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India achieved in two years what China didn’t in decade

Agent_47

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Taipei: Forgive the Chinese if they start feeling a certain amount of OS envy.

For more than 15 years, China has unsuccessfully attempted to come up with a homegrown operating system that would be loved by the masses and allow the country to be freed from the shackles of Western technological imperialism.

India has achieved that feat in less than two years.

Indus OS is now India’s second-most popular smartphone platform with a 6.3% market share, behind Alphabet’s Android. The multilingual system, one of many based on Android itself, reached No. 2 at the end of 2015 and maintained that position in the first two quarters, according to data released this week by Counterpoint Research. It leads iOS and other Android variants including Xiaomi’s MIUI and Cyanogen.

China’s path toward operating system nationalism is littered with the shells of failures including China OS (COS), Kylin, Red Flag and YunOS. They were all unsuccessful in getting traction for varying but similar reasons that include being pushed by the government or by a corporation with skin in the game. It matters little whether they’re for desktop or mobile devices, China has failed at both.

Originally called Firstouch, Indus OS got its big break in mid-2015 when local smartphone giant Micromax decided to start using it for some models instead of Alphabet’s Android.

With at least 12 major Indian languages supported, Indus OS has tapped into what the market needs, not what a government wants. That’s powerful because it means the software is developing and pivoting according to demand. For example, it offers simplified predictive typing and translation between regional languages.

Indus OS also offers carrier billing in its App Bazaar, which means users can pay for downloads via their phone bill, for which network providers likely take a cut. This is a big motivator not only for consumers and app publishers but also for the operators themselves, who are less than happy about being left out of a smartphone party where Android and iOS drink more than their fair share of the champagne.

Since it’s in their best interests to have more phones on their networks that will bill through their payment systems, operators have an incentive to promote Indus OS devices. And in turn, smartphone makers have a good reason to develop Indus OS models over Android.

Such success shows how market forces can trump government directives, and the outcome also ends up playing out well for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Make in India campaign. In theory, a Chinese-made smartphone could have Indus OS installed—and that’ll probably happen one day—yet the reality is that any foreign company that wants to capture this part of the market will need to set up operations locally.

While Beijing has done a lot to try and wean the country off the dominance of American software makers, India shows that all it really takes is a good product and market forces.Bloomberg

http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/SlE...-in-two-years-what-China-didnt-in-decade.html
 
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Honestly it looks AMAZING. I expected it to be a bad knockoff but I couldn't be more wrong.

Swipe to transliterate and translate is brilliant!!

indus-1.png
 
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Honestly it looks AMAZING. I expected it to be a bad knockoff but I couldn't be more wrong.

Swipe to transliterate and translate is brilliant!!

indus-1.png

How does it work ?

Can it be loaded on to a Samsung phone ?

Forgive the Chinese if they start feeling a certain amount of OS envy.

Why must there be a comparison with anyone ?

India did it coz it needed it.
 
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Taipei: Forgive the Chinese if they start feeling a certain amount of OS envy.

For more than 15 years, China has unsuccessfully attempted to come up with a homegrown operating system that would be loved by the masses and allow the country to be freed from the shackles of Western technological imperialism.

India has achieved that feat in less than two years.

Indus OS is now India’s second-most popular smartphone platform with a 6.3% market share, behind Alphabet’s Android. The multilingual system, one of many based on Android itself, reached No. 2 at the end of 2015 and maintained that position in the first two quarters, according to data released this week by Counterpoint Research. It leads iOS and other Android variants including Xiaomi’s MIUI and Cyanogen.

China’s path toward operating system nationalism is littered with the shells of failures including China OS (COS), Kylin, Red Flag and YunOS. They were all unsuccessful in getting traction for varying but similar reasons that include being pushed by the government or by a corporation with skin in the game. It matters little whether they’re for desktop or mobile devices, China has failed at both.

Originally called Firstouch, Indus OS got its big break in mid-2015 when local smartphone giant Micromax decided to start using it for some models instead of Alphabet’s Android.

With at least 12 major Indian languages supported, Indus OS has tapped into what the market needs, not what a government wants. That’s powerful because it means the software is developing and pivoting according to demand. For example, it offers simplified predictive typing and translation between regional languages.

Indus OS also offers carrier billing in its App Bazaar, which means users can pay for downloads via their phone bill, for which network providers likely take a cut. This is a big motivator not only for consumers and app publishers but also for the operators themselves, who are less than happy about being left out of a smartphone party where Android and iOS drink more than their fair share of the champagne.

Since it’s in their best interests to have more phones on their networks that will bill through their payment systems, operators have an incentive to promote Indus OS devices. And in turn, smartphone makers have a good reason to develop Indus OS models over Android.

Such success shows how market forces can trump government directives, and the outcome also ends up playing out well for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Make in India campaign. In theory, a Chinese-made smartphone could have Indus OS installed—and that’ll probably happen one day—yet the reality is that any foreign company that wants to capture this part of the market will need to set up operations locally.

While Beijing has done a lot to try and wean the country off the dominance of American software makers, India shows that all it really takes is a good product and market forces.Bloomberg

http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/SlE...-in-two-years-what-China-didnt-in-decade.html
Its name is "Indus " could not feel more proud as a Pakistani
 
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Why must there be a comparison with anyone ?

India did it coz it needed it.
its just not India everyone needs to do it ..... it will increase competitiveness in Asia and western tech imperialism will be defeated ........ not like its a bad thing but still

How interesting to think of the news


1533016093-0.jpg
love huawei ...... but china still has not been able to create an OS ....
hope they will create it soon
 
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How does it work ?

Can it be loaded on to a Samsung phone ?



Why must there be a comparison with anyone ?

India did it coz it needed it.

It can't be loaded onto Samsung you need a compliant phone, mostly Micromax. It seems similar to CyanogenMod in that it's a heavily modified Android-based OS

http://www.indusos.com/
 
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its just not India everyone needs to do it ..... it will increase competitiveness in Asia and western tech imperialism will be defeated ........ not like its a bad thing but still


love huawei ...... but china still has not been able to create an OS ....
hope they will create it soon
It's really hard to create an operating system.
HUAWEI is said to be developing,
My mobile phone is HUAWEI
No software supported system is difficult to promote

 
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It can't be loaded onto Samsung you need a compliant phone, mostly Micromax. It seems similar to CyanogenMod in that it's a heavily modified Android-based OS

http://www.indusos.com/


Okay...

Thats explains the ads one hears these days on FM about using Micromax etc . Their USP is - Hang English, message / type in your own language.

Thank you
 
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This is a bit misleading, this is OS,is a modification of Android, like what you get in Samsung - their modified version of the OS, or MIUI and Cyanogen.

I think Xiaomi said they reached 160 million users world wide this year.

Also this company is funded by the Omidyar group, fairly close to the U.S govt.
 
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https://in.news.yahoo.com/indus-os-indian-operating-system-093000795.html

In fact, Indus OS is Android

In fact, according to Counterpoint market research, that accolade goes to homegrown operating system IndusOS, which though based on Android, caters primarily to the regional audience.


View attachment 321367
Dude, thats exactly the article says.

This is a bit misleading, this is OS,is a modification of Android, like what you get in Samsung - their modified version of the OS, or MIUI and Cyanogen.

I think Xiaomi said they reached 160 million users world wide this year.

Also this company is funded by the Omidyar group, fairly close to the U.S govt.
Source is Bloomberg they should have counted MIUI and Cyanogen, also its talking about 2 year timeline.
 
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Source is Bloomberg they should have counted MIUI and Cyanogen, also its talking about 2 year timeline.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Indus OS is adding close to half a million activations every month and the company expects to double these numbers in the next six months, said CEO Rakesh Deshmukh to ET. The company has set a target of 100 million users by 2018.
http://www.gsmarena.com/wsj_despite...till_at_top_in_china_last_year-news-16367.php
According to Canalys, Xiaomi claimed 15.2% of the market in China. Huawei came in second with 14.7%, while Apple was third with 12.5% share.

They also predicted that in 2016, Xiaomi will have to face a tough fight from competitors like Huawei, which shipped over 100 million smartphones in 2015 - Xiaomi, for comparison, shipped only 70 million.
 
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