US$667.8 million), Samsung disclosed. Going forward, the entity will consider adopting various restructuring measures including a merger with Samsung Mobile Display (SMD) and S-LCD, Samsung indicated.
Samsung’s display panel unit – including its LCD business and subsidiary SMD – reported KRW750 billion [US$667.8 million] in operating losses for 2011, while its other businesses stayed profitable. The firm saw its overall operating profits slip 6% to KRW16.25 trillion [US$14.5 billion] in 2011.
Samsung also makes memory chips and mobile phones.
– Samsung to invest more into display technologies [Feb 15, 2012]
Industry sources indicated that Samsung Electronics continues to expand its TV product lines and is aiming for smart TV shipments to reach 50 million units in 2012. In particular, Samsung may invest up to KRW6.6 trillion (US$5.9 billion) into LCD display products.
LG also plans to introduce OLED TV products at the end of 2012. The market believes LG will adopt white OLED display technology.
Industry sources noted that Samsung will likely focus on producing OLED TVs after merging Samsung Mobile Display into the group.
Taiwan-based panel maker AU Optronics (AUO) also has OLED technology. However, the firm indicated that large-size OLED panels will only be produced in small amounts. The firm will focus its OLED technology towards small- and medium-size products such as smartphones and tablet PCs. AUO showcased a 32-inch OLED TV at the end of 2011.
AUO added that yields from producing large-size OLED panels continues to be a problem. Currently, the price of OLED TVs is still quite high. Taiwan-based TV brands believe that low-priced models will continue to take over the TV market in 2012, hence it is unlikely for consumers to try out OLED TVs while the price is still high.
– China government reportedly plans to raise import tariffs for LCD panels [Feb 6, 2012]
The China government plans to raise import tariffs for LCD panels by 3-5% in the second quarter of 2012 in order to safeguard the development of the domestic flat panel industry, according to industry sources.
While acknowledging the speculation, most Taiwan-based panel makers stated that they have not heard any official announcement from the China government and expect the new tariff policy to become more clear in May.
If the new tariffs are realized, China-based flat panel makers BOE Technology and China Star Optoelectronics Technology (CSOT) will benefit from the adjustment as the two companies are ready to ramp up their output this year, the sources commented.
The possibility is high for the China government to raise tariffs for LCD panels at a time when its 8.5G lines begin volume production and domestic 10G lines have gradually been established, Jason Hsuan, chairman of TPV Technology, said earlier.
See also the updates as of January 4, 2012 in the ending part of this post.
End of updates
Digitimes Research: Samsung may cut LCD panel orders for Taiwan after Sony exit from S-LCD [Jan 2, 2012]
Sony has been cooperating with Samsung Electronics on the TFT LCD business since 2004 when the Japan vendor was optimistic about the growth of the LCD TV market. Large-size panel makers in general were able to achieve gross margin of 20% and some even had 35% in the period between second-half 2003 and first-half 2004. This further hardened Sony’s determination to invest in large-size LCD TV panel production, forming a joint venture, S-LCD, with Samsung in April 2004.
But the price of LCD TVs and related panels have been dropping rapidly and growth of the market is also slowing down. Accumulated loss for Sony’s TV business unit has reached JPY650 billion (US$8.4 billion) since 2003. Hence, lowering the cost of procuring panels and the cost of running S-LCD has become a priority.
Due to the loss incurred by the TV business unit and the rising popularity of smartphones, Sony decided to buy back all shares of Sony Ericsson to expand its own smartphone department, but at the same time exit the cooperation in S-LCD. The departure from S-LCD can help Sony decrease losses and obtain a certain amount of cash.
Taiwan firms have seen Japan vendors such as Sharp, Panasonic, Toshiba and Sony increase panel procurement and TV orders. Sony may now decrease the amount of panel procurement from Samsung, and rely even more on Taiwan suppliers. As for Samsung, it is possible that it may move one of S-LCD’s 8.5G production lines to Suzhou, China to avoid tariffs.
Samsung is the world’s largest LCD TV vendor. In 2011, about 40% of its TVs used LCD panels from AU Optronics (AUO) or Chimei Innolux (CMI). So once Sony decreases the amount of panel procurement from Samsung, it is predictable that Samsung will decrease the number of panels procured from Taiwan-based panel makers. Therefore, Sony’s exit of S-LCD cooperation is not completely beneficial to Taiwan-based firms.
Reinvent the display–again [Dec 27, 2011]
By Mary Lou Jepsen, Founder and CEO, Pixel Qi (as told to Barb Darrow)
Mary Lou Jepsen could be called the queen of screens. Her pioneering work on computer displays took her from graduate studies in holography at MIT and optical science at Brown to MicroDisplay to Intel to One Laptop Per Child. Today, she is the founder and CEO of PixelQI, where she works on creating energy-stingy, bright, and lightweight screens for laptops and smaller devices, including phones. In her view, the screens are not an after thought, they are key to the user experience.
The LCD industry is in meltdown. The losses are huge and have been for the last five years or so. It’s unclear how some of the large companies are going to make it through.
The recession’s different in the hardware industry. I think it’s much worse today than in 2008 and early 2009. For the tier one companies, it’s not about the hardware anymore. It’s abouthardware, software, content. And content suppliers are king right now. A lot of the hardware suppliers won’t survive unless they restructure. It’s a bit like the airline industry. Many of the airlines we fly are bankrupt. We’re dealing with that kind of scenario. They all make the same products and compete on price. You can only do that for a number of years before the consequences get worse and worse. E-ink stands alone, as a category that is doing relatively well.
In 2011, it became apparent to the executives that they need to do something different. That made our life easier at PixelQI. Now we can get into the factories. Before it was a struggle, with us trying to say, “We know more about designing an LCD than you do.” They’d look at us and say, “How many people are you? We’ve got 50,000 people. Where’s your fab? How many engineers do you have?” For me to say, “Well, my engineers have Ph.D.s from MIT and Stanford” — they don’t care about that.
Over the course of our company’s life, we’ve shipped three million units, including the One Laptop Per Child units. No one’s ever done that before for a novel display company. It usually takes decades. We’ve shown our stuff can be mass-produced in volume and deal with the price structure inside existing factories.
We may move into the cell phone space next year, but for that we need to demonstrate volume in multiple fabs, because the volume in cell phones is so large.
…
One challenge for next year is whether the industry, our customers, find an interesting tablet that isn’t just like the iPad but cheaper. Certainly Amazon is making a go of it. The competitive landscape has been tough on our big customers, the ones in Best Buy who compete with Apple. There are a lot of products that haven’t made it.
We’re also working on some displays that will be rollable, flexible, put anywhere displays, and look better than OLED and don’t need power cables or data cables. That’s pretty cool, because then you can solve some problems in portable computing. With rollable displays you can look at more data. You can write notes in one area and view things in other areas. Digital signage needs it. TV needs it.
LCD is a bit like low-end DRAM these days and it doesn’t have to be. There’s so much more we can do to use it like we use
DCMOS. With what we’re doing, we’ll show you that you don’t need batteries. Or it might be more like a watch where you might change a small battery.I’ve also been thinking about the way we perceive images. When you see something really striking, it feels like it’s burnt on your retina. There’s some data that suggests that it kind of is. Not the retina exactly, but right behind it, on the LGN [lateral geniculate nucleus]. There’s research that shows that it’s possible to extract that information, suck it out. Two thirds of our brainpower is allocated to processing visual images. What are they? Do they look like what we think they are? Can we get those out to people? How will communication change? Will it be better, worse? Will it shock people? In the ultimate future of display technology, there is no display. We will communicate with images that are in our minds already.
Mary Lou Jepsen of Pixel Qi at TEDxTaipei [May 9, 2011]
You have to consider, while it has been 23 months ago that I [i.e. Charbax] published my first Pixel Qi interviews from Taiwan (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), (12), (13), (14) while that might sound like a long time, in the display industry, 2 years is peanuts. Things move rather slowly there. Since then, there has been an economic crisis and a sort of re-focus from netbooks to tablets, although netbooks have sold more than 100 million units in 3 years, the display investments are focused on tablets. The display business can be considered to be the worlds biggest non-profit industry, the 5 biggest LCD makers who produce 90% of the worlds LCDs, produce for $120 Billion in screens every year but can only make small profit margins out of that because of the strong competition and the large volumes shipped. Those companies that produce the worlds LCD screens have very high costs, very high risks, little flexibility. Let’s hope Pixel Qi has amply well convinced the big LCD makers like Quanta, CPT, Chi Mei, Samsung, LG, Sharp, Sony, Foxconn, let’s hope that they have all signed with Pixel Qi and that they are all right now in the process of tuning the mass manufacture of millions of these screens for all the worlds upcoming Chrome OS notebooks, ARM Powered Macbooks, Kindle4s, iPad3s, a solution for using the interactive UIs of Android on all the worlds e-readers. It would also be nice to double the battery runtime and improve outdoor readability on all the worlds Smartphones using Pixel Qi.
More information:
– Pixel Qi’s first big name device manufacturing partner is the extremely ambitious ZTE [Feb 15, 2011]
– Pixel Qi’s second investment round concluded by the 3M investment [Sept 19, 2011]
– Reflectivity/Sunlight readability category of posts on this blog (14)
Anticipated Tablet Growth Alters TFT LCD Manufacturing Strategies, NPD DisplaySearch Reports [Dec 13, 2011]
In response to falling large-area TFT LCD panel prices in 2011, panel makers have minimized their 2H’11 production, but preparation for 2012 models and gradual clearing of supply chain inventories are encouraging panel makers to take a more positive stance in their production strategies. According to the NPD DisplaySearch Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report, global TFT LCD glass input peaked in Q2’11, achieving a record 42.1 million square meters, but then fell to 36.5 million square meters in Q3’11, and is expected to reach 37.8 million square meters in Q4’11.
In Q1’12, panel makers are expecting to increase glass input by 5%, to 39.8 million square meters. The forecast capacity utilization is 77% in Q1’12, which is 7% higher than previously expected. This is partly based on expectations that prices have bottomed out in this cycle. Also, panel makers are planning for new models, such as larger size multi-function monitor panels, ultra-slim notebook PC panels, new TV panel sizes including 39”W, 43”W, 48”W and 50”W with cost effective CCFL and LED backlights, and slim bezels. However, with 2012 market demand still unclear, panel makers foresee the possibility of adjusting capacity utilization again in Q1’12.
Table 1: Global TFT LCD Glass Input by Application (Million m²/Quarter)
|
Application
|
Q1’11
|
Q2’11
|
Q3’11
|
Q4’11
|
Q1’12
|
|
LCD Monitor
|
7.9
|
9.2
|
7.8
|
7.5
|
8.1
|
|
LCD TV
|
22.8
|
25.4
|
21.6
|
23.3
|
24.4
|
|
Notebook PC
|
3.7
|
4.3
|
4.0
|
3.9
|
4.0
|
|
Tablet/Mini-Note PC
|
0.7
|
1.0
|
1.1
|
1.2
|
1.4
|
|
Small/Medium
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
1.9
|
1.8
|
1.9
|
|
Others
|
0.1
|
0.2
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
|
Total
|
37.2
|
42.1
|
36.5
|
37.8
|
39.8
|
Source: NPD DisplaySearch Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report
According to Shawn Lee, Senior Analyst for NPD DisplaySearch, “Increasing production does not necessarily increase shipments, as panel prices are close to cash costs in many cases. However, improved inventory and price outlooks, as well as the launch of new panel models, are leading panel makers to be more optimistic.” Lee added, “Other factors leading to the increased production forecast include the need to increase utilization rates in order to cover depreciation costs, and the fact that new panel producers in China are starting to ramp up their fabs, contributing to the increased input. Lee concluded, “After a long oversupply period, panel makers are still cautious about glass input and utilization rates, and they do not plan to increase utilization to more than 80% in Q1’12.”
Tablet Panel Production on the Rise, While Mini-Notes Slide
In mobile PC applications, panel makers plan to decrease production of mini-note PC panels while increasing production of tablet PC panels, with area production of tablet PC panels expected to double from Q1’11 to Q2’11. Panel makers are also reshaping their tablet PC panel production strategies, with Sharp using its Gen 8 fab to produce tablet PC panels with oxide TFT backplanes, and Samsung, LG Display, and Sharp producing tablet PC panels with more than 200 pixels per inch.
Other panel makers, including AUO, Chimei Innolux, BOE, CPT and HannStar, are planning to apply more production resources to tablet PC panels in 2012. Although Gen 5 and smaller fabs will mainly produce mini-note and tablet PC panels, more than half of these will be produced in Gen 6 and Gen 8 starting in Q1’12.
Table 2: TFT LCD Glass Input for Mini-Note and Tablet PC by Generation (Million m²/Month) [emphasis in red is mine]
|
Generation Fab
|
Q1’11
|
Q2’11
|
Q3’11
|
Q4’11
|
Q1’12
|
|
Gen3.5
|
10.8%
|
13.0%
|
8.1%
|
5.9%
|
0.1%
|
|
Gen4
|
1.4%
|
0.4%
|
0.1%
|
0%
|
0%
|
|
Gen5
|
83.9%
|
83.9%
|
74.1%
|
57.1%
|
49.4%
|
|
Gen6
|
3.2%
|
3.2%
|
17.7%
|
16.8%
|
10.1%
|
|
Gen8
|
0.7%
|
0.7%
|
0%
|
20.3%
|
40.5%
|
Source: NPD DisplaySearch Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report
The NPD DisplaySearch Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report offers the industry’s most complete view of large-area panel production by analyzing panel makers’ quarterly production plans. Subscribers receive production plans by application in different generation fabs, with granular detail down to the size by aspect ratio and by country. With 100% coverage of panel makers, the Quarterly Large-Area Production Strategy Report provides reliable information and insight needed to evaluate production strategies, understand current capacity, spot key supply trends before it is too late and manage inventory. Please contact Charles Camaroto at 1.888.436.7673 or 1.516.625.2452, e-mail contact@displaysearch.com or contact your regional NPD DisplaySearch office in China, Japan, Korea or Taiwan for more information.
About NPD DisplaySearch
Since 1996, NPD DisplaySearch has been recognized as a leading global market research and consulting firm specializing in the display supply chain, as well as the emerging photovoltaic/solar cell industries. NPD DisplaySearch provides trend information, forecasts and analyses developed by a global team of experienced analysts with extensive industry knowledge and resources. In collaboration with The NPD Group, its parent company, NPD DisplaySearch uniquely offers a true end-to-end view of the display supply chain from materials and components to shipments of electronic devices with displays to sales of major consumer and commercial channels. For more information on NPD DisplaySearch analysts, reports and industry events, visit us at www.displaysearch.com. Read our blog at www.displaysearchblog.com and follow us on Twitter at @DisplaySearch.About The NPD Group, Inc.
The NPD Group is the leading provider of reliable and comprehensive consumer and retail information for a wide range of industries. Today, more than 1,800 manufacturers, retailers, and service companies rely on NPD to help them drive critical business decisions at the global, national, and local market levels. NPD helps our clients to identify new business opportunities and guide product development, marketing, sales, merchandising, and other functions. Information is available for the following industry sectors: automotive, beauty, commercial technology, consumer technology, entertainment, fashion, food and beverage, foodservice, home, office supplies, software, sports, toys, and wireless. For more information, contact us or visit www.npd.com and www.npdgroupblog.com. Follow us on Twitter at @npdtech and @npdgroup.
Low Temperature Polysilicon and IGZO Production Forecast to Skyrocket 150% in 2012 [Dec 19, 2011]
Adoption of High Mobility TFT LCD Backplanes in the iPhone and iPad Create a New Paradigm in FPD Manufacturing
Santa Clara, California, December 19, 2011—The explosive growth of smart phones and tablets has made high performance TFT technologies, particularly LTPS (low temperature polysilicon) and IGZO (indium gallium zinc oxide), critical to production of the high resolution displays used by these devices. These TFT technologies employ high mobility semiconductor materials, which allow panel manufacturers to shrink TFT dimensions and increase light transmission. LCDs with greater than 230 ppi (pixels per inch) resolution, such as Apple’s Retina Display, are enabled by high transmission because it minimizes power consumption, allowing mobile devices to run longer without recharging.
According to the NPD DisplaySearch TFT LCD Process Roadmap Report, high mobility backplane production is forecast to grow 150% from 5.6 million square meters in 2011 to 14.1 million square meters in 2012. Drivers for this tremendous growth include multiple Gen 5 and larger LTPS fabs starting production in 2012, as well as expected IGZO production on existing lines by Sharp, LG Display and Samsung.
Figure 1: Manufacturing Capacity Devoted to High Resolution Backplane Production
Source: NPD DisplaySearch TFT LCD Process Roadmap Report
“Smart phones, tablets and cost reduction are expected to be the key drivers pushing the FPD industry in 2012,” stated Charles Annis, NPD DisplaySearch Vice President of Manufacturing Research. “With FPD profitability under extreme pressure, LCD makers are focusing development efforts on rapidly-growing mobile segments and a wide array of cost reduction strategies. Because of this, high mobility backplanes, optical alignment, high resolution lithography and advanced LC modes are expected to be some of the most important manufacturing technology trends over the next year.”
All of these technologies target increasing panel transmission. With only about 4-9% of illumination generated by LCD backlights making it to the front of screen, very powerful light sources are required to meet LCD brightness specifications. In addition, backlight units are the single most expensive components in large-area LCD modules. Thus, by increasing transmission, panel makers can trade off power consumption and costs.
“However, a lot of know-how and proprietary technology are required to successfully increase transmission without sacrificing yield. Panel makers and their suppliers are racing to create competitive advantages through manufacturing technologies to increase profitability in 2012,” Annis added. “Any technology, such as IGZO, that may simultaneously lower costs while improving performance offers a double competitive advantage to panel makers, and potentially can create a new standard in FPD manufacturing.”
The new NPD DisplaySearch TFT LCD Process Roadmap Report offers a unique and unprecedented guide to these rapidly evolving FPD manufacturing technologies. The report provides technical discussions, process flows, production status by maker, adoption forecasts for 57 technologies and analysis of benefits, opportunities, negatives and challenges. Additionally, LCD cost and performance specifications for manufacturing technologies are projected through 2016.
For more information about the new NPD DisplaySearch TFT LCD Process Roadmap Report please contact Charles Camaroto at 1.888.436.7673 or 1.516.625.2452, e-mail contact@displaysearch.com or contact your regional DisplaySearch office in China, Japan, Korea or Taiwan for more information.
Apple to utilize IGZO panels for its new products [Dec 30, 2011]
Apple is expected to push forward the adoption of IGZO (indium gallium zinc oxide) flat panels, instead of IPS (in-plane switching) panels used currently, for its next-generation mobile display products, according to sources in Apple’s supply chain.
Starting with the new iPads, Apple will utilize IGZO panels from Sharp in order to upgrade the display resolution of the new tablets to full HD level, the sources indicated.
To enter the supply chain of iPads, Sharp has switched some of its capacity for large-size panels to the production of small-size panels for smartphones and tablet PCs, said the sources, adding that Sharp will also continue to roll out its Galapagos tablet lineup in 2012 using IGZO panels.
Most Taiwan-based flat panel makers are capable to produce IGZO panels, but the yield rates of such panels still remain a major concern for the makers, said the sources.
Digitimes Research: iPad pricing to change tablet game [Jan 3, 2011]
Market watchers have mostly expected Apple to follow its traditional pricing strategy for its next-generation tablet device, which is likely to start from US$499 with the present iPad 2 to drop to US$399. But if Apple releases two versions of the new iPad, as reported by Digitimes, the vendor’s pricing strategy may change.
Sources from Apple’s supply chain have claimed that there will be two versions of the new iPad, one targeting the high-end segment and the other the mid-range. Digitimes Research believe the two new iPad models will both be equipped the A6 processor with high-end model coming with a high resolution panel (2048×1536) and the mid-tier model featuring the same grade of panel as iPad 2 (1024×768).
With the existing iPad 2, the Apple tablet series may cover all price segments – from entry-level to high-end. Apple’s pricing strategy for its iPad series is crucial to the tablet market. It remains to be seen at what price level Apple will set its entry-level iPad. For Wi-Fi only models, US$299, US$349 or US$399 may all be possible.
Currently, the non-Apple camp is maneuvering in the US$199-399 range. If Apple drops its iPad price to US$299, it could seriously affect the non-Apple camp’s pricing strategy and even Amazon’s Kindle could also be affected.
Apple to unveil two versions of next-generation iPad in January, sources claim [Dec 29, 2011]
Apple is set to unveil its next-generation iPad – which will come in two versions – at the iWorld scheduled for January 26, 2012, according to sources at its supply chain partners. The new models will join the existing iPad 2 to demonstrate Apple’s complete iPad series targeting the entry-level, mid-range and high-end market segments, the sources claimed.
The iPad 2 will be competing directly with Amazon’s kindle Fire in the price-sensitive market segment, while the new models will focus on the mid-range and high-end segments respectively, the sources said.
Apple officials declined to comment.
Instead of the previously-rumored 7.85-inch, the upcoming iPad models will still feature 9.7-inch screens but come with QXGA resolution (1,536×2,048 pixels), the sources indicated. Dual-LED light bars are designed for the new iPads to strengthen the brightness of the panels, the sources added.
Sharp will be the major panel supplier for Apple’s next-generation iPad series, while Samsung Electronics and LG Display are also responsible for a part of the orders, the sources said. Minebea, from which Sharp sources backlight units (BLUs), has accordingly entered the supply chain for the new iPads, the sources pointed out.
Apple continues to contract Samsung to manufacture its quad-core A6 processors, which will be used in the next-generation iPads, the sources revealed. The existing iPad 2 is based on the dual-core A5.
Samsung is also among the CMOS image sensor (CIS) suppliers for one of the versions of the new iPad that comes with a 5-megapixel lens, marking the Korea-based vendor’s first time to grab CIS orders from Apple, the sources noted. Sony is the other CIS supplier for the other model with a higher 8-megapixel lens, the sources added.
In addition, Simplo Technology and Dynapack International Technology have both secured orders for batteries with a capacity of as high as 14,000 milliampere-hour (mAh) used in the new iPads, according to the sources.
Updates:
Chimei Innolux to Cut Capital Spending to NT$30B. in 2012 [Jan 4, 2011]
Chimei Innolux Corp., the largest thin film transistor-liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) panel manufacturer in Taiwan, plans to keep 2012 capital spending to under NT$30 billion (US$1 billion) compared to about NT$50 billion (US$1.67 billion) in 2011, according to CEO Tuan Hsing-chien.
The panel maker aims to utilize its capital spending to develop new technologies, including IPS (In-Plane Switching).
Chimei Innolux claims that all its businesses, including large-sized, small- and medium-sized and touch panels, will grow clearly in 2012, especially when the touch-panel shipments are forecast to increase 40%.
Tuan stressed that Chimei Innolux`s system-integration (assembly) business unit will totally spin off in 2012. The company`s system assembly business once generated revenues of about NT$10 billion (US$333.3 million) per year, and now about NT$5 billion to NT$6 billion (US$166.7 million to US$200 million), with revenue expected to rise regardless in 2012.
The CEO pointed out that the maker engaged in many basic works in 2011, including development of LED-backlighting and three-dimension (3D) panel products, as well as new TV-panel sizes as 39- and 50-inch. He added that Chimei Innolux`s shipments of small- and medium-sized panels will grow 20% to 30% in 2012, backed by added capacities of two of the company`s 4.5th-generation (4.5G) factories.
Tuan said that the company will continue to accelerate the development of active matrix organic light-emit diode (AMOLED) panels, which are to be small-volume produced in the third quarter.
Chimei Innolux to Supply Panels to 2nd-Gen. Kindle Fire [Dec 21, 2011]
Chimei Innolux Corp., the largest maker of thin film transistor-liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) panels in Taiwan, recently won Amazon`s order for panels used in its Kindle Fire second-generation tablet PCs.
The company is already a panel supplier to Apple`s iPad 2, and the new order from Kindle Fire would further consolidate Chimei Innolux`s leading position in Taiwan in supplying tablet-use panels.
Industry sources said that tablet-PC panel is one of a few panel models still generating profits now for panel suppliers, so the new order is expected to have positive effects on Chimei Innolux`s operation.
The first-generation Kindle Fire was contract assembled by local Quanta Computer Inc. using panels supplied by Korean company LG Display and Taiwanese maker E Ink Holdings Inc. (formerly known as Prime View International Co., Ltd., who contracted local Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd., or CPT to produce the panels).
Hon Hai Group [i.e. Foxconn] of Taiwan reportedly won the contract-assembly order for the second-generation Kindle Fire, allowing its affiliate Chimei Innolux to supply the panels.
Data compiled by market research firm iSuppli showed that Chimei Innolux ranked as the world`s No. 3 supplier of tablet-PC panels, trailing only LG Display and Samsung. With the new order from Amazon, Chimei Innolux`s market share is expected to rise further, industry sources said.
Chimei-Innolux Plans to Sell Production Equipment to Brazil [Dec 19, 2011]
Eike Batista, the richest person in Brazil, has reportedly planned to join hands with a Brazilian bank and Hon Hai Group in establishing an FPD (flat panel display) plant in Brazil by procuring existing 6th or 7.5G equipment from Chimei-Innolux at several tens of billions of NT dollar.
The project, if materialized, will enable Hon Hai to expand its deployment, while helping Chimei-Innolux weather its financial plight.
In response to the news, Chimei-Innolux reported yesterday (Dec. 18) that the company is evaluating related projects. Hon Hai failed to respond to the report. The Brazil side reportedly dispatched a delegation to Taiwan to study the feasibility of the project recently.
Brazilian media revealed that Batista already signed an agreement with Brazilian bank BNDES and Hon Hai [i.e. Foxconn] for the project recently. Initial investment will top US$4 billion, including US$500 million from Batista and US$1.2 billion from BNDES. Hon Hai intends to provide technology, without contributing fund. The investors intend to purchase the existing production equipment of Chimei-Innolux.
Chimei is considering selling its sixth- or 7.5th- generation plant to the project, with the former capable of turning out panels for use in tablet PC and TV and the latter mainly for the production of TV panels.
Sixth-generation plant is not the mainstream equipment on the market but still worth several tens of billions of NT dollar. The sales will greatly alleviate the financial pressure for Chimei-Innox, which has suffered red inks for six quarters in a row and is having difficulty in obtaining syndicated banking loans.
Brazil has a huge consumption market, with local sales of LCD TV topping 8 million units this year, for 40% growth. The country, however, doesn’t have FPD plants. Hon Hai, therefore, has planned to set up LCD TV production base in the country.
Foxconn denies rumors of Chimei takeover [Dec 9, 2011]
Foxconn, the world’s largest contract manufacturer of electronic products, has denied rumors that the companu is to play a larger role in Chimei Innolux’s operations after the Taiwanese flat panel maker’s chairman Frank Liao resigned Thursday.
Chimei’s stocks were boosted this week on the rumor that Liao’s resignation signifies a personnel shakeup that could include more influence from stakeholder Foxconn. If Foxconn were to play a larger role in the company, their success in the technology manufacturing industry could help give Chimei Innolux an edge.
Foxconn said the speculation about its future role at Chimei is just rumors and that Chimei Innolux will still be run by its own board.
Foxconn also stressed that it is only a shareholder of the company, holding 11% of Chimei shares, fewer than Chimei Corporation‘s 13.57%. Of the 11% holdings, 2.9% are personal investments by Foxconn founder Terry Gou. Foxconn says Gou’s holding are separate from the company’s investments. Foxconn remains the second largest shareholder of Chimei Innolux after Chimei.
Chimei Innolux to come under management of Foxconn [Dec 4, 2011]
Chimei Innolux chairman Frank Liao, right, has resigned and may be succeeded by CEO Tuan Hsing-chien, left, or Foxconn founder Terry Gou.Electronics contract manufacturer Foxconn may gain full management rights over flat panel maker Chimei Innolux as chairman Frank Liao resigned for health reasons and vice chairman and CEO Tuan Hsing-chien stepped down from the board but remained as CEO on Saturday. Foxconn founder Terry Gou and Tuan are the most popular candidates to succeed Liao at the Taiwan-based company.
There has been sepculation regarding the timing of Liao’s resignation. The flat panel maker has been struggling to secure a NT$40-$60 billion (US$1.3-$2 billion) consortium loan to save its faltering business, which has been blamed as the main cause of 74-year-old Liao’s deteriorating health.
Chimei has also struggled to cope with corporate infighting since it merged with Innolux Display in 2010. The two companies have a very different corporate culture and their similar organizations have seen an overlap in each other’s authority, creating constant leadership fights. They have therefore not seen much benefit from the consolidation of the flat panel sector that Taiwan’s government has called for since 2008. The tensions between them were raised even higher recently as Chimei Innolux attempted to split up its touch screens and medium and small display departments.
Liao’s resignation is widely viewed as signifying an end to Chimei’s influence over the company and the rise of a new leadership headed by Foxconn, where it is believed Terry Gou may take the helm himself.
The Taiwan-based Foxconn is the world’s largest contract manufacturer of electronic products, which counts Apple among one of its biggest clients.
LCD makers look to gain from growth in Chinese market [Dec 30, 2011]
Taiwanese display panel manufacturers AU Optronics and Chimei Innolux have benefited from the growing sales of LCD TVs in the Chinese market, which looks set to continue expanding in the near future.
Chimei has held the top spot in terms of market share in China for eight months straight, closely followed by AU. As of November, Chimei accounted for 30% of the Chinese market, while AU followed with 21.9%. South Korea-based LG and Samsung rounded out the top four, accounting for 21.7% and 20%, respectively. BOE, a Chinese brand, has also seen good performance in recent months, with a growth rate of 53% in November and market share of nearly 6%.
According to a report by LCD market research firms WitsView and Eintell, total shipments for the six largest TV brands came to 4.2 million in November, a figure that was higher than previously expected and is estimated to rise in December. Display panels sales also saw a higher-than-expected growth rate — 32.9% — in November.
WitsView also indicates that one of the important focuses for LCD makers next year will be TV size. Chimei will continue to develop and manufacture TVs of different sizes for the Chinese market, following its new 39-inch and 50-inch models. Samsung plans to produce 39-inch and 52-inch TVs.
An official at WitsView said that although LCD sales had increased thanks to Black Friday in the United States, it is still not clear whether demand for TVs will match supply after Chinese New Year.
Taiwan flat panel production value tops NT$1.39 trillion in 2011, says PIDA [Jan 2, 2012]
The production value of TFT LCD panels produced by Taiwan flat panel makers totaled NT$1.39 trillion (US$45.89 billion) in 2011, including NT$797 billion for large-size panels and NT$241.8 billion for small- to medium-size panels, according to an estimate of the Taiwan Photonics Industry and Technology Development Association (PIDA).
In terms of production volume, shipments of small- to medium-size panels reached 1.694 billion units for 2011, an increase of 21% from a year earlier, PIDA said.
Chunghwa Picture Tubes (CPT) was the top vendor in the small- to medium-size panel segment with shipments totaling about 500 million units, accounting for a 30% share, PIDA added.
Chimei Innolux (CMI) came in second in the same segment with shipments totaling 425 million units in 2011, accounting for a 26% share, down from 31% of a year earlier.
HannStar Display‘s shipments of small- to medium-size panels soared 67% to 414 million units during the year, but shipments of small- and medium-size panels from AU Optronics (AUO) slid 14% to 190 million units in 2011.
Shipments of small- to medium-size panels will continue to grow in 2012, since smart mobile devices will remain the mainstream products in the year and more low-priced smartphone will be rolled out, PIDA concluded.
Chunghwa Picture to be Taiwan’s top maker of small and medium panels [Dec 29, 2011]
Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd. (CPT) will replace Chimei Innolux Corp. as Taiwan’s biggest maker of small and medium panels by the end of this year thanks to a shift in product mix, a Taipei-based industry association predicted Thursday.
The Photonics Industry and Technology Development Association (PIDA) said that shipments of small and medium panels in Taiwan will amount to around 1.69 billion units in 2011, up 21 percent year-on-year from the 1.4 billion units recorded in 2010 in light of strong demand from the smartphone and tablet PC markets.
Shipments of CPT’s small and medium panels in 2011 will increase by 42 percent from 352 million units last year to reach 500 million units, moving the Taoyuan-based company into the top spot in the market with a 30 percent share, the PIDA said.
Last year, CPT took 25 percent share of the market and ranked the second-largest vendor behind Chimei Innolux, according to the association.
CPT’s huge growth can be attributed to a transformation of its Generation 6 plant to produce high-end small and medium panels for smartphones, the PIDA said.
CPT Steps into Smartphone Panel Biz [Nov 2, 2011]
Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd. (CPT), a major thin film transistor-liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) panel manufacturer in Taiwan, recently announced to venture into the cellphone-display panel field, claiming also to utilize a sixth-generation (6G) production line to produce projected capacitive touch panels.
CPT said that it had modified a 4.5G production line specially for production of capacitor touch panels and 0.3T glass. To meet strong demand, the company has been aggressively adjusting product mix and upgrading technological capability, having successfully developed 3.5-inch panels for smartphone application and will begin mass production of such product at its 6G line in November.
CPT also aims to produce over-4-inch WVGA (400×800 and 400×864) smartphone panels, expecting to complete the project by year-end.
According to the panel manufacturer, it has been raising shipment of small- and medium-sized panels, hence successfully evading impacts from oversupply in the third quarter by shipping less TV and consumer-electronics panels. In the fourth quarter, CPT`s area of small and medium panels shipped is expected to rise to 70% to 80%, helping to improve profitability.
In the third quarter, CPT shipped 137 million small- and medium-sized panels, a record quarterly high, as well as a 22.8% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) and 35.3% year-on-year (YoY) increase, with such shipments accounting for 60% of CPT`s total shipments during the period.
In the first three quarters, CPT shipped 346 million small- and medium-sized panels, up 41.2% YoY, and is expected to ship some 500 million such products this year.
China’s flat-panel queen calls for further industry cooperation [Jan 3, 2012]
Bai Weimin, vice president of the China Video Industry Association. (File Photo/Yen Chien-lung)Taiwan’s flat-panel sector should further its cooperation with China so that both sides of the Taiwan Strait can jointly establish industry standards for smart televisions, tablet computers and next-generation AMOLED display technology, says Bai Weimin, vice president of the China Video Industry Association.
In an interview with our Chinese-language sister newspaper Want Daily, Bai, who has been dubbed “China’s flat-panel queen,” said there was a large gap between the number of flat panels supplied by Chinese manufacturers and annual demand in the mainland market. China produced 100 million color televisions annually, while local manufacturers such as BOE could only supply over 20 million panels, Bai said.
Therefore, Bai said she encourages Chinese companies to import flat panels from Taiwan. She expects procurement in 2012 to total US$4 billion, the same amount as last year.
Last June, Bai announced a flat-panel procurement deal worth up to US$5.5 billion, when she visited Taiwan. It was difficult to implement nearly 80% of the deal towards the end, Bai said, given the poor market environment prevailing in western countries, the leading export market.
Bai also said that China’s purchases of Taiwanese flat panels doubled between 2008 and 2010. The average size of panels had also increased from 2009’s 30.3 inches to an estimated 39.5 inches in 2011.
Bai hopes that the Taiwanese government’s restrictions — only allowing flat-panel makers to adopt production technology one generation behind Taiwan’s in their Chinese operations — will be lifted soon.
Furthermore, she said several Taiwanese flat-panel makers had established joint ventures with Chinese television manufacturers, such as AU Optronics‘ collaboration with Haier and TCL, and Chimei Innolux‘s venture with Hisense and Konka. These companies, along with six others, were also members of a task force set up in 2008 to promote the flat-panel display industry across the Taiwan Strait.
Bai added that cross-strait cooperation should be further strengthened and should focus on improving post-sales service, standardization of technology, closer exchange and capital cooperation.
Speaking of her forecast for the global television market, Bai said she expects global demand to fall between 220 million and 230 million units in 2012, while China will produce 120 million units. Although a great push was still required for Chinese television manufacturers to establish a global brand, Bai said, 70 million units produced in China would be sold overseas.
The leading ClearBlack display technology from Nokia
For better brightness, contrast and outdoor visibility In-Plane Switching (IPS) type LCD and AMOLED display panels are typically used. Nokia made a significant enhancement of both.
First in September 14, 2010 with the announcement of its ClearBlack technology “for improved outdoor visibility” with AMOLED displays in the new Nokia C6-01 and E7 smartphones. The AMOLED ClearBlack display variant used a year later in Nokia N9 “beat the Super AMOLED Plus of Samsung Galaxy S II in sunlight, and was almost exactly the same quality indoors” (see the below 3d party review). The later Lumia 800 has the same type of display as well as the earlier Nokia 700.
Next application of ClearBlack technology came in August 24, 2011 with the announcement of Nokia 701 having an IPS type LCD ClearBlack display. It got the “brightest screen on a mobile phone to date” title from its predecessor Nokia E7, moving even more ahead of the Apple iPhone 4 and Samsung Galaxy S II in that regard. And later came two other models with IPS type LCD ClearBlack displays: Nokia 603 and Lumia 710.
So Nokia with it ClearBlack enhancement has now a clear lead in display technologies. Below you can find more details about all that, including a technical explanation of the ClearBlack enhancement approach from Nokia itself. Plenty of evidence is given first by independent third parties testing the current flagships from Nokia against their rivals, then all kind of explanation materials are included from Nokia, and an interview with Nokia developers of ClearBlack as well.
Update: Tablet and Smartphone Displays Under Bright Ambient Lighting Shoot-Out [by DisplayMate]:
– [For comparison the earlier one without Nokia ClearBlack Display technology]
Master Photo Grid for Viewing on High Resolution Displays [Round 1] [March 3, 2012]
- [Tablets] Apple iPad 2 – Amazon Kindle Fire – Motorola Xoom – Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1
- [Smartphones] Apple iPhone 4 – HTC Desire – Motorola Droid X – Samsung Galaxy S
…
– Master Photo Grid for Viewing on High Resolution Displays [Round 2] [May 8, 2012]
- [Tablets] Apple iPad 2 – Amazon Kindle Fire – Motorola Xoom – Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1
- [Smartphones] Apple iPhone 4 – HTC Desire – Motorola Droid X – Nokia Lumia 900 – Samsung Galaxy S
…
The Master Photo Grid below includes Screen Shots from many of the Tablets and Smartphones in our Mobile Display Technology Shoot-Out article series. For more information on how Ambient Lighting affects the displays read the Results Highlights for Tablets or the Results Highlights for Smartphones. The visual results from the Screen Shots agree very well with the Lab measured DisplayMate Contrast Rating for High Ambient Light for Tablets and the Contrast Rating for High Ambient Light for Smartphones.
…
The Winner: The DisplayMate Contrast Rating for High Ambient Light for the displays ranges from a low of 15 (HTC Desire) to a high of 90 (Nokia Lumia 900). From both the Lab Measurements and the Screen Shot Viewing Tests (below) the top performing device for display viewability under Bright Ambient Lighting is the Nokia Lumia 900. This results from a combination of its high screen Brightness and low screen Reflectance, which Nokia calls ClearBlack technology.
The Samsung Galaxy S and Apple iPhone 4 are tied for second place.
The best Tablets all performed a notch below the Smartphones – the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 was the leader, with the iPad 2 in second place. The new iPad (not included below) performs better than the iPad 2 and just behind the Galaxy Tab 10.1. The other Smartphones and Tablets performed well below these top models –
ALL manufacturers need to pay much more attention to their display performance in high Ambient Lighting because that is frequently how they are used. The highly touted and advertised display Contrast Ratio applies only to Absolute Darkness, which makes it pretty much irrelevant for mobile devices. Note that we plan on including the Lumia 900 in one of our upcoming Smartphone Shoot-Outs.
…
CR HAL is the DisplayMate Contrast Rating for High Ambient Light – which is based on the measured Screen Brightness and Screen Reflectance.
…
Update: The core products with ClearBlack technology [April 18, 2012]
| TFT with capacitive touch | AMOLED with capacitive touch |
| Nokia C6-01 (November, 2010): 3.2″, 16:9 nHD (640×360 pixels), 16.7 million colours | |
| Nokia E7 (February, 2011): 4″, 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels), 16 million colours | |
| Nokia 701 (September, 2011): 3.5″, 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels) IPS-LCD, 16 million colours; 160° viewing angle, Corning® Gorilla® Glass | Nokia 700 (September, 2011): 3.2″, 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels), 16 million colours |
| Nokia 603 (November, 2011): 3.5″, 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels), with IPS technology, 16.7 million colours; 160° viewing angle, 1000 nits brightness | Nokia Lumia 800 (November, 2011): 3.7” WVGA, 800 x 480 pixels, 16 million colours, with pinch zoom, 2.5D curved glass seamlessly integrated to unibody (Windows Phone, manufactured by Compal Electronics) |
| Nokia Lumia 710 (November, 2011): 3.7” WVGA, 800 x 480 pixels, 16 million colours, with pinch zoom (Windows Phone, manufactured by Compal Electronics) | Nokia Lumia 900 (April, 2012): 4.3″ WVGA, 800 x 480 pixels, 16 million colours, with pinch zoom (Windows Phone, manufactured by Compal Electronics) |
| Nokia 808 PureView (May, 2012): 4″, 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels), 16.7 million colours, Corning® Gorilla® Glass, 2.5 D curved glass |
Update: Clear, black and super bright [Nokia Conversations, Feb 2, 2012]
Being able to answer emails and access entertainment while you’re out and about is one of the greatest revolutions in work and leisure of the last 100 years.
But the whole thing’s scuppered if the sun’s shining right on your screen and reflections mean you can’t see anything. In fact, the problem’s become worse in recent years as we’ve largely switched to full screen, touch-driven displays.
Brighter displays are one part of a solution. And so we’ve pumped up the power and moved to improved display solutions in pursuit of a few extra nits.
But making the screen brighter and brighter has a big drawback. Big, modern screens use up a lot more power than the 1.5-inch mono display on your old Nokia 3310. There comes a point where you’d be prepared for the screen to be a little dimmer if it meant you could get a couple more hours’ use out of your phone.
So a second strand to improving outdoor usability needed to be devised. One that focused on reducing the reflectiveness of your screen. Anti-reflective coatings were introduced. But they don’t go quite far enough.
That’s why Nokia created ClearBlack display.
ClearBlack display uses a sequence of polarising layers to eliminate reflections.
You have probably tried polarising sunglasses before now and so have a rough idea of how that works. If you look at a window or the surface of some water using polarising glasses, then they become more transparent – which is why they’re especially good for fishermen. The polariser cuts out reflected light.
Polariser layers used in display solutions are bit more sophisticated than in sunglasses. Light rays actually get “processed” many times on its way in and out of your phones´s screen.
Download the larger image from here.There’s both a linear polariser and retardation layers between the surface of your phone and the display. When light hits your screen, this is what happens:
- It hits the linear polariser, this vertically polarises the light. (Polarising means – roughly – aligning the wave vibration in a particular direction).
- Then it hits the circular polariser retardation layer. This converts the light again, making it right-circularly polarised.
- Then it hits the screen and bounces off it, switching the rotation of the light to leftist.
- It goes back through the retardation layer. When this happens, the light becomes horizontally polarised.
- Finally, it hits the linear polariser, since the light is horizontally polarised at this point it can be blocked entirely by this optical solution.
So why doesn’t the light from your phone’s display get blocked? Because it only goes through the second half of this journey so the light is unpolarised when it hits the final filter and goes through.
Nokia 701 with IPS type TFT LCD ClearBlack Display vs Apple iPhone 4 IPS type TFT LCD Display comparison [PhoneArena , Oct 1, 2011]
PhoneArena examines the 1000 nits display on the Nokia 701 via an improvised outdoor comparison with the Apple iPhone 4 and the Samsung Galaxy S II, about which you can read on: Thousand points of light: the brightest mobile display to date on the Nokia 701 compared[Oct 1, 2011]
Nokia 701 with IPS type TFT LCD ClearBlack Display vs Nokia 700 with AMOLED ClearBlack Display (Sept 19, 2011)
More information about this new brightness record is in The technical excellence of the new Symbian range from Nokia [Oct 1, 2011] post on this blog.
Nokia AMOLED ClearBlack Display [vs Super LCD] Sunlight Viewable Test on the Lumia 800 [minipcpro, Nov 23, 2011]
Nokia ClearBlack http://www.netbooknews.com The promise of sunlight viewable AMOLEDs has been around for a year now, and if you put on a foil to get rid of the glossy display you actually have a decent shot of using it outdoors. Nokia has actually done something very similar with their ClearBlack Display which is an AMOLED display with a polarized filter on top. The polarizer removes undesired reflections which increases visual contrast to provide vibrant colors and blacker blacks. This enables the ClearBlack Display to be usable in brightly lit conditions.
Information about the Lumia 800 phone used in this comparison see in the Nokia Lumia (Windows Phone 7) value proposition [Oct 26, 2011] post on this blog.
The other phone used for comparison in this video is the HTC Mozart with its so called Super LCD by Sony Mobile Display, a technology which is quite close to the IPS LCD technology. HTC is using the same technology on its latest HTC Titan and Radar phones, as well as on a number of other phones (plus a number of additional ones since the specification HTC’s product site typically says nothing about the type of display like in the case of HTC Mozart).
Super AMOLED Plus vs AMOLED ClearBlack Display [Videos From ZOMGitsCj.com, July 14, 2011]
From http://www.ZOMGitsCJ.com/2011/07/15/ye-giant-samsung-galaxy-s-ii-review/ here’s a quick video comparison of the Super AMOLED Plus Display on the Samsung Galaxy S II vs the [AMOLED]Clearblack CBD display on the Nokia E7.
Ye Giant Samsung Galaxy S II Review [ZOMGitsCJ.com, July 15, 2011]
… To sum it up, the Super AMOLED screen on the SGS2 is pretty darn great, with great image quality, good viewing angles, good sunlight legibility and great energy efficiency. It’d be hard to fault the screen on the SGS2, and apart from Nokia’s [AMOLED] CBD screens, nothing else really comes close to it. …
Here the “classic” ClearBlack, Nokia E7 is used for comparison. The “second generation” AMOLED ClearBlack displays of Nokia N9, Lumia 800 or Nokia 700 perform even better:
First Impressions of the Nokia N9 [ZOMGitsCJ.com, Oct 14, 2011]
…
What we liked:
…
- The 3.9 Inch AMOLED ClearBlack curved display is gorgeous. I put it right up next to a Galaxy S2 (which I thought was the benchmark in mobile screen tech) and the N9 beat it in sunlight, and was almost exactly the same quality indoors (even better I’d say). Great viewing angles too.
…
Other information: Nokia N9 UX [?Swipe?] on MeeGo 1.2 Harmattan [June 24 – Oct 27, 2011]
this new brightness record is in The technical excellence of the new Symbian range from Nokia [Oct 1, 2011] post on this blog.
Details from Nokia
ClearBlack Display, a vibrant differentiator [Nokia Conversations, Nov 15, 2011]
Smartphones have grown up in recent years, going from mainly keyboard based phones to now having the entire front being dominated by large touch screens. We’ve also gone from resistive displays that had to be pressed significantly to register a press to capacitive displays that are much more of a joy to use.
However, we can all agree on one thing: not all displays on touch screen phones are created the same. Here in Oregon, when the sun finally shines in the summer, we constantly battle screen glare that takes a good screen makes it unreadable in bright sunlight. Other complaints include poor colors, greyish-colored blacks and scratches taking away from the touch-screen experience.
Enter the advantages of Nokia’s ClearBlack Display. This awesome feature is proudly featured on the Nokia Lumia 710 and 800, along with the recently released Nokia E7 and C6-01, and the Nokia N9. To me, the exciting part is that the Lumia 710 and 800 are the only Windows Phone devices that feature ClearBlack Displays and this feature will be noticed every time you show your phone off to someone – they’ll notice the vibrancy of the display, whether you’re showing it off outside or inside under bright fluorescent lights, ClearBlack Display looks spectacular, every time.
What’s the story behind the magic of the ClearBlack Display?
What ClearBlack Display provides
Why integrate ClearBack display in these devices? Nokia’s engineers looked at display-related issues and wanted to provide a solution that would yield vibrant colors, blacker blacks and high contrast but which wouldn’t compromise battery life significantly. ClearBlack Display is an innovative solution that solves many of the issues that plague touch screen phone users.
Think about the last time you tried to use your phone outside, whether it was to post something on Facebook or navigate to a nearby location. To adequately see the screen, you likely had to tilt or shield the screen to see text or a map. To get around this, phone manufacturers have tried approaches such as increasing the display brightness, which helps, but also increases power consumption, affecting battery life. Mobile phone users have also bought antiglare screen protectors in an effort to cut down on glare.
ClearBlack Display helps solve this issue while preserving image quality and and keeping blacks as dark as possible. Also, ClearBlack Display phones create an amazing color contrastthat makes your apps, videos and images pop off the screen in a stunning manner.
So what is ClearBlack display? [nokia, Dec 1, 2010]
ClearBlack ensures that the blacks you see really are just that — black — which in turn enhances the contrast of the display and makes the whole screen much easier to see. Read more: http://conversations.nokia.com/2010/11/04/so-what-is-clearblack-display/To help explain how the display works, let’s talk about touch screens themselves. The touch screen on your phone is actually a layered pancake of different elements. The facet that makes ClearBlack Display so effective is where one of the layers, called the polarizer, is placed. The polarizer is a circular layer that is effective at removing undesired reflections. Stamping out reflections means higher visual contrast, resulting in vibrant colors and blacker blacks.
In ClearBlack Display phones, the polarizer is placed between the window and the touch sensor. The goal of this layers is to stack the optical performance with an air-gap solution. By putting the polarizer between the touch and display, engineers can block reflection from the captive sensor grid. To envision this, tilt a traditional touch screen phone in direct sunlight…see the grid of tiny dots? That’s the capacitive sensor grid.
Finally, when placing the polarizer in this position, light is diffused and reflection is minimized, resulting in a clearer display where all icons and colors contrast against one another. To see an example of the difference between a ClearBlack Display device, see the image below. On the left, a Nokia C6-01 with the polarizer is in place and on the right, a prototype C6-01 without ClearBlack Displayshows glare and reflection.
ClearBlack Display and you
The next time you’re outdoors, either looking up a map, showing off the photos from a weekend event or otherwise reading text on your phone, having a Nokia phone with ClearBlack Display will be of huge benefit.
You will no longer have to squint and rotate your phone to read text or see an image because of this revolutionary new display technology from Nokia’s display engineers. Also, you won’t have to reach for your charger as often because of the battery friendliness this solution provides.
So what is ClearBlack display? [Nokia Conversations, Nov 4, 2010]
Nokia displays have never looked better
In the past, phones were largely measured and compared by a few factors: ease of use, signal strength and the quality of the calls. However, over the years, phones have become smarter and do more, and there are now other components on the phone that are starting to be used to measure their quality. Many of us would probably put the display towards the top of the list. The display’s quality, its brightness, the viewing angle, the ability to be read in all lighting conditions, are all important. So it’s no surprise that one of the big talking points for the new devices launched at Nokia World 2010 was a new technology known as ClearBlack display.
ClearBlack display isn’t a completely new type of display technology like AMOLED. It’s actually a method to reduce reflections on the screen and improve visual image quality, especially outdoors. ClearBlack ensures that the blacks you see really are just that – black – which in turn enhances the contrast of the display and makes the whole screen much easier to see. This will be especially useful for apps like Ovi Maps, which are likely to be used outside. Also, sharing pictures or other items on-screen with others will be a lot easier due to the technology that enables excellent viewing angles.
The effect of the ClearBlack display technology is similar to that produced by a pair of polarising sunglasses. If you look at a body of water on a sunny day without a pair of polarising glasses, it’s really hard to see anything below the surface, but with the glasses on, the reflections are eliminated and you can see underneath the surface. In the same way, without ClearBlack display, you see the reflections on the phone’s screen, but with it you see the image on the screen. However, unlike sunglasses, ClearBlack display improves the vividness of the colors: in fact, because the contrast is higher, they’ll seem more vivid.
Another useful feature of this technology is also that the viewing angle of the device’s display is improved, so sharing pictures or other items on-screen will be a lot easier.
Here’s a picture of the Nokia C6-01 with ClearBlack display, alongside an early prototype of the same device without it:
Effectively, with ClearBlack display your device is able to provide a high quality image in any type of situation, indoors, outdoors, low-light and bright-light. ClearBlack display adjusts the brightness automatically to optimum level depending on the conditions you are in.
Another advantage is that by improving the image quality, and reducing the need to turn up the brightness, you also reduce the energy needed to power the display, and hence reduce the battery drain compared to regular technology, and so your mobile device will last longer between charges. Of the new Symbian^3 phones, the Nokia C6-01, and the Nokia E7 both have the very latest ClearBlack display technology.
…
Nokia E7 [Nokia Conversations, Nov 23, 2010]
The forthcoming Nokia E7 is set to be the new communicator. It’s powered by the new Symbian OS, offers three homescreens and a QWERTY keyboard for super-fast typing. All cased within an anodised aluminium shell and real glass display.
There’s a lot packed into this device. For starters there’s the 4 inch AMOLED capacitive touchscreen with Clear Black Display technology, which moves over to reveal the 4-row QWERTY keyboard. This makes it perfect for business use, and having Mail for Exchange, Quickoffice dynamic premium, F-Secure anti-theft for mobile and Adobe PDF reader preloaded means you’re able to make the Nokia E7 your own little portable office.
With 16GB of built-in storage and USB On-The-Go, you’ll be able to take as many HD videos as you like using the 8-megapixel camera, edit them using the preloaded video-editing software and watch them back later by plugging the Nokia E7 directly into your TV using the HDMI-out on the phone.
The Nokia E7 also comes with all the usual Ovi services, such as free navigation for life with Ovi Maps, Ovi Store for downloading apps or games and Ovi Music for downloading all your favourite bands.
…
Nokia Lumia 800 – light fantastic [Nokia Conversations, Oct 26, 2011]
… This is an amazing phone to hold in your hand. The polycarbonate body is all subtle curves topped with a bright AMOLED ClearBlack display [Nokia 700 also uses AMOLED, ClearBlack technology as well as Nokia N9 although in specifications AMOLED is only indicated and only the Australian N9 launch press release mentiones it] with toughened glass stretching to the sides of the phone. …
Nokia 603 is Belle-issimo! [Nokia Conversations, Oct 13, 2011]
… With a 3.5-inch ClearBlack display [the same TFT-LCD ClearBlack display with IPS technology as in the Nokia 701 and in the Lumia 710] under toughened glass to make sure your screen is visible even in bright sunlight, the Nokia 603 is versatile under any circumstances. The screen offers nHD resolution (640 x 360 pixels) and 16 million colours. …
The Nokia 701 screen outshines the rest [Nokia Conversations, Sept 28, 2011]
You don’t get to make the brightest touchscreen on the planet without being pretty, er, bright. So I pressed for an interview with Peter Nisula, head of the display and touch development team [more precisely: Senior Manager Display & Touch, Windows Phone Product Engineering at Nokia (since June 2011)] and Osku Sahlsten as Nokia 701 Display and Touch Project Manager [more precisely: Managing display development teams in Nokia. Responsibilities in display development, conceptual work and in technology projects.], to find out how Nokia managed to leave the rest of the world’s phones in the shade.
Nokia Conversations.
Creating a phone with the worlds brightest screen is great, but why do it?Peter Nisula.
In honesty, there’s two answers to this question. The first answer is, well, why not? We’ve got the technology to do it. The second answer is that having a screen that’s super-bright means that when used outdoors, it’s even easier to see what’s displayed on the screen if it’s lit really, really well.The IPS type LCD with ClearBlack technology makes the bright parts of the display bright and the dark bits, especially the black colours, dark. This combination gives a really clear display for the user.
NC.
Doesn’t a super-bright display drain the battery of the phone quicker?PN.
There is no significant impact on the battery life. We have performed studies in order to determine how people will use their phones on a daily basis. How long they spend on gaming, listening to music or even the simplest of tasks such as just standing at a bus stop typing a text message. With the information from studies we are able to decide the optimized settings for phone. All these things are considered when we make a phone.Although the screen of the Nokia 701 is the brightest screen on a smartphone, it’s not always cranked up to the highest level of luminance. As with most Nokia smartphones, there’s a built in ALS (ambient light sensor) that senses the light in the environment and adjusts the screen accordingly. If it’s dark, the phone turns down the screen brightness and the opposite happens if you’re in a really bright place.
NC.
How bright is this exactly?PN.
The brightness – or luminance – is measured in what’s called nitsand the Nokia 701 screen has 1000 of them.NC.
1000 nits huh? So, what does that mean? In real-life terms?PN.
Well, think of it this way. 1000 nits is equivalent 3145 lux. Sunlight on an average day ranges from 32,000 to 100,000 lux, TV studios are lit at about 1000 lux and moonlight measures at 1 lux. So, it’s clearly not as bright as daylight but much brighter than moonlight. However it’s three times brighter than a TV studiomaking it very bright.Oh, and the max brightness of the Nokia 701 is more than double higher than the iPad, if that’s a good example?
NC.
Is this really the brightest smartphone screen to date? What do other phones measure up to?PN.
We work with the major display manufacturers in the world and we know competition around, so we know the situation really well. We can bravely say this is the most brightest smartphone screen in the world.NC.
Are there plans to introduce IPS type LCD screens to every Nokia smartphone?PN.
IPS type LCD as a technology is giving certain advantages without doubts, but we need to see what technologies will be introduced to Nokia smartphones in the future. Of course, we’d love to have IPS type LCDs on all future Nokia smartphones. But we don’t know if that’s going to happen. We hope it will.If you’re still confused about some of the terminology used – and to be honest, it baffles us slightly, too – we’ve written a separate piece that explains all when it comes to nits and lux.
Would you like a smartphone with the worlds brightest screen? Let us know your thoughts, in the comments below.
Image credit: chadmiller
Kindle Fire with its $200 price pushing everybody up, down or out of the Android tablet market
Suggested preliminary reading: $199 Kindle Fire: Android 2.3 with specific UI layer and cloud services [Sept 29 – Nov 13, 2011]
Update (when neither up or down the market is an option for the company):
Acer Likely to Withdraw From Tablet PC Market [Dec 28, 2011]
Routed by Apple Inc. in the tablet PC competition, the Taiwan-based Acer Inc., one of the world’s top five PC suppliers by market shares, has intended to disband its touch business group in January, 2012, indicating its withdrawal from the competitive landscape to follow the footsteps of HP and Research In Motion.
Headed by Acer’s corporate president Jim Wong, the touch business group was set up in April 2011 to develop and promote tablet PCs and smartphones, regarded as the company’s best promising business unit then.
However, the momentary impression has proven unable to secure the business unit an expected success, as the company, after struggling with the sluggishness of tablet PC sales in the past months, is determined to dissolve the unit starting in January, 2012. Of over 300 workers of the touch business unit, 150, mostly R&D engineers, will be transferred to other business divisions, and only 100 will be retained, with the remainder likely to be laid off, according to industry insiders.
Although the disbandment has yet to be publicized, Acer directors have confirmed that the company has recently merged its Android tablet business, which originally belonged to the touch business group, into its global logistics center management, saying that the once-promising division now exists in name only.
With the touch division to be streamlined, market observers believe that Acer, which just halved its tablet PC sales projection to the range of only 2.5 million to 3 million units from 5 million units optimistically set right after the division was established, is likely to leave the challenging market that has been dominated by Apple with its iPad.
Although global PC makers have eagerly ventured into tablet PC business in the wake of iPad’s success over the past year, many of them, however, have proven unmatchable with Apple in the competition, with HP and RIM already out of the market. Taiwanese contract manufacturers, such as Quanta Computer Inc. and Inventect Corp., have also been jeopardized by customer’s withdrawal from the segment, forced to cut their employees as a result.
The Kindle Fire Is On Fire: Amazon Expected To Ship 3.9 Million This Quarter [Seeking Alpha, Dec 2, 2011]
The Kindle Fire looks like a bona fide hit right out of the gate. New estimates from IHS iSuppli have Amazon.com (AMZN) shipping 3.9 million Kindle Fires this quarter, which would make it the No. 2 tablet after the iPad 2 (with an estimated 18.6 million shipments). The Kindle Fire will become the No. 1 Android tablet by a wide margin (the Samsung (SSNLF.PK) Galaxy Tab is the next biggest, with an estimated 1.4 million shipments).
To put this 3.9 million number in context, just remember that the very first quarter Apple sold the iPad back in the September quarter of 2010, it sold 3.3 million. So the Kindle Fire sold more in its first quarter than the iPad did in its first quarter on the market. Of course, Apple sold 7.3 million iPads the second quarter it was on the market, which was the 2010 holiday quarter.
Quanta shipments of Kindle Fire reach 3-4 million units [Dec 2, 2011]
Shipments of 7-inch Kindle Fire tablet PCs from Quanta Computer to Amazon have reached 3-4 million units, according to industry watchers. However, Quanta declined to comment.
The sources said Amazon has continued to increase its orders for Kindle Fire and aims to see total OEM Kindle Fire shipments reach five million units by the end of December or early January.
Wintek, a major supplier of touch panels for Kindle Fire, has recently raised its internal forecast of shipments to Amazon. Industry sources have estimated that Wintek will ship about 3-3.5 million touch panels for Kindle Fire before January.
However, some makers in the supply chain have built up inventory of needed parts and components steadily, and OEM Quanta has also kept its shipments regular, for the sake of avoiding over stockpiling inventory in case there is a reverse in order visibility, the sources pointed out.
The out-of-the-market case #1: White-box players in China quitting tablet PC market [Dec 8, 2011]
As non-Apple tablet PC players are dropping their tablet PC prices to compete against Kindle Fire, white-box players in China are starting to quit the tablet PC market and can only wait for the rise of the next innovative device to appear in the market.
Since China-based Lenovo is offering its tablet PCs at a price of CNY1,000 (US$158), several large white-box players have quickly dropped their tablet PC prices to help clear their inventory, while several white-box players that offer tablet PCs at below CNY800 are even preparing to sell their devices at cost and then quit the market.
With the launch of Android 4.0 and Nvidia Tegra 3, first-tier brand vendors have been dropping their tablet PC prices to compete for market share, especially Lenovo, which has recently dropped its 7-inch 16GB LaPad A1 from CNY2,500 [$US393] originally to less than CNY1,400 [$US220] and its entry-level 2GB model is offered at CNY1,000 [$US157], cheaper than most of the large white-box players’ models.
Since Lenovo is stronger in the retail channel, while offering warranty and its products have basic quality, these advantages are all piling strong pressure upon white-box players.
Some China-based ODMs pointed out that their orders from white-box players have dropped sharply by about 30-50% with several clients clearing their inventory by dropping prices; however, since they still cannot outmatch first-tier players, some of them have already decided to temporary quit the tablet PC market.
As the situation may become worse, the ODMs expect that more than 70% of the existing white-box players could quit the market by the first quarter of 2012.
Note: White-box is a term often used to describe computer makers who are not the well-known name brands, but rather B- or C-tier players.
The down-the-market case #1: Players drop tablet PC prices to compete against Kindle Fire [Nov 24, 2011]
Several tablet PC players including RIM, High Tech Computer (HTC), Lenovo, and ViewSonic, have dropped their 7-inch tablet PC prices to compete against Amazon’s Kindle Fire, priced at US$199, according to sources from channel retailers.
The sources pointed out that RIM has recently cooperated with Best Buy to offer its 7-inch 16GB PlayBook at a price of US$199, down from US$499 originally. Meanwhile, the price of HTC’s 7-inch Android 2.3-based Flyer tablet PC has dropped to US$299, Lenovo’s 7-inch A1 tablet PC to US$199, and ViewSonic’s 7-inch Viewbook 730 to US$169.
Meanwhile, several China-based white-box players are also offering their 7-inch tablet at prices as low as US$75.
In addition to the 16GB model, RIM also dropped its 32GB model from US$599 to US$299.
Since part of the reason consumers buy Kindle Fire is because of its strong content support, even though other brand vendors are trying to attract consumers by lowering their prices, they may not be able to achieve the same sales results as Amazon.
The sources also revealed that several vendors are already in talking with upstream suppliers hoping to develop a tablet PC that costs less than US$199, but since there is still not yet a suitable solution to accomplish such a goal, most of the brand vendors are halting their 7-inch tablet PC projects.
The out-of-the-market case #2: Dell kills off its last Android tablet in the US [Dec 6, 2011]
Dell has taken its 7-inch Streak Android tablet out of commission, according to its website. While some retail sites still have stock, the company no longer offers the Streak for sale from its own website and will no longer produce it. The Dell Android tablet species is officially extinct in the US.
The fadeout of the 7-inch Streak follows the disappearance of the 5-inch Streak in August, when it failed to corner (read: create) the 5-inch tablet market. The 7-inch Streak went on sale in January and was priced at $200 with a T-Mobile contract, but has failed to generate any significant interest in the last year. The only Dell tablet still in production is the 10-inch Streak, sold in China.
From here, Dell will move on to making Windows 8 tablets when the operating system launches next year. Speaking at the Dell World 2011 conference, Michael Dell, the company’s CEO, said that “the Android market has not developed the expectations [Dell] would have had.”
Lenovo Reaffirms Android Commitment In Wake Of Dell Streak 7 Demise [Dec 7, 2011]
Lenovo is reaffirming its commitment to its Android-based tablets – at least for now – in the wake of the demise of Dell (NSDQ:Dell)’s Streak 7 Android tablet. Dell nixed the 7-inch tablet on Tuesday, posting a note on the Streak 7’s landing page saying that the product, unfortunately, is “no longer available for sale.”
Dell declined to comment on exactly why it discontinued the tablet, which was its last Android-based device on the U.S. market.
Many reports, however, are suggesting that Dell pulled the reins on the Streak 7 to start transitioning from Android-based tablets to Windows 8-based tablets, upon the new OS’ release next year. Dell declined to confirm the move, but other PC makers, such as Lenovo, have expressed their commitment to Google’s OS – even if just for now.
“Our tablet strategy today is an Android operating system,” said Chris Frey, vice president of North America Commercial Channels at Lenovo in an interview with CRN. “As operating systems evolve next year and new operating systems become available, we’ll make decisions on the hardware and the operating system that will go on that hardware as we get closer. Right now [Android] is the operating system we have and are driving in the market.”
Lenovo’s ThinkPad Tablet: An Android Business Slate [Review] [Dec 7, 2011]
Conclusion
Lenovo designed the ThinkPad Tablet with business users in mind. The optional pen accessory and the preloaded software are options business users may appreciate. During our tests, we felt the ThinkPad tablet was great for taking notes, surfing the web, checking email, and many other daily tasks that are typical of a business user.
Battery life with the ThinkPad Tablet is a bit of a mixed bag. Although the tablet is rated at up to five days of use, this longevity is dependent upon the user putting the tablet into suspend mode each time he or she is finished using the tablet. Even then, battery life is sure to vary greatly depending on how much you use the tablet. We would expect that many users may place the tablet on their desk to take a phone call or deal with another interruption and forget to press the power button. In doing so, you’ll suffer a considerable hit in terms of battery life.
In terms of connectivity, the ThinkPad Tablet has a lot going for it. Not only does the ThinkPad Tablet have a full-size USB port, but it also offers a card reader, microUSB port, mini HDMI port, a ThinkPad Tablet dock connector, and headphone jack. Most tablets on the market today offer considerably fewer ports, so this is an area where the ThinkPad Tablet really shines.
IT departments will also appreciate the encryption and remote wipe capabilities of the ThinkPad Tablet. The optional pen accessory is definitely a nice add on that gives the tablet some additional functionality, and we found ourselves using it often during our evaluation process. The biggest drawback to this tablet is its battery managment. Assuming you’re religious about pressing the power button each time you’re finished using the tablet, it won’t be a problem. If you’re like us and tend to forget however, you’ll want to keep a charging cord nearby at all times. Regardless, we feel the ThinkPad Tablet is a great tablet for business users who want some of the added capabilities and software that Lenovo includes. It’s a full-featured device that offers a tablet experience not found in many others on the market right now.
Hot
- NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual-core 1GHz ARM SoC w/ NVIDIA graphics
- 1GB of RAM, 16 – 64GB Storage
- Lots of ports: mini HDMI, USB 2.0, micro USB, dock connector
- Full size media card reader
Not
- Relatively short battery life in idle mode
- Pen is not included (costs $30)
[Price: 16GB: $499, 32GB: $569, 64GB: $669]
Apple iPad Sales Slowing as Amazon Lights Kindle Fire [Dec 7, 2011]
Since launching in 2010, Apple’s iPad has been the global leader in tablets. But since Amazon’s first table, the all-new low-priced Kindle Fire came out in November Apple’s dominance may be sagging. In a new analyst note, Shaw Wu of the brokerage firm Stern Ageesees iPad sales as a “little light” in the current quarter.
Wu assigns the blame for light iPad sales to stiff competition, namely from Amazon’s Kindle Fire, priced at $199 while the starting price for the Apple iPad is $499. He also notes that some Apple customers are buying the MacBook Air instead of an iPad, but in lowering his estimate for iPad sales in the quarter from to 13.5 million units from 15 million units, it’s clear the Kindle Fire is the leading culprit.
[from: Apple’s iPad sales look light amid Kindle Fire, MacBook Air popularity [Dec 7, 2011]
Wu wrote in a research note:
In the Mac business, we are seeing particular strength in the MacBook Air, arguably the best ultra-mobile PC on the market. Last but not least, iPads appear a little light of expectations due in part to competition from Amazon’s Kindle Fire but also as some users opt for a more full-featured MacBook Air.]
IHS iSuppli estimates Amazon will sell nearly four million Kindle Fire tablets by the end of the year— not bad for a product that didn’t ship until mid-November. Reviewers note that the Kindle Fire isn’t the Apple iPad — it is short on apps and isn’t known for content creation abilities. Yet it seems to serve at a low price what most tablet buyers want — a handy device good for watching videos and Web browsing and content reading on the go.
It’s not like Apple’s iPad dominance is going away, either. If the company sells 13.5 million tablets in the quarter as Wu estimates, the Cupertino, Ca.-based company still has a global leader on its hands. But the Kindle Fire has shown out of the gate that a device can ably compete with the iPad after others like the HP TouchPad and the BlackBerryPlayBook failed.
Wu isn’t the only analyst who thinks the Amazon Kindle Fire is dipping into Apple iPad dominance, either. Another new report from Michael Walkley of Canaccord Genuitysees the same trend.
“With our expectations for a new iPad launch during the March quarter leading to potentially lower inventory levels combined with increased competition from the $200 Kindle Fire,” Walkley said in a note, “we have slightly lowered our December quarter iPad estimates from 14M to 13M units.”
But it’s interesting to note that some analysts don’t think Apple is overly concerned with the low-priced Kindle.
“If anything, we believe that Apple is not too concerned about the low-priced entrants,” wrote Mark Moskowitz, an analyst with J.P. Morgan, in a Dec. 2 research note. “Recall, it has been our view that low-priced, reduced feature-set entrants, such as the Kindle Fire, are soap box derby devices stuck between a tablet and an e-reader.”
iPad feeling some heat from Amazon’s Kindle Fire [Dec 1, 2011]
Apple’s iPad seems to have run into the one Android tabletthat could knock it down a peg or two.
After hitting retailers on November 15 at $199, Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet is already outselling the iPad at Best Buy. Sorting tablets by the top sellers at the Best Buy Web Siteshows the Fire in first place followed by the 16GB Wi-Fi-only iPad 2 at $499 coming in second. A range of other iPad flavors from different carriers are scattered throughout the top 40 tablets.
Amazon itself shows the Kindle Fire as the top-selling tableton its site, with the 16GB iPad further down the list. But that seems a less accurate gauge of popularity since Fire buyers may be more likely to pick up the tablet directly from Amazon.
Even before the Fire launched a little more than two weeks ago, the tablet was proving to be a big seller, racking up a huge number of preorders. Pegging the Fire as one of the hottest consumer devices among holiday buyers, research firm DisplaySearch recently increased its shipment projectionsfor the current quarter.
DisplaySearch analyst Richard Shim now expects Amazon to ship up to 6 million Fire tablets this season, up from 4 million previously.
Another analyst also sees the Fire giving the iPad some competition, but to a lesser degree.
In an investor note out today, J.P. Morgan analyst Mark Moskowitz said he’d trimmed his fourth-quarter sales estimates for Apple’s tablet to 13 million from 13.3 million previously. Moskowitz attributed the lower forecast mostly to more limited growth in production but also pointed to the Fire.
“To a lesser extent, the Amazon Kindle Fire’s better-than-expected momentum with more price sensitive consumers is a factor, too,” the analyst wrote.
Of course, Apple is certainly in no danger of losing its current dominance in the tablet market. Moskowitz believes that over time the iPad will actually gain more traction in the business and educational markets. And despite the hot holiday demand for the Fire, the analyst doesn’t see Amazon’s current version of its tablet as a strong enough competitor over the long haul.
“We think that for any vendor to wrestle momentum longer-term from Apple, a fully loaded offering is a must, and here, the current revision of the Kindle Fire falls short,” Moskowitz wrote. “We think that, over time, consumers may come away disappointed with the Kindle Fire’s lack of functionality and smaller screen size. In our view, the Kindle Fire is the current Netbook of the media tablet market. The bigger question is whether the Fire evolves into a bona fide tablet in its next-generation release.”
As a consequence of the above two articles one observer dares to note that:
Not even Apple understands the tablet market [Dec 7, 2011]
Just last quarter, iPhone sales took a big dip. Apple (AAPL) was fine as iPads saved the day. This quarter could turn out to be the complete opposite.
If Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu is right, iPad sales will be lower than expected because of the popularity of both Amazon’s (AMZN) Kindle Fire table and Apple’s own MacBook Air, as ZDNet’s Larry Dignon notes. It’s a competition sandwich that underscores how little, still, anyone in the tablet market, including Apple, thoroughly understands the dynamics and what people ultimately want to do with the devices.
…
Initial trials are over
Not that the iPad — or other tablets — will whimper and crawl to a corner. Far from it. But given what products that Wu thinks are drawing attention, Kindle Fire and MacBook Air, you have to question whether anyone knows, yet, what consumers want from tablets, particularly as we’ve yet to see any solid numbers (and are unlikely to) for Kindle sales.
The presumption is that Kindle Fire snags the price-sensitive and Amazon fans. The MacBook Air switch is by people who need a lot more than what the iPad can deliver. That throws open a lot of assumptions. What percentage of buyers expected a tablet to be a media access device only? How many realized that they needed more than an on-screen keyboard? What price points will maximize sales?
For most of the Android tablet vendors, the answer to “What do consumers want?” has been, “Something other than what you sell.” Maybe Apple has all the answers, but even that seems pretty unlikely. Last quarter, unit sales were up. This month, maybe down. Steve Jobs was certain that a 7-inch tablet couldn’t see any success, but Amazon seems to be disproving that.
It’s time for everyone to take a step back and reconsider the basic questions. Maybe talk to a lot of customers, do some usability studies, and follow individuals around (with their permission) to better understand how they use the devices. Only some determined research is going to get beyond the seat-of-the-pants navigation that the tech industry seems to heartily embrace so often.
Evercore: Amazon will own 50% of Android tablet market in ’12 [Dec 5, 2011]
The Kindle Fire may “vaporize” the market for every for-profit tablet maker except Apple
In a note to clients Monday about Apple (AAPL), Evercore Partners’ Robert Cihra summarizes the impact of Amazon’s (AMZN) Kindle Fire on the tablet market in stark terms:
While Amazon’s Kindle Fire has come out of the gates strong, as expected, we see Apple maintaining its competitive lead, if anything accentuated by what now looks like the only tablet to so far mount any credible iPad challenge apparently needing to do so by selling at cost; not to mention Amazon’s success may just vaporize other “for profit” Android tablet OEM roadmaps (e.g., we est Amazon 50% of all Android tablets in CY12). Meanwhile Apple goes on as the only vendor able to cream off the most profitable segment of each market it targets, whether tablet, smartphone or PC. (emphasis ours)
The up-the-market case #1: Asustek sets shipment goal for 2012 [Dec 6]
Asustek Computer, at its global sales meeting on December 5, has set the shipment goals for its four major product lines for 2012 with notebooks and netbooks together to surpass 22 million units and the company internally expecting shipments to reach 23.8 million units, while tablet PCs will reach at least three million units with the company internally expecting the volume to reach six million units, surpassing Samsung Electronics.
…for tablet PCs, Asustek expects its shipments will reach about 1.8 million units in 2011.
…
As for the recent report that Asustek was not invited into the Windows on ARM (WOA) development project, Asustek noted that it has the strongest R&D ability among notebook vendors and is the largest client of Nvidia; therefore, the company will continue to have tight partnership with ARM-based processor makers over development of the WOA platform.
See also: NVIDIA Tegra 3 and ASUS Eee Pad Transformer Prime [Nov 10 – Dec 2, 2011]
for all related information + Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime: The Rolls-Royce of Android tablets [Dec 2, 2011] as one of the first reviews
Note: Wistron Enters Asustek’s Tablet PC Supply Chain [Dec 8, 2011]
Aimed at becoming the largest brand for the Android- and Windows8-enabled tablet PCs, Asustek has aimed to challenge a goal of six million tablet PCs in 2012, three times that of this year’s 1.8 million units.
Asustek Unveils Transformer Prime Amid Aggressive Goal for Tablet Market [Dec 5, 2011]
Asustek Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jerry Shen … vowed that his company will become one of the top tablet brands, next only to Apple (iPad) and Amazon (Kindle Fire). His pledge is considered by some industry executives as a challenge against Samsung, which is now the most popular brand name supplier of tablets only trailing Apple and Amazon.
Demo: Ice Cream Sandwich on Asus Transformer Prime [nvidia, Nov 17, 2011]
The up-the-market case #2: Acer, Lenovo to launch quad-core tablet PCs [Nov 29, 2011]
Acer and Lenovo are set to launch quad-core tablet PCs featuring Google’s Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and Nvidia’s Tegra 3 in the first quarterto compete against Asustek Computer, which has already launched its latest Eee Pad Transformer Prime with Tegra 3 and Samsung Electronics, according to sources from notebook players.
The sources pointed out that the competition over the quad-core tablet PCs will be difficult as these quad-core devices will only see improvements over their performance and design, but will still feature the same concept as their dual-core predecessors.
Therefore, these players may need to battle it out before being able to enter competition against players such as Amazon or Apple, the sources noted.
The sources noted that although these players’ performance in the dual-core tablet PC competition were not as good as expected, they will continue to advance and launch new quad-core devices to defend their brands.
The new quad-core tablet PCs from Acer and Lenovo are expected to be priced between US$459-599.
Since non-Apple players’ machines have no advantage to compete against Amazon or Apple’s tablet PC devices, the sources believe non-Apple players will together account for only 10-15% of the total tablet PC market.
The real up-the-market case: Amazing Screen Technology: Samsung Flexible AMOLED [Dec 4, 2012]
Some time earlier this year there were concept drawings of a Samsung phone with a flexible OLED display. This was a rather intriguing concept that we didn’t think would be happening anytime soon, but we were then proved wrong as Samsung stepped forward and said that flexible display smartphones were in the works and would be introduced some time in 2012.
Now Samsung’s Mobile Display Division has released a new concept video of what a transparent and flexible tablet of the future could look like and what it could accomplish. We’re guessing that Samsung’s flexible smartphone for 2012 won’t be anything like the concept video, but we definitely like where Samsung’s ideas are headed.
It showcases a tablet that can be shrunk and expanded according to our needs, augmented reality translation, and what appears to be 3D imagery as well that seems to literally leap off your screen.
From: Samsung shows off flexible display concept tablet in video [Dec 5, 2011]
In its quarterly earnings call, Samsung’s vice president of investor relations, Robert Yi, told investors, analysts and press, “The flexible display we are looking to introduce sometime in 2012, hopefully the earlier part. The application probably will start from the handset side.”
After flexible-screen mobile phones roll out, the company plans to introduce the same technology for tabletsand other devices.
In January 2011, Samsung purchased Liquivista, a strategic acquisition that will allow it to produce the kinds of displays that were announced today. Liquivista made electrowetting display technology, which is used to create mobile and other consumer electronic displays that are bright, low-power, flexible and transparent.
Flexible screen technology was also a focus of Samsung’s in March, when Yongsuk Choi, director of Samsung Mobile Display, gave an overview of the company’s future mobile device plans. At that time, Choi said most of the flexible-display technology Samsung was working on was still in very early stages.
From: Samsung’s new phones will have flexible screens [Oct 28, 2011]
See also on Samsung Mobile Display site:
– Future Display Used : Flexible Display – Foldable Display – Dual Display – 3D Display – Paper Thin Display: “Flexible Display: AMOLED products that are still fully functional when they are folded or rolled can be expanded and applied to full-color and mobile market as digital signage and e-book markets and technologies are developed.” …
– SMD History: … “Nov 2010: Developed WVGA [Wide VGA 800×480 resolution] Flexible AMOLED for the first time in the world” … “May 2009: Developed the world’s biggest 6.5” of Flexible AMOLED” …
HP, Dell, Acer to expand R&D investments [Nov 24, 2011]
Seeing that the PC industry is going through a slowdown, PC players Hewlett-Packard (HP), Dell and Acer have all expanded their investments in R&D and as the PC industry will enter an atmosphere that is filled with multiple platformsin 2012, each vendor’s R&D, branding and marketing abilities will become important drivers to increase their competitiveness in the future, according to sources from PC players.
HP is set to increase its investment in R&D and to strengthen the related resources. The company also changed its policy to have senior vice president of research, and director of HP Labs Prith Banerjee directly report to company CEO Meg Whitman.
Meanwhile, Dell is set to expand its R&D funding to US$1 billion each year, up 51.28% from US$661 million, that was reported a year ago. Dell also noted that the company will continue to acquire companies in the future and will need more funding to integrate the acquired firms.
Furthermore, Acer’s first R&D center is also expected to increase its total engineers from 600 in the middle of the year to 1,000 by year-end with executives of brand vendors and ODMs all major targets for headhunting.
An Acer executive also pointed out that the PC industry is experiencing a significant change, transitioning from Wintel system dominated to competition between several different platforms. Therefore, to the ability to develop devices based on Google’s Android system or ARM will become important.
AMD helping Android fans port to x86 [Dec 6, 2011]
A team of developers working privately to port the next version of Android to the x86 platform has been receiving a lot of support from AMD, but less from other key players.
The project is seeking to port the Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) android-4.0.1_r1 release build to the x86 platform, and Chih-Wei Huang, one of the enthusiasts involved, told The Register that AMD had not only donated two tablets to the cause, but also has a couple of engineers helping out. As a result, the porting to AMD’s Brazos platform is now largely complete and the source code has been made available.
The first porting of Android to the x86 platform was actually done by Google engineers, but he explained that the Google team had not been continuing with the project since Android version 1.5, aka Cupcake. While the developers submit patches to Google, they seldom hear back, although some Google engineers are helping out privately with the project. Intel, too, hasn’t been keen.
“Generally speaking, Google didn’t care for the x86, at least before ICS,” he told The Registerin an email conversation. “Intel doesn’t care, either. They don’t want to help us. I’ve tried to contact Intel in different ways, but the replies were negative.”
Intel’s position has caused the team considerable problems, not least in getting Android to work with the video chipsets, and particularly the hardware acceleration added to Chipzilla’s kit. Work is still continuing, but since this is a voluntary project by people who have day jobs, then Android users might have a while before they can plaster an Intel Inside sticker on their systems.
Chih-Wei Huang, an open source advocate based in Taiwan, started the project with a former colleague in June 2009, and it has morphed to the point where the scheme has 2,600 subscribers to the project forum. He said that while he tried to keep the porting process up to date, it was a lot of work and some people weren’t sharing data.
“Now ICS is more mature for x86 tablet or netbook, so there are more practical reasons to do that,” he said. “Actually, I know some vendors like Bluestack, Viewsonic, and Insyde have already shipped Android-x86.org based products. However, they never contribute back. That usually makes us feel bad and angry.”
Supplementary information: Android: A visual history [Dec 7, 2011]
China becoming the lead market for mobile Internet in 2012/13
Update: China government not expected to issue TD-LTE operating license for the time being [Jan 16, 2012]
While China Mobile has been actively promoting TD-LTE, the China government is not expected to issue a TD-LTE operating license to China Mobile for the time being, according to industry sources.
China Mobile finished initial TD-LTE trials in seven selected cities in China around the end of 2011 and has proposed a second-round of trials, but the China government has not yet approved the plans, signaling the government’s attitude to slow down promotion of TD-LTE in China, the sources indicated.
This is because 3G mobile communication services are taking off in the China market and therefore the government does not want to issue a TD-LTE operating license out of consideration for China Telecom and China Unicom, the sources said.
China in Smartphone Lead [Nov 24, 2011]
China overtook the U.S. as the world’s largest smartphone market by volume in the third quarter, according to a report by research firm Strategy Analytics.
Deliveries of smart phones to operators and retailers in China grew 58% in the third quarter from the previous quarter to 24 million units. That surpassed 23 million units delivered to the U.S. market, down 7% from the previous quarter …
Nokia Corp. had the largest share of China’s smartphone market in the third quarter, with 29%. … Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. is chasing hard with 18% of the Chinese market …
Strategy Analytics said that China is now at the forefront of the worldwide mobile computing boom and has become a large and growing smartphone market that no hardware vendor, component maker or content developer can afford to ignore. …
Strategy Analytics estimates that 57% of the world’s handsets were manufactured in China in 2010. … two of Nokia’s eight production facilities are based in China and the company said China is also one of its bigger suppliers of mobile handset components.
HSPA+ and LTE Investment Key to Operator Profitability [Strategy Analytics press release, Nov 29, 2011]
In its latest Wireless Operator Strategies (WOS) report, “Outlook & Forecast: How HSPA+ and LTE Investments will save Mobile Operator Profits,” Strategy Analytics projects the impact of HSPA+ and LTE investments on operator margins through 2016. Successful operators will be those who accelerate investment in next generation infrastructure in response to the dramatic growth in Broadband data demand. The race is on to reduce cost per Gigabyte (GB) to match the rate at which revenue per GB is falling. Operators who invest early in next generation HSPA+ and LTE infrastructure will see improvements in gross margins after 2014
VAS and mobile internet in China [Nov 24, 2011]
See as well the slides at http://www.mforum.ru/news/article/099412.htm
China Telcos Announce October 2011 Subscriber Totals [Marbridge Daily, Nov 21, 2011]
China’s three main telecom operators have announced their subscriber totals for October 2011.
October saw the net addition of 12.05 mln new mobile subscribers. China Mobile (NYSE: CHL; 0941.HK) added 5.37 mln new mobile subscribers, pushing the operator’s total mobile user base to 638.89 mln, of which a total of 45.33 mln subscribers used China Mobile’s TD-SCDMA terminals during the month. China Mobile added 2.17 mln new TD-SCDMA subscribers in October.
China Unicom (NYSE: CHU; 0762.HK; 600050.SH) added 3.34 mln new mobile subscribers, bringing its total to 192.38 mln. Of the new mobile subs added, 0.42 mln were GSM subscribers, bringing China Unicom’s total GSM user base to 159.23 mln, and 2.92 mln were WCDMA subscribers, pushing the company’s total WCDMA user base to 33.15 mln subscribers.
China Telecom (NYSE: CHA; 0728.HK) added 3.34 mln CDMA subs, taking its total to 120.29 mln, of which 31.19 mln were CDMA2000 EV-DO subscribers. China Telecom added 2.76 mln new CDMA2000 EV-DO subscribers in October.
Of the combined total of 109.67 mln 3G subs, China Mobile holds 41.3%, China Unicom 30.2%, and China Telecom 28.4%. Of total new mobile subs added in October, China Mobile took 44.57%, dropping its share of China’s total mobile user base to 67.14%. China Unicom’s share of the total mobile user base rose to 20.22%, while China Telecom’s share increased for the 34th straight month, rising from 12.45% at the end of September to 12.64% at the end of October.
China Telecom lost 560,000 fixed-line subs, reducing its total to 170.4 mln, and China Unicom lost 278,000 fixed-line subs, dropping its total to 94.3 mln.
China Telecom added 1.07 mln new broadband subscribers to reach 74.76 mln, and China Unicom added 512,000 new broadband subs to reach 55.05 mln.
Analysys International: Chinese Mobile Internet Users Reached 370 Million in 2011 Q2 [Nov 14, 2011]
According to the EnfoDesk recently released by Analysys International, the number of domestic [mobile] internet users was 369 million in Q2, 2011, with a sequential growth rate being 7.6% and a year-on-year increase of 72.3%.
In terms of 3G mobile Internet, however, there is a huge potential for growth. Taking just the global 3G technology leader W-CDMA against the home-grown TD-SCDMA:
– As at 30 June 2011, the total number of subscribers of the China Unicom reached 181.61 million, an increase of 15.7% over the same period last year. Not much considering that the penetration rate of W-CDMA subscribers reached is still 13.2%. (From: China Unicom (Hong Kong) Limited Announces 2011 Interim Results [Aug 24, 2011])
– For China Telecom (CDMA and CDMA 200 EV-DO for 3G) the total number of subscribers reached 120.29 million, of which 31.19 million were 3G subscribers, i.e. 25.9% of the subscriber base. (From the above Marbridge Daily report)
– Meanwhile at 30 June 2011, the total number of subscribers of the China Mobile reached 616.79 million and the penetration rate of TD-SCDMA subscribers reached 5.7% only. (Here and below from: China Mobile Operation Operation Data – Customer Numbers)
– At the end of October 2011 China Mobile had 638.889 million subscribers and the number of 3G subscribers was still just 7.1% of the whole subscriber base.
– Considering the monthly 3G subscriber data from the corresponding operators (till October 2011) we can clearly see that China Mobile’s TD-SCDMA is not only underperforming against China Unicom’s W-CDMA, but that underperformance is getting worse month after month:
The consequence is that the #1 global operator, China Mobile, is fast moving towards a combined 3G/4G strategy now:
China Mobile to add 10,000-20,000 TD-LTE base stations in 2012 [Nov 21, 2011]
China Mobile will set up 10,000-20,000 additional TD-LTE base stations around China in 2012, according to company vice chairman Xi Guohua.
Under the auspices of the China government, China Mobile has been establishing TD-LTE experimental networks in six cities in China and has set up more than 850 base stations in total, Xi indicated. In addition, 50% of China Mobile’ 250,000 TD-SCDMA base stations around China can be gradually upgraded to TD-LTE, Xi said.
China Mobile has been promoting international adoption of TD-LTE through cooperation with mobile telecom carriers in North America, Europe and Asia, with more than 30 TD-LTE experimental networks completed or under establishment as of the end of October 2011, Xi indicated.
Taiwan-based companies are expected to play an important role in China Mobile’s promotion of TD-LTE, Xi said. For example, Taiwan-based IC design house MediaTek has completed development of TD-LTE/3G and FDD-LTE/3G chips for use in smartphones and Quanta Computer has finished development of TD-LTE network interface cards and TD-LTE-enabled tablet PCs.
TDD Camp Sets Out Global Ambitions [Nov 17, 2011]
“Our belief is, LTE is the next GSM,” Bill Huang, general manager of China Mobile Ltd. (NYSE: CHL)’s Research Institute, told a packed seminar organized by Global TD-LTE Initiative(GTI), the industry body set up to promote the technology.
Huang said that by 2013, GTI’s operator members will have 39 percent of the world’s mobile population covered. “But I think it’s not enough. We can cover 50 percent by 2015, or something close to that.”
He also thinks China Mobile should go head-to-head with fixed-line broadband using TDD, “as long as we can get our costs down.”
…
China Mobile guided the technology through the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) standards process and was instrumental in gaining the support of other influential operators such as Japan’s SoftBank Mobile Corp. , India’s Bharti Airtel Ltd. (Mumbai: BHARTIARTL) and Vodafone Group plc (NYSE: VOD).
In addition, China Mobile helped form the GTI, headed by former GSMA chairman Craig Erlich, and persuaded some WiMax operators, such as Malaysia’s Packet One Networks (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd. (P1) and Australia’s vividwireless Pty Ltd. to climb aboard. (See P1 Joins Global LTE TDD Group, Another WiMax Operator Converts to LTE, Going WiMax to LTE Down Under and GSMA Names New Chairman.)
…
LTE TDD’s big draw is that it can be deployed by those operators holding licenses for unpaired spectrum, which is currently used to provide WiMax services. FDD’s paired channels work well for voice but are wasteful for data, which is mostly asymmetrical in nature. Additionally, the guard bands in FDD mean up to 30 percent of it is not used, compared with about 10 percent for TDD.
Those capabilities, and the availability of unpaired spectrum, has resulted in a growing interest in LTE TDD — something reflected in the rising prices paid in spectrum auctions, according to Donald Lu, Beijing-based executive director of global investment research for Goldman Sachs & Co.“It’s the unpaired spectrum that has made the difference. The value of unpaired has increased by comparison to paired,” he said.
That said, the majority of awarded spectrum is of the FDD variety: Of the 185 LTE network projects underway globally, just 33 are trialing LTE TDD and of those only about 10 have absolutely committed to the technology, according to the Global Mobile Suppliers Association (GSA). And as Ovum’s McCormick notes, while the FDD players might supplement their existing spectrum with TDD licenses, they’re not going to switch from one to the other.
As a result the global LTE TDD market is not set to be enormous for the coming few years, at least while the ecosystem continues to grow. Goldman Sachs estimates that global LTE TDD capex will total US$15-20 billion during the 2012-2014 timeframe, while 40 million devices will likely be shipped.
China Mobile aims to complete next phase 4G trial by June [Reuters, Nov 15, 2011]
China Mobile expects to finish the second-phase of its fourth-generation (4G) network trials by June, a senior company executive said on Tuesday, as the world’s largest mobile carrier tries to boost its data services to attract high-end users.
China Mobile has built more than 850 base stations in six major cities in China and has made “remarkable progress” in its tests of the new-generation network technology based on TD-LTE platform, Li Zhengmao, an executive vice president, said at an event in Hong Kong. [LTE TDD/FDD International Summit 2011 Hong Kong GTI Summit, Nov 15, 2011]
“With the growing popularity of mobile Internet and smart devices, data consumption is increasing at an explosive speed, which has brought huge pressure to global mobile networks.”
“Under such a situation, the need to speed up the commercialisation of LTE is more compelling.”
China Mobile, the country’s biggest mobile carrier with 633.5 million subscribers — more than the entire population of North America — has been losing out to smaller rivals China Unicom and China Telecom in attracting higher-end 3G users.
China Unicom is the only official iPhone seller among the three Chinese carriers. China Mobile has 10 million iPhone users even though it does not have an agreement with Apple, but iPhone subscribers using the carrier do not have access to 3G download speeds.
Apple has been reluctant to strike a deal with China Mobile due to its inferior homegrown 3G technology called TD-SCDMA.
Apple has promised to make an iPhone compatible with China Mobile’s TD-LTE standard when its next-generation model comes out, the Chinese firm’s Chairman Wang Jianzhou told Reuters last month.
Li said seven telecom equipment makers and threechip makers participated in the first phase of the 4G trial. The Beijing-based carrier has begun purchasing TD-LTE devices, he said.
China Mobile and U.S. 4G operator Clearwire Corp have teamed up to develop high-speed mobile devices and infrastructure. Under their agreement China Mobile will work on chipsets and devices for TD-LTE that both companies are planning on using.
China Mobile and Clearwire Announce Collaboration on TD-LTE Devices [Clearwire press release, Sept 24, 2011]
China Mobile, the world’s largest mobile operator in terms of subscribers, and Clearwire Corporation (Nasdaq:CLWR), a leading provider of 4G wireless broadband services in the United States, today announced a collaboration to accelerate the development of TD-LTE devices. Specifically, the two companies agreed to work together to cultivate a robust device ecosystem that supports multi-mode, multi-band devices with minimum component complexity and cost.
China Mobile and Clearwire both support the global 2.5 GHz spectrum band for 4G deployments along with many other operators around the world. To date, both China Mobile and Clearwire have conducted successful TD-LTE trials and tests using commercially available / production-ready TD-LTE devices from numerous vendors. The two companies will work jointly to further accelerate the time-to-market availability of high volume TD-LTE chipsets and devices that should be commercially available starting in 2012. In addition, the two companies will collaborate to enable worldwide data roaming among TD-LTE, FDD-LTE and other 2G/3G networks.
“The availability and cost of TD-LTE devices are critical success factors for operators to deploy TD-LTE networks,” said Mr. Jianzhou Wang, Chairman of China Mobile Communications Corporation. “The cooperation with Clearwire will leverage economies of scale in the two largest markets in the world to speed up the development of TD-LTE devices. We anticipate the widest variety and most cost effective high performance devices – modems, routers, smart phones and tablets– to provide end users with affordable advanced mobile broadband services.”
“We expect to launch a next-generation LTE network that will offer more capacity than any other 4G network in the United States,” said John Stanton, Executive Chairman of Clearwire. “By working with China Mobile, we fully expect to benefit from a device ecosystem aimed to support billions of potential users worldwide. This unmatched scale should reduce costs and increase choices for our customers in the years ahead.”
Today’s announcement further supports Clearwire’s recent announcement of its intent to add LTE technology to its 4G network. By joining forces on TD-LTE technology, product, deployment and roaming solutions, China Mobile and Clearwire are well positioned to build a viable and competitive TD-LTE ecosystem for the highest demand 4G markets around the globe.
Clearwire gets a boost from China Mobile’s TD-LTE progress [Nov 15, 2011]
In an interview in September with FierceBroadbandWireless, Clearwire CTO John Saw said the primary goal of the partnership is to accelerate the development of a global multi-band, multi-mode chipset that incorporates frequencies between 2.3 GHz and 2.7 GHz. However, because Clearwire’s push into TD-LTE remains on hold while it searches for more funding, China Mobile’s progress is propelling the partnership forward.
…
The next phase for China Mobile is to have the network running for “large scale commercial” use, and the company plans to launch a network demonstration in Beijing’s main Chang An Street and in the city’s financial district. “4G handsets and data terminals are expected to be ready for mass production next year. We will launch 4G services commercially when both the network and devices are ready,” said Bill Huang, the general manager of China Mobile’s Research Institute, according to Dow Jones Newswires.
…
Clearwire, meanwhile, has said it needs $600 million to deploy TD-LTE over its mobile WiMAX footprint. Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S), Clearwire’s majority owner and largest wholesale customer, said it may use a portion of the $4 billion in debt it recently raised to fund Clearwire. Sprint also said last month that it signed a non-binding deal with Clearwire to jointly work on LTE network development. The agreement covers cell site selection, site builds, chipsets for devices and is intended to assure seamless handoffs between Sprint’s forthcoming LTE network and Clearwire’s LTE network.
Clearwire CEO Prusch: We Got Our ‘Big Three’ In Sprint Deal [Forbes, Dec 1, 2011]
In an interview with Forbes this afternoon, Prusch was practically gushing about the company’s new multi-part agreement with Sprint, a development that spurred a 14% jump in the company’s stock price today. Just a few days ago, there were worries that the company might decide not to make a $273 million interest payment on its debt that was due today. Today, the company not only made the payment on schedule, it also apparently reached a detente in its fractious relationship with majority owner Sprint.
“This is a significant event, a foundational event,” Prusch said. “This is the springboard for a lot of different things to occur.”
Prusch said the deal achieved three key objectives: it extends the company’s deal to provide WiMax service to Sprint; they got a commitment to support its planned rollout of LTE service over the current WiMax footprint; and they got a commitment for additional equity funding. “We’re excited about it, clearly,” he said, apparently with no pun intended. “It gives us an avenue to get our LTE build completed as we had suggested we wanted to do by the end of 2012 or the beginning of 2013.” It was, he adds, “a very important step” to have the company’s top shareholder getting behind the company’s expansion plan.
Sprint and Clearwire Announce New Agreements [joint press release, Dec 1, 2011]
– Offers Clearwire Up to $1.6 Billion in Conditional Aggregate Revenues and Funding
– Clearwire to Receive Total of $926 Million From Sprint for Unlimited 4G WiMAX Services in 2012 and 2013; WiMAX Network to Operate Through at Least 2015
– Sprint to Provide Support for Future LTE Services
– Companies Agree on Parameters for Additional Sprint Equity Investment
– Clearwire to Pay $237 Million Total Interest for First-Priority, Second-Priority and Exchangeable Notes as ScheduledOVERLAND PARK, Kan. and BELLEVUE, Wash. – Dec. 1, 2011 – Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S) and Clearwire(NASDAQ: CLWR)today announced agreements potentially worth up to $1.6 billion over the next four years in payments for WiMAX services, possible pre-payments for LTE services and potential equity investments. The agreements further align Clearwire’s LTE network build as a complement to Sprint’s Network Vision strategy.
Also today, Clearwire announced that it has made interest payments totaling $237 million on its first-priority, second-priority and exchangeable notes which were due Dec. 1, 2011.
“These agreements are a result of the technical MOU we outlined during our third quarter results call and extend our relationship with Clearwire,” said Dan Hesse, Sprint CEO. “It provides Sprint improved pricing, allows us to continue to provide WiMAX 4G services to our customers today and to new customers in the future and provides additional LTE capacity to help complement our Network Vision strategy and meet our customers’ growing data demands.”
“Today’s announcement further cements the mutually beneficial relationship between our two companies,” said Erik Prusch, president and CEO of Clearwire. “It is an important step toward meeting Clearwire’s key goals of extending our current 4G network arrangement, securing a commitment to our future LTE Advanced-ready network, and funding the business. We continue to move closer to realizing the full value of our deep spectrum resources as we are uniquely positioned to meet the rapidly growing demand for 4G mobile broadband.”
Wholesale Pricing and 4G Availability
The agreements modify prior wholesale pricing agreements and provide Sprint with unlimited access to Clearwire’s WiMAX network to meet its growing 4G data demands. Under the terms of the agreements, Sprint will pay Clearwire a total of $926 million, approximately two-thirds of which will be paid in 2012, for unlimited 4G WiMAX retail services during 2012 and 2013, subject to certain conditions. The agreements also establish long-term usage-based pricing for WiMAX services in 2014 and beyond. Sprint will have access to Clearwire’s WiMAX network through at least 2015. Sprint plans to continue selling WiMAX devices with two-year contracts through at least 2012 and support those devices through the life of the contract.
In addition, the agreement contains separate, competitive pricing for re-wholesaling by Sprint that provides flexibility for Sprint to grow its 4G WiMAX wholesale business while at the same time providing Clearwire increased pricing flexibility that should allow Clearwire to grow its wholesale markets and attract new customers.
TDD-LTE Collaboration
The agreements also lay the foundation for the deployment of Clearwire’s planned LTE Advanced-ready overlay network and outline the terms for Sprint to gain access to the additional LTE capacity. The TDD-LTE rollout will capitalize on Clearwire’s deep spectrum resources to deliver on 4G capacity needs over the long-term. Under the terms, Sprint will pay Clearwire up to $350 million in a series of prepayments over a period of up to two years for LTE capacity if Clearwire achieves certain build-out targets and network specifications by June 2013. The agreements also establish long-term usage-based pricing for LTE services for 2012 and beyond. The companies have agreed to collaborate on a network build plan and will jointly select LTE macro-cell sites to cover Sprint’s high usage area “hotspots.” Clearwire plans to seek additional funding before initiating the build-out of its LTE Advanced-ready network.
In addition, Clearwire and Sprint will work collaboratively to support the ecosystem for TDD-LTE in Band Class 41 for devices, chipsets and standards. Subject to the timing of the build-out and other factors, Sprint expects to launch devices including laptop cards and phones that will utilize Clearwire’s TDD-LTE network in 2013.
Equity Investment
Sprint has committed to providing additional equity funding to Clearwire in the event of an equity offering. If Clearwire raises new equity between $400 and $700 million, Sprint will participate in the offering on a pro rata basis up to $347 million, consistent with Sprint’s current voting interest of 49.6 percent on the same terms and conditions as other participating companies.
About Sprint Nextel
Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers, businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel served more than 53 million customers at the end of 3Q 2011 and is widely recognized for developing, engineering and deploying innovative technologies, including the first wireless 4G service from a national carrier in the United States; offering industry-leading mobile data services, leading prepaid brands including Virgin Mobile USA, Boost Mobile, and Assurance Wireless; instant national and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a global Tier 1 Internet backbone. Newsweek ranked Sprint No. 3 in its 2011 Green Rankings, listing it as one of the nation’s greenest companies, the highest of any telecommunications company. You can learn more and visit Sprint at http://www.sprint.com or http://www.facebook.com/sprint and www.twitter.com/sprint.
About Clearwire
Clearwire Corporation (NASDAQ:CLWR), through its operating subsidiaries, is a leading provider of mobile broadband services. Clearwire’s 4G network currently provides coverage in areas of the U.S. where more than 130 million people live. Clearwire’s open all-IP network, combined with significant spectrum holdings, provides an unprecedented combination of speed and mobility to deliver next generation broadband access. The company markets its 4G service through its own brand called CLEAR® as well as through its wholesale relationships with companies such as Sprint, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Locus Telecommunications, Cbeyond, Mitel, Best Buy and United Online. Strategic investors include Intel Capital, Comcast, Sprint, Google, Time Warner Cable, and Bright House Networks. Clearwire is headquartered in Bellevue, Wash. Additional information is available at http://www.clearwire.com.
GSMA: Dual-Mode a Must for LTE Devices [Nov 16, 2011]
For Long Term Evolution (LTE) to succeed, it’s “absolutely critical” that devices be able to support both the TDD and FDD versions of the next-generation mobile technology, according to GSM Association (GSMA) Director General Anne Bouverot.
Bouverot told a conference held by the Global TD-LTE Initiative (GTI), an industry group promoting Long Term Evolution Time Division Duplex (LTE TDD), that it was not enough just to get the products to market.
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The chipsets are the key. Only four chip vendors — mostly startups — designed and built TD-SCDMA chips, points out Bill Huang, general manager of China Mobile Ltd.’s Research Institute.
Now, though, around 16 chip specialists, including Qualcomm Inc. (Nasdaq: QCOM), ST-Ericsson and Sequans Communications , are doing “various kind of baseband” for LTE TDD, Huang stated.
To date around 35 LTE TDD terminals (mostly data cards or MyFi-style hotspots) have been developed, while ZTE Corp. has already produced a dual-mode card.
But Huang said the problem is not whether the two 3GPP standards will be combined into one chipset, but whether the chips can support all the required spectrum bands. “The question is: What spectrum from TDD or what spectrum from FDD that [the chip] will support?” stated the China Mobile man. “We now have six spectrum bands identified that will cover maybe 80 percent of the world — we may increase that to eight bands to get 100 percent coverage.”
Internet giants have taken over from pure mobile internet players [Nov 11, 2011]
According to data provided by China Mobile, the internet giants, that’s to say Tencent, Baidu and Sina, have become the leading players in the mobile internet market, boosting traffic levels and overtaking the pioneering pure mobile internet players in their respective sectors (See Exhibit 1 below).
Exhibit 1: Traffic of the Top Fifteen Mobile Internet Players (Unit: TB)
Note: 1) By China Mobile we mean related sites such as the Monternet homepage, reading and Mobile Market sites. 2) The highlighted companies are internet players who aim the bulk of their services at the traditional PC-based internet.
Source: China Mobile. Figures are based on traffic data for Fujian, Guangdong, Henan, Jiangsu and Shanghai in August 2011 and August 2010.In the portal sector, both Tencent and Sina have supplanted 3g.cn, the previous market leader specifying on WAP portal. Sina, it should be noted, lagged a long way behind 3g.cn a year ago in terms of traffic (15.1 TB vs. 28.5TB). In the search market, Baidu and Soso more than doubled their traffic within a year and are now much larger than Easou, once the market leader. Easou’s traffic shrank to less than 50% of its previous level. Ecommerce is also extending from internet to mobile internet space. Taobao, the dominant B2C and C2C site, China’s third largest internet site in terms of traffic, secured itself 14th place in the mobile internet industry in August 2011, proof of a dramatic take-off in traffic. Furthermore, transaction volume has also rocketed. Unveiled in 2009, Taobao’s mobile site expects to have a turnover above RMB 10 billion in 2011, up from RMB 1.8 billion and RMB 0.25 billion in 2010 and 2009 respectively.
There are three main reasons for the significant changes in the past year:
- Internet applications and content perform much better on the large-screen smartphones and tablets that have come into widespread use in the past two years. The launch of the iPhone proved to be a critical turning point. Users now find little difference between accessing websites through a PC and through portal devices.
- Internet giants are eagerly promoting services/applications for mobile users. For example, Tencent has launched various SMS+IM packages leveraging its 700 Million strong QQ user base, and Sina has invested heavily in its SMS+weibo (twitter type) service.
- Pure mobile internet players lack differentiation and diversification. Pioneer mobile service providers, for example 3g.cn and Easou, rely totally on mobile ads on WAP sites or search portals. They lack product lines such as SNS, IM, or games which feature high user stickiness.
Among above mobile internet companies, there are a few exceptional cases which are still well positioned and report strong uptake:
- UCWeb has maintained No.2 position thanks to its popular mobile browser. Despite the rapid growth of various App Stores, the mobile browser is still the main access point for mobile internet content. Tencent has in turn unveiled its QQ browser, aiming to gain some share of the market.
- The mobile SNS site Lexun has remained the leader in this sector, unaffected by rapidly growing internet SNS services, such as Renren and Kaixin. However, overall traffic growth on mobile SNS sites remains flat, in contrast to the significant take-off of the mobile internet as a whole.
Looking forward, mobile internet market will see fiercer competition and more players expanding to mobile internet sector with their popular internet applications.
China’s app growth is up by 840% in 2011 [Nov 4, 2011]
China’s mobile applicationmarket is now the second largest in the world, according to research.
Analyticsfirm, Flurry, found that China has had an 840% increase in app usage during this year. The growth is four times more than the rate experienced by other countries.
The country now ranks behind the United Statesin the stakes to become number 1 in the apps market.
Countries within Asiawere also featured in the top 10 of biggest growers, with India at 398% and Thailand at 351%.
China’s growth could be due to the country’s increasing affluence for middle class people, meaning more people are starting to own smartphones.
Peter Farago from Flurry said: “While the top 100 countries are averaging session growth of over 200%, China is delivering more than four times this growth rate, spurred by a massive population voraciously adopting applications.”
Flurry also found that the United States have suffered a decrease in activity, meaning China could overtake the country in the bid to be the top country for app usage by 2013.
The findings are based on the number of customers that downloaded apps from their country’s store, along with how long customers spend on the apps stores.
Farago continued: “As one of the fastest modernizing and largest countries in the world, the adoption of mobile apps in China is unprecedented. Whether studying China by existing app session generated or new demand for apps, the growth rates are similar.”
To learn more about the future of multiplatform apps and how marketers, developers, businesses, brands and operators are benefiting from the market’s rapid growth, visit www.apps-world.net/europe on 29-30 November in London and hear from leading global brands and industry experts.
Smartphones making rapid headway in cities [China Daily, Nov 11, 2011]
About 35 percent of urban Chinese use smartphones, the third-highest level in the world, a survey has found.
China’s smartphone adoption rate follows Singapore’s 62 percent and Australia’s 37 percent, according to the survey by Google Inc and research company Ipsos, which was based on 30,000 interviewees from 30 countries and regions.
“If you consider that the device didn’t exist more than five years ago, the fact that already one-third of the population in the cities has it is actually quite remarkable,” said Ryan Hayward, Asia-Pacific mobile product marketing manager of Google.
“When we look back at how long it took for people to adopt radio and TV, I doubt that one in three had them within four years. That just didn’t happen.”
The survey covered 2,000 people in seven large cities: Shenyang, Beijing, Shanghai, Xi’an, Chengdu, Wuhan and Guangzhou.
“People living in first- and second-tier cities change their mobile phones relatively often,” said Wang Ying, an analyst with domestic research company Analysys International.
“Economic development in the cities has spurred residents’ demand for smartphones, which in turn, led to mobile carriers’ initiatives to promote smartphones,” she added.
Urban Chinese consumers are also most likely to own multiple mobile phones, whether smartphones or regular feature phones. One out of three people in urban China have at least two smartphones, a proportion that is the highest in the Asia-Pacific region, according to the report.
The wide adoption of smartphones has been partly boosted by China’s construction of a third-generation (3G) networks, which which have improved the user experience for smartphone owners with higher speed.
China had more than 100 million 3G users at the end of September, representing more than 10 percent of total mobile phone subscribers, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
The smartphone adoption level is probably less than 20 percent nationwide, however, taking less-developed cities and rural areas into account, said Wang. The market needs to be further tapped as these areas gradually adopt 3G networks and people there change mobile phones.
In areas that require advanced technology, such as cloud computing, the US will continue to be a leader for a long time. But in other areas, such as social applications, games and mobile Internet services, there will be promising companies emerging in China in the coming years, Kai-Fu Lee, former head of Google China, said last month at an industry forum in Beijing.
China spurs growth of mobile Internet [China Daily, Nov 1, 2011]
A senior expert said Monday that China will take greater strides in promoting the development of its mobile Internet sector.
Wang Xiujun, chief engineer of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), said that the government will step up policy support for mobile Internet because it “promotes industrial integration and leads to revolutionary changes in development and technology.”
Wang said the country will speed up comprehensive upgrades for its information networks and boost the development of third-generation technology (3G), especially homegrown TD variants of 3G and LTE (long-term evolution) technology.
Along with the development of information networks, the innovation and development of integrated technologies and businesses should also be highlighted, Wang said during the ongoing fifth International Mobile Internet Conference, which opened Monday in Beijing.
Wang said that the Chinese government will attach more importance to the protection of users’ personal information and their rightful interests and maintain a healthy environment for the development of the mobile Internet sector.
The two-day meeting is sponsored by China Mobile, the world’s largest telecommunications firm by number of users.
“The development speed of mobile Internet is far quicker than what we imagined. Mobile Internet is becoming a reality, and is deeply changing our habits and behaviors,” a statement on the firm’s website said.
The statement said mobile Internet has also had a great impact on the traditional operation and business modules of the mobile telecommunications industry.
MIIT data showed that the number of Chinese mobile phone users hit 952.31 million by the end of September, 102.46 million of whom are 3G users.
According to the China Internet Networks Information Center (CNNIC), the number of netizens in China reached 485 million by the end of June this year. As of the end of 2010, the number of people who accessed the Internet through mobile phones had already reached 303 million.
Mobile Internet users are even expected to outnumber those who access the Internet through computers next year, according to Enfodesk, a think tank engaged in researching of new media economics in China.
Li Zhengmao, China Mobile’s vice president, said the production of smart mobile phones has jumped 50 percent year-on-year globally. Li added that the continuous development and deepened applications of 3G and LTE technologies means that mobile Internet has entered a new phase for rapid growth.
With more than 630 million subscribers, China Mobilehas been pushing for the country’s homegrown 4G standard, known as TD-LTE, or “Time Division-Long Term Evolution,” to become a globally accepted standard.
Huang Xiaoqing, who heads China Mobile’s telecommunications research institute, said the TD-LTE technology will substantially lower bandwidth costs. He said the technology will provide faster broadband wireless services to meet future demand that the current 3G network would be unable to deliver.
China Mobile also announced Friday the incorporation of a new company to accelerate its development of 3G and smartphone technology.
The subsidiary, China Mobile Terminal Co Ltd, will handle customization, testing, procurement, sales and service for the group’s third-generation (3G) devices. The new firm will also speed up the research and development of TD-LTE.
Market Scale of China Mobile Internet Grows to 10.83 Billion Yuan in Q3 2011, Showing Huge Development Potential [Nov 15, 2011]
According to the data of iResearch, market scale of mobile Internet reaches to 10.83 billion in Q3 2011, up 154.6% year-on-year and 38.9% quarter-on-quarter. Meanwhile, growth rate of mobile Internet increases nearly 18% compared with last quarter.
iResearch views competition among mobile devices and mobile operation systems is more fierce, which will accelerate popularity of smart phones and lead growth rate of mobile Internet to a new peak. Besides, traditional Internet enterprises all invest more in mobile Internet, and new applications and commercial modes also attract more companies to participant in the mobile Internet market, which helps growth of the market segments.
Changing track of mobile Internet segments in Q3 is similar to Q2 2011. Share of mobile value-added service market in the mobile Internet will further fall to 43.7% while share of mobile ecommerce obviously become bigger, up to 34.8% from 27.9% in the second quarter. Moreover, with higher awareness of advertisers, development of mobile advertisement network enterprises and increasing number of mobile device users, market scale of mobile advertisement rises to 10.3% from 9.5% in the second quarter. In the other segments, mobile value-added service, mobile games and mobile search develop steadily and their share falls slightly. Mobile Internet market segments will face balanced development.
Mobile value-added service increases 17.7% quarter-on-quarter, which is attributed to the following reasons: Firstly, mobile operators enhance the development of value-added service and pay more attention to product integration. Secondly, a variety of new applications such as mobile reading, mobile instant messaging and location based service develop rapidly and bring more revenue. Therefore, iResearch considers new applications in the mobile Internet develop well and have more users while most commercial modes aren’t mature. As a result, new applications don’t do much contribution to mobile Internet.
Mobile ecommerce maintains strong growth, up 508.1% compared with Q3 2010. It has become a main driving power for the growth of mobile Internet owing to the following reasons: Firstly, traditional ecommerce websites have operated mobile terminals and increased marketing efforts in order to attract a large quantity of users to generate buy deeds. Secondly, some large B2C websites support cash on delivery (COD) instead of mobile payment, which solve the payment problem of many users. Finally, applications of mobile ecommerce more efficiently improve users’ experience and maintain the relationship with clients. Therefore, iResearch holds China mobile ecommerce has showed a trend of accelerated development in Q3 2011 and its share will continue to increase in the future.
As the mobile phones jump into the third generation from the second generation, mobile advertisement as a new marketing method is developing in the content and form. Up to now, advertisers have more mature awareness of mobile advertisement and companies, which provide free applications depending on advertisement platform, achieve profitability. Traditional Internet enterprises expand their business to mobile Internet, producing new demand of marketing and motivate development of mobile advertisement.
Based on the state of mobile Internet market in the third quarter, iResearch views mobile Internet market will continue to rapidly increase in the fourth quarter 2011. In mobile Internet segments, share of mobile ecommerce will expand and Q4 market scale of mobile ecommerce will keep growth rate of 90% or more because mobile ecommerce is attached much attention by traditional ecommerce enterprises and users have gradually cultivated the habit of mobile online shopping; Mobile advertisement will rapidly grow in the process of exploration because it has solved the problem in the profit model of mobile medial even though it remains in the initial stage; Traditional mobile value-added service will develop steadily; Mobile reading and mobile video remain in the search of profit model and may give initial result in the fourth quarter; Mobile games will have a slower growth compared with other mobile Internet segments.
About iResearch
iResearch is China’s leading internet research company, dedicated to providing high quality products and services to deepen our clients’ understanding of China’s internet industry.
For more information, please visit www.iresearchchina.com.
iResearch Client Solutions www.iresearchchina.com/solution.shtml.
More Views & Reports www.iresearchchina.com/report.aspx.
CNC report from Beijing [Sept 15, 2011]
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By the end of 2010, cell phone internet subscribers reached 303 million in China – accounting for 66 percent of total internet users in the country.
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Weibo is China’ s version of Twitter.It’ s the most popular online social media site in the country. And, one of the major reasons many people in China began logging on more frequently.
As of June, the number of Chinese people using Weibo and other blog sites reached 195 million – an increase of 209 percent in just one year!
And, just like Twitter, many users have become addicted.
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TITLE: THE FUTURE OF MOBILE WEB IN CHINA
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Some of the most influential leaders of the mobile internet industry in China recently gathered in Beijing for the China Mobile Internet Industry Investment Forum.
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Mobile internet is quite new in China.In fact, it wasn’t introduced until 2009.
As a result, some people in the country are weary of the new technology.
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Education is key, but something many people won’t receive until they can afford to try out the technology.And, the cost of mobile internet in China, is preventing many people from making the purchase.
SOUNDBITE(CHINESE): HOU WEIWEI, OFFICE STAFF
“It costs me about 3 US dollars per month for a 250 Mbyte package. I have to pay extra bills if I surf the net too much, so I would have to go to places that offer free Wi-Fi.”The cost of the service isn’t the only complaint from customers.
Many people don’t like the high cost of apps that are needed to take full advantage of mobile technology.
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Price. Education. And, other hiccups in the expansion of the mobile internet industry are constant topics of discussion at events like the China Mobile Internet Industry Investment Forum.
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The number of mobile internet users in China is expected to reach an estimated 800 million people within 5 years!
Picture: Mobile Internet is innovation and entrepreneurship and investment boom [Aug 29, 2011]
China Internet Network Information Center released the <<28th China Internet Development Statistics Report>>, as of June this year, China’s mobile phone users reached 318 million, accounting for 65.6% of the total number of Internet users. Most of the increase in business class application remains such as the online shopping rate increased to 35.6%, 12.15 million new users six months, the user growth rate of 7.6% in six months.
CCID Consulting: China’s Mobile Internet Industry Sees Equal Strengths in South and North with Rise in West [Aug 25, 2011]
BEIJING–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Mobile Internet, an integral part of the new-generation information technology, has been recognized as one of China’s strategic emerging industries and given priority by China’s Ministry of Information and Technology in its 12th Five-Year Plan scheme. As such, CCID Consulting has drawn a map of China’s mobile Internet industry in the coming years based on analyses on its current characteristics and growth trends.
“One Belt (the Circum-Bohai Sea, the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta in a line) Plus One Triangle (the West Triangle)”
Equal Strengths in South and North with Rise in West; Guangdong Province Taking the Lead
In 2010, China’s mobile Internet industrial recorded an output value of RMB 293.69 billion, to which the four major regions, namely the Pearl River Delta in the south, the Circum-Bohai Sea in the north, the Yangtze River Delta in the east and the West Triangle centered on Chengdu, Chongqing and Xi’an, contributed over 90 percent.
Figure 1 China’s Mobile Internet Industry Size
http://event.ccidconsulting.com/en/images/en-0824-1.jpg
Source: CCID Consulting Mobile Internet Industry Database, May 2011In China, Guangdong Province is the champion in the mobile Internet industry with an annual output value of more than RMB 100 billion leveraging its strength in terminal manufacturing; the Circum-Bohai Sea is China’s second largest mobile Internet base with significant strengths in mobile terminal manufacturing, mobile Internet software and services; the Yangtze River Delta is also of great importance to China’s mobile Internet industry, which is strong in mobile Internet-related software and services, but relatively weak in terminal manufacturing; the West Triangle is enjoying the greatest growth potential in China’s mobile Internet industry.
“One Belt Plus One Triangle”
The layout of China’s mobile Internet industry is described as “One Belt (the Circum-Bohai Sea, the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta in a line) Plus One Triangle (the West Triangle)”. The major cities on “One Belt Plus One Triangle”, including Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Hangzhou in the east and Chongqing, Chengdu and Xi’an in the west, are all well equipped in industrial development conditions to support the mobile Internet industry
Figure 2 Key Cities of China’s Mobile Internet Industry
http://event.ccidconsulting.com/en/images/en-0824-2.jpg
Source: CCID Consulting Mobile Internet Industry Database, May 2011Overall Development with Highlighted Clusters and Evolution in Echelons in Future
In the coming decade, China’s mobile Internet industry will usher in an age of overall development as its industrialization advances to facilitate the transformation of the telecommunications and Internet industries, while the existing industrial clusters will remain the focuses of the industry.
Meanwhile, the evolution of the mobile Internet industry will feature multiple echelons at different growth levels. The first echelon will include the Circum-Bohai Sea, the Yangtze River Delta and the West Triangle, with Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Chengdu, and Chongqing staying in a leading position in the fields of mobile terminal design & manufacturing, mobile software and application R&D. Wuhan, Zhengzhou, Changsha, Xiamen and other second-tier major cities located in the second echelon of Wuhan-Changsha Cluster and the Western Taiwan Straits Economic Zone will specialize in mobile terminal manufacturing and mobile software and application development. Other provinces and regions including Yunnan, Guangxi, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Gansu and Ningxia will start with infrastructures construction and promote mobile Internet applications with the local governments and operators playing a major role.
Mobile Terminal Manufacturing Sector to Shift to Lower-cost North and West
As the comprehensive cost in coastal cities stay high, the cost-sensitive mobile terminal manufacturing sector has accelerated its shift to Central and Western regions with lower labor and operation costs. For example, the leading OEM Foxconn has shifted part of its capacities to Henan, Shandong, Sichuan and Chongqing. In addition, the related upstream and downstream sectors including chip manufacturing and mold manufacturing will follow the same trend.
Mobile Software and Application Sector to Continue Relying on Industry-Academy-Research-Application Chain
The mobile software and application sector, both intelligence-intensive and capital-intensive, requires educated and highly skilled talents, innovative technologies as well as high market-penetration of software and applications. Hence, of the sector will continue to focus on major cities in the first echelon where the industry, academy, research, and application forces are tightly integrated.
About CCID Consulting Co., Ltd.
CCID Consulting Co., Ltd. (hereinafter known as CCID Consulting), the first Chinese consulting firm listed in the Growth Enterprise Market (GEM) of the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong (HKSE: 08235) and the first consulting firm which gets ISO 9001 international and national quality management system standard certification, is directly affiliated to China Center for Information Industry Development (hereinafter known as CCID Group). Headquartered in Beijing, CCID Consulting has so far set up branch offices in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Wuhan and Chengdu with over 300 professional consultants after many years of development. The company’s business scope has covered over 200 large and medium-sized cities in China. With its powerful industrial resources, information technology and data channels, CCID Consulting provides customers with public policy establishment, industry competitiveness upgrade, development strategy and planning, marketing strategy and research, HR management, IT programming and management services. The company’s customers range from industrial users in electronics, telecommunications, energy, finance and automobile to government departments at all levels and diversified industrial parks. CCID Consulting commits itself to becoming China’s No.1 advisor for enterprise management, No.1 consultancy for government decision and No.1 brand for informatization consulting.
New China-made smartphone unveiled [Xinhua, Aug 30, 2011]
A new smartphone made by a Chinese high-profile Internet startup has the potential to shake the world’s largest mobile phone market driving prices down for high-performance handsets.
The low-cost but high-specification phone was unveiled by Lei Jun, founder of Xiaomi Technology Co. that produced it, at a presentation in Beijing on Aug. 16.
Xiaomi Phone, which runs a MIUI ROM on top of Android, is 125mm x 63mm x 11.9mm in size and weighs 149 grams — so it’s both a little heavier and bigger than the iPhone 4.
Lei said that his phone stands out with its fast dual core processor, big screen, high-quality signal, and large battery capacity.
But most impressively perhaps is its 1,999-yuan (313 U.S. dollars) price tag, 3,000 yuan cheaper than the iPhone 4.
“The success of Apple encourages others to follow suit. It has become a trend to promote platforms with terminals and promote App stores with platforms. The question is whether somebody else can be the winner after Apple,” said Sun Taoran, the founder of e-payment service company Lakala.
Lei, also board chairman of Chinese software company Kingsoft, has dismissed comparisons by Internet users between him and Apple’s just-retired CEO Steve Jobs, saying on his microblog that he didn’t imitate Jobs in clothing and “Jobs’ charm is matchless.”
But he did compare his phone with the iPhone several times during the product’s launch.
A total of 16.81 million smartphones were sold in the Chinese market in the second quarter of the year, up 7.5 percent from the previous three months, according to the IT consulting firm Analysys International.
Analysys has said that the number of smartphones sold in China could reach 95 million for this year.
Phones produced by Taiwan-based company HTC, Lenovo’s LePhone and the iPhone are among the best sellers in China.
Lenovo claimed recently in a report that it sold 34 percent more cellphones in the first quarter year-on-year. Its 2,900-yuan LePhone has been selling well, and, according to recent reports, through its sales the company holds a 10 percent share of the middle and high-end domestic smartphone market.
Also, Lenovo this month unveiled its second smartphone, the A60, which has a 88.9-mm touch screen and uses the Android 2.3 operating system, priced at 959 yuan.
But the real change in China’s smartphone market is that domestic Internet firms are starting to compete in it.
Last month Alibaba.com, a major Business-to-Business electronic commerce company, released its smart phone which runs “ALI cloud” OS.
Also, China’s online search giant Baidu is planning to launch its own mobile phone OS Qiushi.And the country’s leading web-portal Tencent is also working on its own brand Qphone mobile phone and operating system, according to Beijing-based International Herald Leader newspaper.
“The companies including Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu have successfully produced PCs. However, as people are spending more and more time on mobile terminals, their influence could decline,” said Li Yi, secretary general of the China Mobile Internet Industry Alliance.
Competition in the smartphone market may get fiercer as international competitors look to grab a bigger slice both in China and worldwide.
Google Inc. has agreed to buy Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. for about 12.5 billion U.S. dollars, the largest purchase for the Internet search giant that will allow it to compete more directly with other mobile phone makers.By the end of the first quarter this year, Nokia, Apple and RIM, the leading three smart phone producers enjoyed more than a half stake in the global market. And it is estimated that more than 100 million smartphones were sold worldwide in the first quarter this year.
But, so far, Chinese companies have only captured a small piece of the global market.
Zhu Junmin, a Beijing-based telecom expert, said domestic companies’ smartphones are still lagging behind in terms of designing. “Foreign brands do better in industrial and user-oriented designing. Lack of innovation makes domestic companies to have to follow and imitate.”
Ma Zihui, chief economist of Samsung Economic Research Center also expressed his worries about the lack of novelty of domestic companies. “Without creativity, a company can hardly compete with foreign counterparts and make ideal profits.”
Survival of the smartest [Global Times, Aug 1, 2011]
For many months now, Beijing’s swankier cafes have been filled with people perusing the Internet not on a laptop computer but on their smartphones.
However, while the mobile Internet has taken off in China, it has remained dominated by foreign platforms, such as Apple’s iPhone OS, Google’s Android and RIM’s Blackberry – until now.
That could be set to change as Chinese companies prepare to launch their own operating systems (OS), with two Chinese companies launching smartphone OS products this month alone.
Xiaomi Tech, a high-tech company set up in April last year, launched MIUI, a system based on Android, on July 8 and plans to launch its own MIUI mobile phone – the M1 – in September. It is a new system with more than 100 personalized services, including free voice call options.
Xiaomi’s founder and CEO Lei Jun, who is also chairman of Chinese software developer Kingsoft and an angel investor in the mobile Internet sector, announced on July 12 that the company had attracted $41 million investment from Morningside Group, Qiming Venture Partners and IDG Capital. The company is valued at about $250 million.
Alibaba Group, China’s e-commerce giant, launched its Ali Cloud Mobile OS Thursday. The Ali Cloud Mobile OS uses cloud computing technology and not only uses Alibaba Group’s own text input software, search engine and e-mail, but also embeds its business services, such as group-buying business Juhuasuan, online retailing marketplace Taobao.com, mobile instant messaging service Ali Wangwang and online buyer community Taobao Girl.
The OS provides users with 8GB storage volume on the phone and over 100 GB storage space on the company’s cloud server side. Users don’t need to download software or applications, they just register to enjoy various applications developed by the company and other developers based on Android OS, with software and applications stored and run on the cloud server side.
Though China’s biggest Internet company Tencent has so far denied that it is developing its own smartphone OS, industry experts believe it is working on one.
“Tencent did a lot of market research on users’ expectations for its QPhone since 2009. Tencent hopes the QPhone brand can cover both the high-end market to compete with iPhone and Google’s Android phones and low-end market to compete with Nokia in China,” a Tencent marketing official said, requesting anonymity.
Tencent partnered with Intel in April 2010 to cooperate on Intel’s smartphone OS MeeGo. Tencent will carry out its own research and development based on the MeeGo OS to make it more suitable for the Chinese market and Tencent’s products and services, which in other words means MeeGo will be used in Tencent’s QPhone.
China’s biggest search engine Baidu also has plans for a smartphone OS. Rumors have swirled since last July that Baidu will launch its Android-based smartphone OS in November this year.
China Mobile started earlier than the country’s Internet giants. It put its OMS (Open Mobile System) into commercial use in 2009. Currently many handset manufacturers produce customized terminals using the system for China Mobile, including Motorola, HTC, Lenovo Mobile and Dell.
Crucial moment
But why are so many big companies rushing to enter what is already a fiercely competitive sector?
“Smartphone OS is the way forward in the mobile Internet industry. Just like the importance of the PC-based Windows OS for the Internet industry, how the smartphone OS field develops is very important for the future market structure and competition pattern,” Chen Yanshu, analyst of IT market research company eShip Consulting said.
Once a company has the advantage in the competition between the different smartphone OS, it can attract more users and application developers and develop new business models based on these resources.
“Selling applications to users through mobile phone application stores is a popular business model now. If a company’s smartphone OS gains more support from users and developers, it will attract more and more other users and developers, which means it has more potential buyers,” said Chen.
“Handset manufacturers, telecom operators and application developers will all cooperate together. But in the ever-changing mobile Internet sector, more and more business models will appear. No one wants to miss this chance. So they have all started to develop a smartphone OS to try to occupy the entrance.”
Multilevel competitionHowever, achieving market-leader position is far from easy.
“Currently, the competition in China’s smartphone OS area is happening in two dimensions, between industries and between domestic companies and international giants,” Chen said.
Domestic IT and Internet giants are very active in developing smart phone OS because they own a lot of content and applications.
Alibaba Group has established a sound ecosystem in its e-commerce business, which has 370 million registered C2C buyers and sellers, an excellent online payment system, widely used instant messaging services and many others. But the company is looking to shift all this onto the mobile Internet via a smartphone OS.
Tencent has 647 million users of its instant messaging service QQ. Its online community, microblogging, online shopping mall and online games can also be migrated to mobile Internet. The same is true for Baidu’s search engine, map service, location based services, video broadcasting service and so on.
But the difficulties for IT and Internet companies are huge.“The mobile Internet is very different from the standard Internet. On the standard Internet, things are more open and a company can get users only if it provides excellent products and services. But in the mobile Internet industry, there are many more participants, such as telecom operators, mobile phone chipset manufacturers, mobile phone designers and manufacturers and application software developers,” said Chen.
“The competition is not simply in better products and services to users, but also related to partners, negotiation ability, the business ecosystem construction and many others. This is a new problem for IT and Internet giants. Just copying what they did in the past won’t get them success.”
China’s domestic mobile phone manufacturers are not as strong as international giants such as Nokia and Google and have lagged behind in developing a smartphone OS, according to Chen.
“They cooperate with telecom operators. Lack of power is one reason. Another reason is that traditionally the telecom operators are at the top of mobile Internet industry. The mobile Internet is accessed over their networks. They have big influence on the industry. But what they don’t have is what the IT and Internet giants do have – content and applications,” Chen said.

























