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To: Ruffian who wrote (68074)2/29/2000 1:38:00 AM
From: Boplicity  Respond to of 152472
 
Feb 28, 2000 6:22 PM PT
IBM to unveil new chip-making technology
IBM Corp. (NYSE: IBM) will unveil details this week about a new chip-making system that can create tiny semiconductors for smaller but more powerful cell phones and personal digital assistants, company officials said on Monday. The next-generation system will use electron beams, rather than light waves, to etch circuits onto chips. Electrons can go to much smaller levels than light beams, which IBM said addresses some concerns that existing chip-making systems that use light waves may be reaching physical limits. The details of the new technology, which IBM is developing with Nikon Corp., will be detailed at an industry conference this week in Santa Clara, Calif. -- Reuters

Dick Tracy clones running around every where... <gg>

g



To: Ruffian who wrote (68074)2/29/2000 3:46:00 AM
From: Ed Forrest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Hope this has not been posted.
Ed


10:57 PM ET 02/27/00

China Unicom plans CDMA network this year - paper

BEIJING, Feb 28 (Reuters) - In a possible signal that a
suspension in the rollout of CDMA cellular networks in China is
temporary, an official newspaper said on Monday China Unicom
would build phone systems using the U.S. technology this year.
The brief article in the People's Daily appeared to be the
first mention of CDMA by state media since Beijing suspended its
rollout last week.
A Ministry of Information Industry official told Reuters on
Friday plans by China Unicom and another state carrier to build
CDMA networks had been "suspended" and contract negotiations with
equipment suppliers postponed.
"China Unicom has not completed its preparations and
applications," said the official, declining to elaborate on the
reasons for the suspension.
Some industry executives said they were worried the
suspension was a tactical move by Beijing aimed at putting
pressure on the U.S. Congress to support China's entry to the
World Trade Organisation.
Executives and analysts said a long-term delay could
jeopardise China Unicom's plans to adopt the U.S. technology
pioneered by San Diego-based Qualcomm Inc .
Several North American and Korean firms, including Nortel
Networks , Lucent Technologies , Motorola
and Samsung Electronics <05930.KS>, are jockeying for meaty
contracts to supply CDMA equipment.
The People's Daily article made no reference to the
suspension and simply recounted well-publicised plans by China
Unicom to build a national system using the standard.
"China Unicom plans within the year to build CDMA digital
mobile communications networks on a large scale, so vast numbers
of users may enjoy superior mobile communications service under
the CDMA standard," the Communist Party newspaper said.
It also mentioned the signing earlier this month of an
intellectual property rights agreement between China Unicom and
Qualcomm that licenses the technology to Chinese manufacturers.
Details of the pact are confidential and industry regulators
have not said whether they were happy with the terms.
Besides China Unicom, Century Mobile Communications Corp -- a
smaller mobile phone company backed by the People's Liberation
Army -- also has ambitious plans for the U.S. technology and
already operates networks in several key Chinese markets.
((Matt Pottinger, Beijing Newsroom +8610 6586-5566 ext 204,
Fax +8610 8527-5258 beijing.newsroom@reuters.com))




To: Ruffian who wrote (68074)2/29/2000 10:34:00 AM
From: LBstocks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Wide Telecom set to release new CDMA handsets
Wide Telecom Inc., a rising manufacturer of mobile terminals, is set to advance into the CDMA (code division multiple access) handset market this month.

The company, which started as a pager maker in July 1996, recently completed the breakdown of its departmental organization into a total of 20 small and efficient teams with a focus on its entry into the market, company officials said yesterday.

In order to ensure a solid footing for sustained growth in its new market, the company also employed more doctoral research staff and a marketing director, company officials said.

In connection with its ongoing cooperation with SK Telecom on the development of the next-generation mobile technology, IMT-2000, Wide Telecom plans to expand its research staff on mobile handset technology by as many as 100 personnel in the coming months.

Last year, the company obtained a license on chip technology, the core part of CDMA technologies, and has since developed mobile handsets using its own technology. It has already signed a letter of intent (LOI) with KT Freetel, in which the wireless carrier is intent on purchasing more than 100,000 mobile handsets made by Wide Telecom worth about 25 billion won each year. In January this year, it signed a 60 billion won export contract with Four Seas Telecom of Hong Kong. Under the deal, to begin in October this year, Wide Telecom will supply over 300,000 units of its mobile handsets to the Hong Kong company each year.

Wide Telecom has grown steadily largely through exports of its pagers ever since its founding. Last year, it posted 1.8 billion won in net profits from 30 billion won in pager sales, which accounted for 80 percent of total sales.

In 1997, Wide Telecom recorded 14.3 billion won in sales. In 1998, the company turned its eyes overseas from the stagnant domestic pager market and almost doubled its sales to 22.4 billion won.

"Buttressed by sharp growth in pager exports so far and on the basis of our accumulated telecom handset technology, we have decided to shift our core competency toward mobile handsets," said Kim Jae-myung, president of the company.

"At present, we are in smooth export negotiations with handset distributors in China, the United States and Brazil. The company is likely to record 120 billion won in sales this year, 42 percent higher than its previous forecast of 84.5 billion won," he said.

The mobile handset to be released by Wide Telecom, under the brand name of MITZ, is only 16 mm thick and the company plans to incorporate wireless application protocol (WAP) and "aroma" software into some models. The company has exclusive rights to the aroma software.

"For successful entry into the nearly saturated domestic mobile handset market, a novel way of differentiating is a must," Kim said.

Turning to next-generation mobile handsets, Wide Telecom plans to complete the development of asynchronized IMT-2000 handsets by the end of this year, and synchronized ones by the end of next year. It expects to begin supply before the opening of the 2002 World Cup.

"The company expects sales to exceed 500 billion won in 2002 when IMT-2000 handsets will be commercially available," he said.

SK Telecom, the largest telecom firm in Korea, is most likely to be licensed by the government later this year to provide the next-generation mobile telephone service which will make transmitting video and text data possible, in addition to international roaming.

As SK Telecom's development partner for IMT-2000 handsets, Wide Telecom will likely become a supplier of IMT-2000 handsets to the massive telecom firm once it is designated as an IMT-2000 service provider.

Though Wide Telecom is striding into the CDMA handset market, its existing pager exports cannot be considered a sunset business. Presently, the company is receiving mounting orders from countries lacking a CDMA infrastructure or where pager production has ceased. The company recently developed voice pagers and is tapping new markets for the product with pager service providers at home and abroad.

"Even as the company pushes its new business of CDMA handsets this year, it will expand its overseas pager markets as well, particularly in Southeast Asia, the United States and China," Kim said.

Though the number of subscribers to domestic mobile telephone services is almost at saturation level, Wide Telecom will tackle the market as the only Korean venture firm with its own technology to develop mobile handsets.

"Just as we have made it in the pager business by taking on niche markets, the first thing the company plans to do is sell handsets to those customers who are intent on replacing old models with new ones," he said.

Kim, 38, worked in a telecom lab of Samsung Electronics Co. from 1984 to 1989, in Standard Telecom from 1993 to 1995 and established Wide Telecom in 1996.

For more information on the company, log on to www.widetel.co.kr or call 0342-709-5455.



Updated: 03/01/2000



To: Ruffian who wrote (68074)2/29/2000 2:37:00 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 152472
 
>>February 29, 2000

China threatens U.S.
with missile strike

By Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

China stepped up its war of words over Taiwan
yesterday, bluntly threatening to fire long-range
nuclear missiles at the United States if it defends the
island.
The warning, published in the official People's
Liberation Army newspaper, comes as a U.S.
aircraft carrier and two cruise-missile destroyers
recently began exercises off Japan. Defense officials
said the warships could be sent to the Taiwan Strait
in a crisis.
The official military newspaper, Liberation Army
Daily, stated in a commentary made public in Beijing
that U.S. intervention in a conflict between China and
Taiwan would result in "serious damage" to U.S.
security interests in Asia.
The military then warned that China could resort
to long-range missile attacks on the United States
during a regional conflict.
"China is neither Iraq nor Yugoslavia but a very
special country," the newspaper stated.
While China is a permanent member of the
Security Council of the United Nations, "on the other
hand, it is a country that has certain abilities of
launching strategic counterattack and the capacity of
launching a long-distance strike," the article said.
"It is not a wise move to be at war with a country
such as China, a point which the U.S. policy-makers
know fairly well also," the newspaper said.
"The U.S. military will even be forced to [make] a
complete withdrawal from the East Asian region, as
they were forced to withdraw from southern Vietnam
in those days," the paper said.
The article was unusually harsh, according to
Pentagon officials familiar with the translation, and
echoed a private warning made in 1995 by Chinese
Lt. Gen. Xiong Guangkai.
Gen. Xiong, the PLA's top intelligence and
foreign policy official, told a former Pentagon official
at that time that Washington would not help defend
Taiwan because it cared more about Los Angeles
than Taiwan. The remark was reported to the White
House as a threat to use nuclear weapons.
China's nuclear arsenal currently includes about
24 CSS-4 long-range missiles that are capable of
hitting most of the United States with warheads of up
to 5 megatons ? the equivalent of 5 million tons of
TNT. It is building two other road-mobile ICBMs
and a new class of strategic missile submarines.
One U.S. official said PLA threats appeared to
be a response to statements made last week by
Walter Slocombe, undersecretary of defense for
policy. Mr. Slocombe told reporters China would
suffer "incalculable consequences" if it attacked the
island.
Mr. Slocombe's statement also brought a
complaint from some pro-China officials at the White
House and State Department who objected to the
Pentagon's tough stance.
Meanwhile, several ships from the carrier battle
group led by the USS Kitty Hawk began conducting
exercises in the Pacific on Wednesday ? two days
after Beijing issued an ominous written warning that it
will use force against Taiwan if the island continues to
delay reunification with the mainland.
Pentagon officials said privately the carrier
deployment is part of U.S. diplomatic efforts to
discourage China from conducting threatening war
games, as occurred in 1996 around the time of
Taiwan's first presidential elections.<<

Excerpt from an article in today's Washington Times:



washingtontimes.com