China Suppliers
History
In 214 B.C., Qin Shi Huang, the First Emperor of China, started wireless communication to alert the invasion of the Xiongnus using the smoke signals, over the Great Wall just completed[citation needed]
In 1995, wireless telephone communication in the modern sense started by the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications of China, using GSM technology. A nation-wide network was completed in the following year. motorola bluetooth hs850
In 2000, the fixed telephone company (China Telecom) and two cell phone telephone companies (China Mobile and China Unicom) were spun off from the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications e2c
In 2002, the fixed telephone company was split into two: China Netcom for North China and China Telecom for South China hs850
Until 2008, China's cell phone service was provided by the three companies:
GSM service from China Mobile
GSM and CDMA service (begun in 2002) from China Unicom
PHS service from the two fixed phone companies: China Netcom and China Telecom
In 2008, another reorganization of the telecommunications industry was made a year before the Third generation (3G) service was granted.
Mobile phone service providers
After the 2008 reorganization of China's telecommunication industry, there are now three cell phone service providers.
China Mobile
China Mobile (Chinese: ) continues the old China Mobile's GSM service, absorbed China Railway Communication, and began 3G service using TD-SCDMA, China's own technology.
China Unicom
China Unicom (Chinese: ) continues the old China Unicom's GSM service, absorbed the old China Netcom's network of fixed telephones in the north of the Yangtze River in China, and started 3G service using W-CDMA technology.
China Telecom
China Telecom (Chinese: ) continues PHS service of the old China Netcom and China Telecom, continues the old China Telecom's network of fixed telephones in the south of the Yangtze River, and began 3G service using CDMA2000 technology.
Mobile phone industry
Wireless communication is regulated by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The mobile phone industry in China has grown to become a large industry, including research of new technology, manufacturing of cell phones and building of telephone networks, participated by not only the domestic companies but also the foreign companies, such as:
Datang Telecom (Research and development of China's 3G TD-SCDMA technology)
ZTE
Huawei
Ericsson
Siemens
The Chinese companies, such as ZTE and China Mobile, have also gained international experience through turnkey cell phone network projects in Pakistan, Ethiopia, etc.
Mobile phones
Mobile phone manufacturers
BBK Electronics
Dopod
Haier
Huawei
Kejian
Konka Group
Legend Group
Lenovo
Ningbo Bird
TCL Corporation
ZTE
Nokia China
Motorola China
Samsung Electronics China
LG China
Sony Ericsson China
Apple Inc. China (iPhone is available from 2009 for China Unicom's service. WiFi function is clipped.)
Sharp Corporation China
Philips China
BlackBerry China
Google China (The introduction of Nexus One for China Unicom in January, 2010, was postponed due to the censorship debate.)
Domestics sales
The domestic sales of cell phone made a breakthrough of 100 million in China in 2006.
In 2007, the domestic sales of cell phone in china were 190 million, increased by 74% as compared with 2007. The impetus mainly came from the rapid growth of new mobile phone users and old customers' upgrading demands. Of 190 million cell phones, 140 million were made through formal channels, while the rest were made through informal channels such as smuggling, counterfeiting and renovating.
Sales volume
For year of 2007, sales volume had reached about 23 billion USD, increased by 17% as compared with 2006. The drop of cell phones' average price made the increment of sales volume lower than the increment of sales because mobile communication company vigorously promoted the sales of cell phones binding to their service which have lower price.
Export volume
The export volume of China's cell phones added up to a record high of 385 million in 2006, increased by 69.3% as compared with 2005. In 2007, this figure reached 483 million, increased by 125.45% as compared with 2006. As far as 2006, the export volume had reached 31.214 billion USD, increased by 52.47% as compared with 2005. The export volume of 2007 was 35.6 billion dollars, increased by 114.01% as compared with 2006.
Development trend
The latest 2-3 years' development trend (2005-2008) has showed that the mainland market is developing in two directions, one of which is the extremely low price cell phones in emerging rural market; the other is multimedia cell phones with diverse functions such as mobile television, MP3 and GPS.
Pricing
China's cell phone market is dominated by products with price under 2000 RMB yuan (about 290 dollars). Products at this price have accounted for 60% of the whole cell phone market, competing with China's local brands, informal cell phones and international brands.
Some features of China's mobile phone
All cell phone service must be prepaid. Pre-payment can be made by buying a card (50 or 100 yuan) and calling the cell phone company, or through commercial banks. When out of town, pre-payment is not easy, usually solved by calling a friend in your own town to add money.
There is a clear distinction of cell phone and cell phone service in China, unlike some countryies such as Japan where the cell phone is sold by and locked to the cell phone service companies. This tradition was broken by the 2009 introduction of Apple Inc.'s iPhone introduction.
Stealing of cell phones and therefore SIM cards is quite common. When your telephone is stolen, go visit the cell phone service company to cancel the previous card, at the same time retaining the previous phone number and pre-payment.
A short message (SMS) or duanxin (Chinese: ), usually 0.15 yuan per message (up to 160 alphabetic or 70 Chinese characters), can be sent to any other cell phones across different cell phone service companies, GSM, CDMA or PHS.
Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) or caixin (Chinese: ) is also available, usually 0.9 yuan per message (up to 50 kilobytes).
Cailing (Chinese: ), usually 5 yuan per month, is an additional service by which the called party can send as the ring tone to the calling party the music (or any kind of sound) that the called party likes . Usually detested by foreigners, but loved by the Chinese young.
See also
Mobile phone
Telecommunications industry in China
Communications in China
Mobile phone industry in the United States
Mobile phone industry in Japan
References
^ Baidu Encyclopedia: China Mobile Communications Corporation's History (in Chinese)
External links
Plus Eight Star
v d e
Telecommunications in the People's Republic of China
Telecoms industry in China
History
Cell phone industry in China Digital divide in China Online gaming in China Internet in the People's Republic of China China Next Generation Internet Chinese Domain Name Consortium ICP license CERNET Golden Shield Project Electronics industry in China CNGrid
Government agencies
Ministry of Industry and Information Technology China Internet Network Information Center Chinese Cyber-Police
Telecom Operators
China Telecom China Unicom China Mobile China Tietong
Equipment Suppliers
Datang Telecom Huawei Amoi Konka Ningbo Bird SVA Group ZTE
Media of the People's Republic of China Television in the People's Republic of China Economy of the People's Republic of China
Categories: Telecommunications in the People's Republic of China | Industry of China | Mobile phonesHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from February 2010 | Articles containing Chinese language text
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Mobile phone industry in China
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