Help | Sitemap | Archive | Advanced Search   
  CHINA
  BUSINESS
  OPINION
  WORLD
  SCI-EDU
  SPORTS
  LIFE
  WAP SERVICE
  FEATURES
  PHOTO GALLERY

Message Board
Feedback
Voice of Readers
 China At a Glance
 Constitution of the PRC
 CPC and State Organs
 Chinese President Jiang Zemin
 White Papers of Chinese Government
 Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping
 English Websites in China
Help
About Us
SiteMap
Employment

U.S. Mirror
Japan Mirror
Tech-Net Mirror
Edu-Net Mirror
 
Thursday, September 06, 2001, updated at 10:44(GMT+8)
Sci-Edu  

HK Telepda's New Focus

A Hong Kong company is hoping to strike gold with its new GPRS-upgradable PDA (personal digital assistant) phone and Chinese-language paging device for users who need time-sensitive financial data.

The two GSM hand-held computers are produced by Hong Kong TelePDA, a joint venture with Taiwan-based TelePaq Technology.

The TelePDA, which sports a 240 by 340 pixel monochrome LCD screen, uses a Motorola Dragonball 32-bit chip and has 18.5 megabytes of Ram. It runs on the company's proprietary Chinese-language operating system, Tele OS.

The paging device features PIM (personal information manager) functions compatible with Microsoft Outlook, games and an English-to-Chinese and Chinese-to-English dictionary. It can receive data at up to 32 kilobits per second.

The TeleWin 168 PDA is equipped with mobile-phone functions, but users cannot access the Web as the proprietary operating system does not have a browser.

Hong Kong TelePDA hopes to tap into China's market by offering Chinese-language, interactive financial services on its products.

Managing director Tammie Kwok said the company had devoted its research efforts to producing mobile-commerce devices with viable business applications.

"As Hong Kong is one of the world's hubs for international financial services, we think the services offered by TelePDA fulfil the needs of those who are engaged in stock-trading and foreign commodities investments," he said.

The TelePDA offers real-time stock information, such as stock prices and indices of the main board and the Growth Enterprise Market, stock-price charts, futures, as well as stock-price information from the United States and Britain.

This product would enable investors to make timely decisions on stock transactions, Mr Kwok said.

Dow Jones Newswire and ET Net will provide daily, real-time financial news as well as indices of Hong Kong and major cities.

"It is not only a PDA, we also provide value-added services that a normal PDA cannot offer," said Mr Kwok.

"Value-added services such as information on stock-market trends and commentary, as well as personal transaction returns, will make this product your real financial assistant."

He said Hong Kong TelePDA would provide users with interactive business applications such as stock exchange, insurance, ticketing and horse-racing.

Assistant marketing manager Pan Yan said the company would develop a Web browser and an e-mail client in the next-generation products, and provide more m-commerce services.

The two products will be available in Hong Kong through retail stores after next month. Pricing details for the devices were not available.

China: One in four has telephone

(2001/09/06)(Agencies)

One in four Chinese now possess a telephone, a former household luxury in China some forty years ago, said Lu Xinkui, deputy minister of information industry, at the Western Forum being held in Western China's Xi'an on Wednesday.

Lu said that China's telecommunication industry witnessed robust growth over the first half of the year. The number of telephone users totals 281 million, including 164 million fixed telephone users and 117 million mobile phone users. There are now 9.2 mobile phones for every one hundred Chinese.

At present, 83 per cent of Chinese villages have access to telephone services.

Statistics show that the production value of China's information industry has maintained an average annual growth rate of 25 per cent over the past 10 years. In 2000 alone, the industry accounted for four per cent of China's gross domestic product (GDP).

In the five years up to 2005, the information industry will work to keep an average annual growth rate of more than 20 per cent, and double its sales and export earnings, the official said.

Shanghai hosts e-business forum

(2001/09/06)(xinhua)

A serial e-business forum, which opened on September 3 in Chinese Taipei, changed its venue to Shanghai, the commercial and financial centre in East China.

The forum, sponsored by Business Week, a leading economic journal, focuses on topics including the prospects of e-business, Asian development strategy and online marketing.

Secretary General Yang Weidong of the China E-business Association told the forum that China enjoys great potential for e-business, and welcomes cooperation from foreign counterparts.

More than 200 e-business magnates from the Asia-Pacific rim are attending the forum, which will move to Seoul, capital of the Republic of Korea, September 7.



Source: China Daily



In This Section
 

A Hong Kong company is hoping to strike gold with its new GPRS-upgradable PDA (personal digital assistant) phone and Chinese-language paging device for users who need time-sensitive financial data.

Advanced Search


 


 


Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved