Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
Lawsuit may cost CNOOC part of its share in Indonesian gas field
China's April crude oil imports rise 23 percent to new record
Market fever by small investors sparks tighter curbs on brokers
Close co-op established between police and PLA HK Garrison
Mainland stocks fall on warning of inflation
ICBC applies for New York branch
carve out  
China confident of solving financial challenges
China's web portal Sina posts 23 pct rise in first quarter profit
BOC unaffected by 160 mln yuan loan scandal
China's logistics business up 24% in first quarter
China auto association chief 'disappears'
China's civil aviation industry posts rising profits in first quarter
Resources  
China's foreign direct investment rises 10.2%
China retail sales rise 15.5% as wages grow
China's CPI rises three percent in April
China's trade surplus is back on fast track
China's monthly trade surplus rebounds in April
China's car exports rise in 1st quarter of 2007
 
China approves foreign 3G standards for next generation of mobile phones
BEIJING, May 16 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Information Industry approved Wednesday the use of European and American standards for third generation (3G) mobile phones that are rivals to China's homegrown TD-SCDMA.


"The three world standards will all be used in China," said Yang Peifang, secretary general of the ministry's telecommunication economist panel.


China's homegrown TD-SCDMA has been called the "Chinese 3G standard", WCDMA is European and CDMA 2000 is American.


By adding the two foreign standards to the Chinese market, the government has consolidated its "technology neutral" stance and offered an open market for different technologies, said analysts.


"The introduction of the other two standards will help improve TD-SCDMA," said Yang.


China's 3G development depends primarily on strong demand for mobile data processing functions involving multimedia solutions and internet connections.


China's major four operators -- China Netcom, China Telecom, China Mobile and China Unicom -- have started training 3G talents, constituting a war chest and making technological preparations fora smooth transition from the existing mobile telecom networks or PHS networks to 3G.


China's homegrown technology for third generation mobile communication passed a series of tests organized by the ministry last year.


A ministry report said base stations and handsets based on TD-SCDMA are all qualified after three years of tests. Key TD-SCDMA technologies and products meet 3G service requirements.


"We will let operators choose which standard they want to use. But the government will decide how many 3G licenses are issued," said Xi Guohua, Vice Minister of Information Industry.


The government has promised to provide 3G mobile communications services in time for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Analysts said the homegrown standard is most likely to get the first license.

Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.