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China is Planning to Purge Foreign Technology and Replace With Homegrown Suppliers

Huawei Already has a lot of support here in Pakistan, there used to be a wrong perception of Chinese electronics liek 5 years ago or so but that drastically changed and now Huawei phones are preferred,
good Going China...
 
you are just a nagging pain in logical arguments
you lack of the basic thinking and you're horrendous in basic economics
who cares about you small and shortly lasted "surplus" way back in 2004 when you NOW have a chronic massive CA deficits that have been running for years

Just imagine you are using this tool 8-)

stock-vector-handheld-metal-bucket-for-sifting-soil-vector-illustration-137419268.jpg


to scoop flooding water out of a sinking tanker which has a big hole in its hull

Read these about incredible india:

Moody's: India's high fiscal deficits have exposed the economy to shocks and constrained the Baa3 sovereign rating

Fiscal deficit hits 99 pct of full-year target in November - Worldnews.com

do you know the significance there!

Who is denying that now we have a CA deficit? What are you trying to prove here? If we had a CA surplus just 10 years ago, we can have it again.

Was thinking, is this because the reverse engineering is complete?

Even then this is applaudable and worth emulating in India, on a limited scale. We don't want controls forced on the people - economics alone should guide the market.

We should have stringent anti-dumping duties for certain countries, we should also introduce certain taxes for products not manufactured in India, especially for the countries dumping their stuff in India.

UPA government screwed us in so many ways is unimaginable.
 
Who is denying that now we have a CA deficit? What are you trying to prove here? If we had a CA surplus just 10 years ago, we can have it again.

Haha you still dont get it? What another round of big frustrations
Bring that 10-year-old small surplus amount, go to the likes of Moody, and other reputable bankers and repeat the same quote and unquote statement above for their mercy of stepping light on the credit evaluation of India tomorrow. You will just be crying in tears feeling very lucky for not getting a credit down grade. You are so ignorant on these matters but still keep BS tons of nonsense all the time on PDF.:-)

And don't forget that both South Korea and Taiwan are merely the foundries for the US designed semiconductors, whereas China is making the R&D for its own semiconductors.

"SMIC and other groups collaborate to setup the “IC Advanced Technology Research Institute:cheesy::tup:

China’s largest and most advanced semiconductor foundry this week announced that
SMIC, Wuhan Xinxin, Tsinghua University, Beijing University, Fudan University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Microelectronics have collaborated to setup the “IC Advanced Technology Research Institute” to create the most advanced IC technology research and development institution in China.


Currently, the research institute will focus on the mainstream 20nm and below technologies for research and development which includes advanced logic technology, advanced non-volatile memory technology, verification of domestic equipment and materials, and related IP qualifications etc. It will also follow up with the industry’s technology development and the actual needs of the customers, and will invite design, equipment, material companies, and upstream and downstream industries. They can join in as a member or in project collaboration. This institute will strengthen its international exchange and cooperation, to promote the establishment our IP infrastructure, to speed up the cultivation of patents and talent, in order to raise the core competitiveness of innovation in China’s IC industry."

SMIC | Semiconductor Manufacturing & Design Community
 
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Haha you still dont get it? What another round of big frustrations
Bring that 10-year-old small surplus amount, go to the likes of Moody, and other reputable bankers and repeat the same quote and unquote statement above for their mercy of stepping light on the credit evaluation of India tomorrow. You will just be crying in tears feeling very lucky for not getting a credit down grade. You are so ignorant on these matters but still keep BS tons of nonsense all the time on PDF.:-)

Throwing around some names like S&P and Moody won't help hide your utter lack of knowledge about the subject, these articles are talking about what it is today, you need to have knowledge of both economics and Indian political circle to understand the scenario over a period of next 10 years. Since you understand nothing about both the subjects, I suggest you to quit trolling further.
 
Throwing around some names like S&P and Moody won't help hide your utter lack of knowledge about the subject, these articles are talking about what it is today, you need to have knowledge of both economics and Indian political circle to understand the scenario over a period of next 10 years. Since you understand nothing about both the subjects, I suggest you to quit trolling further.

It is you who need some serious education
You ignorant people are in permanent delusional 8-) and self-denial modes!:cheesy:



19.06.2014_No193 / News in Brief
China To Begin Work On Experimental Thorium Salt-Cooled Reactors
Print this page!

Research & Development

19 Jun (NucNet): Shanghai’s Institute of Applied Physics will begin construction in 2017 of two Generation IV experimental thorium nuclear reactors – a two-megawatt pebble-bed fluoride salt-cooled reactor and a 2-MW molten salt reactor.

The institute also said it would begin construction of a pilot 10-MW thorium based molten salt reactor in 2025.

The reactors all use solid thorium-uranium fuel cooled by molten salt and are one of the key reactor technologies identified for research by the Generation IV International Forum, which sees 13 countries and regions collaborate in the development of Generation IV nuclear energy systems.

The pebble-bed fluoride salt-cooled reactor will use a thorium-uranium once-through alternative fuel cycle and the molten salt reactor a thorium-uranium modified open fuel cycle.

According to the London-based Alvin Weinberg Foundation, which supports the development of next generation reactors, molten salt reactors represent “a revolutionary advance” in nuclear energy technology. They have many potential benefits over current nuclear reactors, including generating much smaller quantities of waste, far more efficient fuel use and lower construction costs. They have passive safety features, which ensure safe operation without human or mechanical intervention.

In March 2014 the South China Morning Post newspaper reported that the deadline to develop a new design of nuclear reactor using thorium-based fuel had been brought forward by 15 years as China’s central government tries to reduce the nation’s reliance on smog-producing coal-fired power stations.

Thorium, a naturally occurring slightly radioactive metal, is more abundant than uranium, and research is being carried out into its potential use in nuclear reactors in a number of countries, notably China, India, Russia, Norway, Canada, the US and Israel.

The thorium-uranium fuel cycle has several potential advantages over a uranium fuel cycle, including thorium's greater abundance, superior physical and nuclear properties, better resistance to nuclear weapons proliferation and reduced plutonium and actinide production.

Thorium-based fuels and fuel cycles have been used in the past, but have yet to be commercialised.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency and the OECD’s Nuclear Energy Agency, existing estimates of thorium resources total more than 4.5 million tonnes (reserves and additional resources). US mining company US Rare Earths has said deposits of highly concentrated thorium in the US would be large enough to supply the power needs of the entire country for centuries using thorium-fuelled nuclear reactors.

Follow NucNet on Twitter @nucnetnews

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To contact the editor responsible for this story David Dalton at david.dalton@nucnet.org

Related reports in the NucNet database (available to subscribers):


Source:
NucNet

Editor:
David Dalton

© NucNet a.s.b.l Brussels, Belgium
 
Haha you still dont get it? What another round of big frustrations
Bring that 10-year-old small surplus amount, go to the likes of Moody, and other reputable bankers and repeat the same quote and unquote statement above for their mercy of stepping light on the credit evaluation of India tomorrow. You will just be crying in tears feeling very lucky for not getting a credit down grade. You are so ignorant on these matters but still keep BS tons of nonsense all the time on PDF.:-)



"SMIC and other groups collaborate to setup the “IC Advanced Technology Research Institute:cheesy::tup:

China’s largest and most advanced semiconductor foundry this week announced that
SMIC, Wuhan Xinxin, Tsinghua University, Beijing University, Fudan University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Microelectronics have collaborated to setup the “IC Advanced Technology Research Institute” to create the most advanced IC technology research and development institution in China.


Currently, the research institute will focus on the mainstream 20nm and below technologies for research and development which includes advanced logic technology, advanced non-volatile memory technology, verification of domestic equipment and materials, and related IP qualifications etc. It will also follow up with the industry’s technology development and the actual needs of the customers, and will invite design, equipment, material companies, and upstream and downstream industries. They can join in as a member or in project collaboration. This institute will strengthen its international exchange and cooperation, to promote the establishment our IP infrastructure, to speed up the cultivation of patents and talent, in order to raise the core competitiveness of innovation in China’s IC industry."

SMIC | Semiconductor Manufacturing & Design Community

China accomplishes in a day what takes India 1 month。

These guys still don't realize that,compared with what China has,India's electronic industry is practically zero。

Stop wasting time with the uneducatable。:D

Lenovo gearing up to release the Lenovo Cloud Camera

By: Adam | phonesreview | Posted: 01 Jan 2015, 00:12

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Dropcam has done pretty well for themselves, and their little cameras are now found all over the globe. It looks like Lenovo is getting ready to enter the same cloud-based space as a new gadget dubbed the Lenovo Cloud Camera has just made its way through the FCC.

The Lenovo Cloud Camera appears to be a Dropcam rival, and it may be headed to CES considering it just hit the FCC. Little is known about the device, but some specifications have come to light along with a several photos. We’re not sure what to make of the design just yet, but it is interesting to say the least.

The FCC filing also lets us know the Lenovo Cloud Camera can record video in 1,280 x 720 at 30fps with its f3.6 wide-angel lens. It can handle audio with an intercom and mic, and it has an HD CMOS sensor to boot. It also appears to have an SD card slot, but the manual doesn’t mention one. It does mention the fact that you can link to multiple cameras though which is a “must” with a cloud-based camera of this nature.

Now that the cat is out of the bag with the Lenovo Cloud Camera, we fully expect to see it mentioned or shown off at CES 2015 next week. As with most gadgets, pricing will be the deciding factor, especially if they want to take a piece of Dropcam’s pie.
 
19.06.2014_No193 / News in Brief
China To Begin Work On Experimental Thorium Salt-Cooled Reactors
Research & Development
There are two types of Thorium fueled reactors that China is working on, one is molten salt, the other is pebble bed.

This is only about the HTR-PM (High Temperature Reactor-Pebble Bed Modules) by Tsinghua U.

Cheers!!
*****
31.12.2014
NRG finalizes fuel qualification HTR-PM

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Yesterday, NRG has completed the multiyear qualification irradiation project of the China-manufactured fuel for use in the HTR-PM reactor, which is being constructed in the Shan Dong province of China. This high temperature resistant fuel consists of small coated fuel particles contained in 6 cm diameter pebbles. The irradiation results have shown very good behavior during the customized irradiation in the High Flux Reactor, Petten, The Netherlands, operated by NRG.

High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactor—Pebble Bed Module (HTR-PM)
HTR-PM is a world-first modular full-scale high temperature gas-cooled reactor demonstration plant and is one of the 16 key projects in the Chinese national medium- and long-term (2006-2020) science & technology development program. This plant is located at Shidao Bay, Weihai, China. The first concrete of HTR-PM was poured in December 2012.

HTR-PM is an innovative nuclear reactor system with enhanced safety characteristics and high energy efficiency. It is an optimized and innovative design using Chinese engineering and manufacturing capability, based on extensive Chinese and world experience in High Temperature Gas-cooled Reactor technology.

NRG HTR expertise
NRG has decades of experience with the controlled irradiation and examination of fuel and materials for HTR reactors. The HTR fuel is irradiated in the High Flux Reactor, and the behavior is monitored during the irradiation. Next to extensive fuel irradiation expertise, NRG is world leading with regards to graphite irradiation and examination. This is the case for HTR applications but also for the graphite currently applied in British power reactors, as basis for their long term operation safety cases.

NRG: NRG finalizes fuel qualification HTR-PM
 
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China set to triple filed patents by 2020

(from multiple news agencies)

China is aiming to triple the number of patents it files by 2020 as the government looks to boost the country's high-tech economy in areas from agriculture to pharmaceuticals, according to a notice from the central government.

China is targeting 14 invention patents per 10,000 inhabitants by 2020 compared to four in 2013. It published 629,612 patents in 2013, over 200,000 more than the US, according to a Thomson Reuters study in December.

China wants to become a bigger player in high-tech industries as the country grapples with slower growth and rising costs for its manufacturing base. This is likely to raise competition to global players operating in China and abroad who have dominated in more innovative sectors.

"Intellectual property is increasingly becoming a vital component of China's strategic resources and competitive ability," the statement said.

It added that by 2020 China would have boosted its legal environment for IP protection and management, often an area of contention for foreign firms who say that IP law in China sometimes favors local players.

The government is also looking to reduce the length of the review process for patent and trademark applications. Patent reviews will decline to 20.2 months in 2020 from 22.3 months in 2013, while trademark reviews will fall to 9 months from 10 months.
 
TCL to invest RMB 66 bln in developing new display technologies

OFweek | Posted: 05 Jan 2015, 16:35

On January 3, TCL chairman Li Dongsheng indicated via China social media, that the company will invest RMB 66 billion in the new display field, in a bid to become a world leader in the global display industry.

Over the New Year holidays, Li attended the Guangdong Print Display Development Strategic Summit in Guangzhou, along with a dozen of academics and experts from Chinese Academy of Sciences, Academy of Engineering, the United States National Academy of Sciences and TCL Industrial Research Institute and other research and academic institutions During the event, Li also mentioned the investment plan while stressing the importance and difficulty in developing the print display technology,

It has been reported that, equipped with CSOT's production lines for large size display panels, TCL has also continuously expanded investment in the R & D of display technologies. At the end of 2014, the company launched its first QD TV that helped the company gaining a head start of the new display technology race.
 
Huawei Boasts 2014 Revenues of $46B

A diversified portfolio and aggressive expansion in the enterprise and smartphone markets helped Huawei achieve an enviable year-on-year revenues growth rate of 15% in 2014, taking its full-year sales figure to US$46 billion, according to the vendor's CEO.

In a "New Year Message for 2015," current CEO Ken Hu noted that Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd.
had "seized" opportunities resulting from the rollout of 4G and accelerated innovation in cloud computing, big data, and the Internet of Things (IoT). "As a result," the CEO stated in his message, "our sales revenue is expected to reach US$46 billion in 2014, an increase of over 15% year-on-year." No further details related to margins, profits or business unit performance were included.

The CEO went on to highlight areas of development within Huawei, including its extensive 4G business, customer wins for its 400G router (now sold to more than 160 customers) and "joint innovation on NFV/SDN integration services" with "20 leading carriers."

In the enterprise technology sector, Hu cited partnerships with "SAP and Accenture for joint innovation on cloud computing and Big Data," adding that Huawei has now built more than 480 data centers globally, "including 160 cloud data centers, while our agile networks and S12700 agile switch now serve hundreds of top-tier industry customers." (See Huawei SAP HANA Appliance Makes Successive Breakthroughs in Europe and Huawei Intros SDN-Enabled Campus Switch.)

As for the device segment, the CEO cited significant increases in market share, but did not confirm details reported by Reuters last week. Citing an internal memo from consumer business unit leader Richard Yu, Reuters reported that Huawei's device sales rose by about a third to $11.8 billion in 2014, with Huawei having sold about 75 million smartphones globally during the year, an increase of more than 40%. (See Handset Vendors Battle for Limelight and Asia Strengthens Its Grip on Smartphone Market.)

So what's next? CEO Hu noted that Huawei expects there to be 100 billion connections worldwide by 2025, resulting in a networking and data market of "unprecedented scale. How to store and process, transmit and distribute, acquire and present these massive data are enormous challenges as well as strategic opportunities to Huawei."

To take advantage of those opportunities, the CEO said that Huawei will focus on becoming a more agile and responsive organization, improve "project operations and management capabilities" to meet customers' needs, concentrate on "market-oriented innovation and customer engagement," and step up "efforts to safeguard cyber security and user privacy."

In 2013, Huawei achieved full-year revenues of $39.5 billion -- surpassing rival Ericsson AB (Nasdaq: ERIC) in terms of full-year revenues for the first time -- and net income of nearly $3.5 billion.
 
China claims world's smallest 3-axis accelerometer

By: Peter Clarke | electronics-eetimes | Posted: 07 Jan 2015, 08:37

A fabless chip company and foundry partnership from China claims to have designed and manufactured the world's smallest 3-axis MEMS accelerometer with a package size of 1.075mm by 1.075mm by 0.60mm.

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The developer is MEMSensing Microsystems Co. Ltd. (Suzhou, China), which teamed up with Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) headquartered in Shanghai, to produce the MSA330.

The MSA330 has a 30 percent smaller footprint and 70 percent reduction in volume compared with competitors' best commercial products, MEMSensing said.

The package contains 3-axis MEMS device and CMOS ASIC to signal condition the output from the MEMS and uses through-silicon-vias (TSVs) and wafer-scale packaging to minimize the package volume, MEMSensing said.

The accelerometer is also the thinnest of its kind, measuring 0.5mm after surface mounting and 0.6mm in total height including 0.2mm solder balls.

"MEMSensing is SMIC's first domestic MEMS customer, and also one of its earliest customers worldwide which can be dated back to as early as 2009. MSA330 is the world's first MEMS accelerometer enabled by WLCSP (wafer-level chip-scale packaging), which is based on WLP and TSV technology. This approach belongs to the latest generation for MEMS accelerometer fabrication while other competitors are still lagging one step behind," said Li Gang, CEO of MEMSensing, in a statement. "The success for MSA330 product development proves that MEMSensing has now broadened its MEMS sensor product portfolio beyond the existing MEMS microphone and pressure sensors. We plan to allocate more resources to cooperate with SMIC to develop other advanced products and make an effort to further enrich China's domestic MEMS industry chain." he added.

Shiuh-Wuu Lee, executive vice president of technology development of SMIC, said the manufacturing of MEMS components with TSV-based wafer level packaging technologies is expected to enter commercial production in 2015.

MEMSensing was founded in 2007 and has established microphone and pressure sensor product lines.
 
UMC invests US$1.35 billion to co-build a 12-inch wafer fab with Leadcore

OFweek | Posted: 07 Jan 2015, 14:13

Nowadays, China has become a country that has the highest demand for semiconductor in the world. Chinese semiconductor market demand already accounted for about 30% of global market demand, according to the data from IC Insights.

However, Taiwan and South Korea have mastered 56% of global 12-inch wafer capacity, while Chinese mainland vendors only occupied less than 1% of 12-inch wafer capacity. The huge market demand and process technology limit make China Mainland become a new place for investors in terms of semiconductor manufacturing.

Recently, Taiwan semiconductor foundry United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) reportedly confirmed that the company will invest in Leadcore Technology Co., Ltd in Xiamen with a total investment of US$1.35 billion to jointly build a 12-inch wafer fab.

Meanwhile, it is not only UMC that is optimistic about Chinese market. It is rumored that foundry giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Wuhan Xinxin Semiconductor Manufacturing and Shanghai Huali Microelectronics Corporation all plan to build new 12-inch wafer plants in China Mainland. For one moment, it has become a new round mega trend for manufacturers to build 12-inch wafer fabs in China Mainland.
 
Huawei exhibits over 100 products at 2015 International CES including Honor 6 Plus
Source:Xinhua-Global Times Published: 2015-1-7

Huawei, one of China's top high-tech brands, exhibited over 100 products at the 2015 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Xinhua News Agency reported on Wednesday.

The showcased products include Huawei's latest flagship smartphones, wearable devices, tablets, mobile access devices, home access devices, smart home devices, OTT and vehicle-mounted modules.

After the show opened Tuesday in Las Vegas, the company also introduced the start of the Hilink era - its strategy to offer fully integrated mobile internet solutions to consumers all around the world - as part of its commitment to bringing the latest technology to consumers and creating extraordinary connected experiences for people everywhere.

"2014 saw our greatest achievements to date. Our strategy of focusing on premium mid- to high-end products has borne fruit, with year-on-year smartphone sales increasing by 30 percent to over $11.8 billion," said Richard Yu, CEO of Huawei Consumer Business Group.

Founded in 1987 and headquartered in Shenzhen, South China's Guangdong Province, Huawei replaced Ericsson in 2012 as the world's largest telecommunications equipment maker.

With 16 R&D centers in countries including Germany, Sweden, the US, France, Italy, Russia, India and China, the company's products and services have extended to over 170 countries and regions, serving one-third of the world's population.

The recent launch of the Honor 6 Plus smartphone appears to be something Huawei intends to bank on to take some of the limelight away from rising rival Xiaomi.

The Honor 6 Plus was mainly sold on Huawei's self-run online marketplace and China's second-largest online retailer jd.com, which experts said indicates Huawei's intent to copy Xiaomi's successful Internet marketing and distributing strategy.

Thanks to low-budget phones and word-of-mouth marketing, Xiaomi has become China's second-largest smartphone vendor in the second quarter of 2014 with a 13.5 percent share of the market, showed Analysys International's report in August. Lenovo ranked third with 10.8 percent.

But analysts said that this low-cost strategy may trigger price wars in China, eroding margins for all local phone makers.

And as for the global market, Xiaomi has jumped to third in the third quarter, trailing only Samsung and Apple, according to IDC's October report.

But analysts said that this low-cost strategy may trigger price wars in China, eroding margins for all local phone makers.

Xiaomi revealed in a regulatory filing of domestic appliance manufacturer Midea Group, which engaged in a tie-up with the phone maker in mid-December, that its 2013 operating profit margin was 1.8 percent. In comparison, Samsung's margin reportedly stood at 18.7 percent in 2013.

This year's CES, which will close on Friday, gathered 3,500 exhibitors from all over the world and the number of visitors is expected to reach 2014's 150,000.
 
GlobalFoundries wants bigger chunk of China's chip market

By: Eileen Yu | zdnet | Posted: 09 Jan 2015, 08:50

GlobalFoundries is keen to expand its presence in China's lucrative semiconductor market and hoping its recent buyout of IBM's chipmaking business will help lead the way.

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The chip foundry in October inked a deal to acquire loss-making IBM Microelectronics for US$1.5 billion over three years and had pledged to grow the business. Under the agreement, GlobalFoundries will own all of Big Blue's manufacturing, foundries, sales and technology operations, as well as patent portfolio, which IBM says is one of the world's largest.

It now hopes the acquisition, targeted to be finalized mid-2015, will help drive its growth in the Chinese market.

"Our design footprint is tiny right now in China, but we expect to leverage IBM's large presence in China to start building new IP [intellectual property] designs," Chuck Fox, GlobalFoundries' senior vice president for worldwide sales, said in a report by South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Fox said the company is currently involved in "active discussions" with several intellectual property (IP) partners in China, but declined to provide specific details. "The challenge in our industry is about design, so we're making greater investments in IP," he said.

He noted that GlobalFoundries will gain some 100 technical staff in Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen from the IBM acquisition, focused on design work for products and technologies used in smartphone and tablet antennas.

"Our focus will be to enable the Chinese fabless companies to pursue innovation with both mainstream and advanced design platforms," he said.

Citing stats from PwC, the SCMP report noted that integrated circuit design was the fastest-growing market in China's semiconductor industry, with estimates that it grew at a compound annual growth rate of 37.6 percent in 2003 to more than US$13 billion in 2013.

The China Centre for Information Industry Development also projected the country's chip design market to hit US$23.8 billion by 2016.

That the market has growth potential isn't lost on other players.

Intel in September invested US$1.5 billion in China's Tingshua Unigroup in a bid to boost the adoption of Intel-based mobile devices in the country.

Samsung Electronics in May also opened its chip plant in Xi'an, which spans 230,000 square meters and cost US$7 billion to build. The facility produces 10-nanometer NAND flash memory chips and is estimated to generate annual sales of 60 billion yuan (US$9.74 billion) at full capacity.
 
Chinese firms make mark at US tech expo
By Li Qiaoyi

Domestic firms show ambition for overseas expansion
dfd2831b-b874-40a7-bbae-3d563e557b46.jpeg

Crowds surround a ZTE booth at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Tuesday. Photo: Courtesy of ZTE


The annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES), the world's largest consumer electronics trade show, has been held again in Las Vegas, showcasing emerging trends of the year in the technology arena.

Running from Tuesday through Friday, this year's CES continues its dazzling blend of electronics in daily life, having gathered a number of exhibitors. Many of them come from China where surging demand for consumer electronics goods, and smartphones in particular, has led to the emergence of local brands.

More than 25 percent of exhibitors participating in the 2015 CES are from China, Chinese tech news portal tech.qq.com reported on Tuesday, citing the organizer of the show, in a sign of Chinese technology firms' growing ambition to grab the limelight on the global stage.

In response to surging demand from Chinese participants, CES is also set to launch CES Asia in Shanghai in May.

During the show, ZTE Star 2, the newest phone sporting smart voice controls produced by Chinese smartphone maker ZTE Corp, was put on display, in the latest sign that the Shenzhen-based firm is set to make further inroads into the smartphone sector and eyeing a bigger share of the global smartphone realm, ZTE said in a statement e-mailed to the Global Times on Wednesday, quoting Zeng Xuezhong, chief executive of ZTE Mobile Devices.

In an exclusive interview with the Global Times in late October, Zeng said the firm, a longtime business-to-business equipment and solutions provider, is taking an unswerving approach toward becoming consumer oriented.

Driven by the robustness of its mobile device businesses, especially in China, the US and Japan, ZTE posted a 191 percent profit growth in the third quarter of 2014, according to its latest quarterly financial report released on October 23.

ZTE is hardly alone at the show, as its domestic peers including its cross-town rival Huawei Technologies Co and Beijing-based Lenovo Group showed up as well, flexing their muscles in the tech world.

Taking the stage

Among a range of gadgets Huawei displayed at the show, the Honor 6 Plus flagship smartphone featuring three eight-megapixel cameras came under the spotlight, although Huawei has yet to perform as impressively as ZTE in the US market.

The US market has proven to be a particular hotspot for ZTE, where the handset maker recorded an increase of 40 percent-year-on-year in shipments, according to the latest statistics revealed in November by US-based market research firm Strategy Analytics Inc.

But for Huawei, which secured the third spot on the worldwide smartphone sales rankings in the third quarter of 2014, albeit a long way from the top two vendors - Samsung Electronics and Apple Inc - per data released by US market research firm Gartner Inc in mid-December, a breakthrough in the US market is still expected.

Huawei's share of the US market in 2014 was even less than that logged in 2013, Shao Yang, vice president of marketing at Huawei's Consumer Business Group, told tech.qq.com at the CES on Wednesday, without disclosing the exact figures.

To crack the US market, Huawei has strengthened its partnerships with US telecom carriers who have long played a dominant role in the local phone arena. On top of that, Huawei launched gethuawei.com in June 2014 in a direct-to-consumer approach to selling its phones in the US market.

Huawei is expected to unveil its Honor series, which has been marketed as an independent smartphone brand by the company since December 2013, on its proprietary e-commerce site in the second quarter of 2015, tech.qq.com reported on Wednesday.

Lenovo is also among a slew of Chinese tech firms that have gained the limelight at the show, in part due to its announcement that it would bring Motorola smartphones back to the China market.

Following the completion of Lenovo's acquisition of Motorola Mobility from Google Inc, Motorola is preparing itself for a return to China with the new Moto X, Moto X Pro and Moto G, which are slated to hit the Chinese market starting from February, the company said in a statement e-mailed to the Global Times on Wednesday.

Prices of the devices are currently unknown.

Lenovo will continue with its dual-brand strategy, with Motorola targeting matured markets while Lenovo will stay focused on emerging markets, Liu Jun, president of Mobile Business Group at Lenovo and chairman of the Motorola Management Board, told reporters on Tuesday (US time).

Translating limelight into salesPhones from Beijing-based Xiaomi Inc were also on the ground in Las Vegas, although traces of its rumored next-generation Mi5 flagship smartphone were not seen at the event.

Throughout 2014, Xiaomi, which only started selling smartphones in October 2011, had had a banner year, catapulting itself to the top echelon of phone vendors globally.

In the third quarter of last year, Xiaomi held fourth place in the global marketplace for smartphones as measured by sales to end users with a share of 5.2 percent, according to the latest figures from Gartner, beating all but Samsung, Apple and Huawei, which had market share of 24.4 percent, 12.7 percent and 5.3 percent, respectively.

Over the course of 2014, Xiaomi sold 61.12 million smartphones worldwide, soaring 227 percent from the previous year, Lei Jun, its founder and CEO, said on his Weibo account on January 4.

But for the budget phone maker, which bases its bewildering growth mainly on the wide acceptance of its competitively priced gadgets on its home turf, an expansion into other markets would be of critical importance to its future growth, prompting the company to be present at events such as CES.

Still, analysts noted that showing up at the global event won't automatically translate the limelight into sales figures.

The presence of a range of Chinese firms at the CES signifies the rising prominence of domestic brands which have proven their expertise in manufacturing but might still not be ready to take on the likes of Apple, Bryan Wang, Beijing-based vice president and principal analyst at Forrester Research, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Chinese technology news portal tech.sina.com.cn said in an article published on Wednesday that while Apple continues to be absent from the CES, traces of the Cupertino, California-based tech giant can still be found almost everywhere at the show, as most of the visitors crowding the exhibition halls were seen shooting a wide variety of gismos using an iPhone.
 
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