Microsoft has joined hands with Chinese
company Amoi Electronics as the US software giant tries
to penetrate the communications and consumer electronics
markets in China alongside its traditional stronghold in
computer operating systems.
The two firms signed an agreement in Beijing
to form a strategic alliance.
Under the agreement, Amoi, based in Xiamen,
will pre-install Microsoft Windows XP in all of its notebooks,
the first Chinese computer maker to do so. Others install
the software on a selective basis.
Amoi will also use Microsoft Windows CE
and Pocket PC operating systems for smart phones on three
of their mobile phones, and support Microsoft's WMV and
WMA formats, two formats for audio and video files that
are aiming to become the industry's de facto standard.
In the consumer electronics area, Amoi will
make some LCD TV sets based on Microsoft's embedded WinCE
operating systems.
"Amoi is one of the few partners of
Microsoft in China, and it is strong in computing, communications
and consumer electronics (3C), so this partnership is of
high value to us," said Martin Wu, chief marketing
officer of Microsoft China.
Microsoft has formed partnerships with almost
all major computer makers in China in using its Windows
operating systems, but in the mobile communications and
household appliances areas, it only has a few partners.
In the handheld device business, including
smart phones and the personal digital assistant (PDA), it
mainly works with firms like Motorola, HP, Dell, and the
domestic phone maker Dopod.
In the home entertainment business, it
has joined hands with the Chinese TV giant Changhong and
the online game big name Shanda Interactive Entertainment.
But its influences in communications and
consumer electronics are quite weak and it needs a company
strong in all three business lines. Amoi is an ideal partner
with a strong market presence and brand image in high-end
markets.
Source: China Daily