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China seeks its own high-tech standards

malebolgia   on 27 May 2004 - 17:47 · 23 comments & 2006 views

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DVD? China's trying to do it one better -- with a technology called EVD.

CDMA? The digital cell phone standard is so 2003, the Chinese say. Give TD-SCDMA a try instead. Intel Corp.'s Centrino and Microsoft Corp.'s Windows? If you're doing business with Beijing, better bone up on WAPI and Red Flag Linux, too. These days, China's dominant message is this: We'll embrace the world -- but on our terms. And nowhere is this more evident than in the realm of high technology, where behind the acronyms is a battle of standards that could have global repercussions.

Pushed by their government, Chinese firms are shunning technological protocols invented abroad and developing their own. They want Chinese-made video discs to run on Chinese-invented players. They want Chinese consumers linking up with China-developed mobile gadgets. This trend goes beyond commercial and security concerns. Cultural pride is at stake: A once-great China humbled by Western powers in the 19th century doesn't want to be undercut again.

News source: CNN


Ballmer also reinforced the ongoing priority of security-related issues and improvements.
"In order to take advantage of new business opportunities and effectively manage upfront and lifetime IT costs, it's important for customers to look at the entire IT life cycle - from application development to operations and management - and to choose a software platform that provides strong tools, ecosystem partnerships, security and support," Ballmer said. "The tools and technologies Microsoft is delivering today help customers work effectively and efficiently in distributed environments and across disciplines to drive growth and respond to change."

Microsoft Tech*Ed is Microsoft's premier technical training event, offering more than 400 sessions delivered by industry experts. More than 11,000 people are attending Tech*Ed 2004 - an increase of more than 22 percent over Tech*Ed 2003.

Visual Studio 2005 Team System Delivers Powerful Life-Cycle Tools
As businesses look to transform their IT organisations from a cost centre to a catalyst for overall growth, IT professionals seek to continually improve the efficiency and predictability of their infrastructure. Managing the life cycle of software development is a critically important component to overall business success and has become increasingly challenging as software teams become more specialised and geographically distributed. This effort is part of Microsoft's Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), an industrywide initiative focused on management of the entire application life cycle.

Unveiled today, Visual Studio 2005 Team System delivers productive, integrated and extensible software life-cycle tools that enable businesses to reduce the complexity of delivering service-oriented solutions. The Visual Studio 2005 Team System contains several tightly integrated design, development and testing tools that foster greater collaboration between architects, developers and IT professionals throughout the IT life cycle. Expanding on Microsoft's proven success in delivering highly productive developer tools, the Visual Studio Team System increases the predictability of the software development process, shortens the development life cycle, and enables IT departments to deliver greater business value.

Visual Studio 2005 Team System creates even more opportunities for the Visual Studio
partner ecosystem. Global systems integrators, service providers and tools vendors all play a vital role in complementing and extending the Microsoft Visual Tools family to customers. Today, Borland Software Corp., Compuware Corp., EDS, Telelogic AB and Unisys Corp. announced their support for Visual Studio 2005 Team System.

Partners can take advantage of the integration benefits of the Visual Studio 2005 Team System, giving customers a broad choice of development tool options. "We believe Microsoft's entry into application life-cycle management is evidence that the industry is maturing, and will even further expand for leaders like Borland that have years of experience in the space and a set of mature products already available to customers," said Dale Fuller, CEO of Borland Software. "Borland looks forward to continuing its long-standing collaborative relationship with Microsoft to deliver high-quality solutions for our mutual customers."

Systems integrators can extend the Visual Studio 2005 Team System and Microsoft's process guidance and prescriptive architectures to gain greater predictability in the development process.

"Visual Studio 2005 Team System offers maximum productivity using integrated tools while lowering risk and project-related costs through increased and continuous visibility into the overall project. This allows EDS to increase business agility for clients through configurable guidance, architectural guidance and life-cycle tools built on Windows Server System," said Stan Alexander, vice president of Technology Strategy & Architecture at EDS.

Facilitating Service Orientation With More Secure Web Services
Microsoft's service-orientation strategy focuses on enabling customers to integrate new and existing systems composed of heterogeneous technologies with Web services. To help developers build interoperable, security-enhanced Web services solutions, Microsoft today announced the immediate availability of Web Services Enhancements 2.0 for Microsoft .NET (WSE), a free add-on to Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and the .NET Framework.

Today more than 250,000 developers use WSE to build security-enhanced Web services that help improve business processes within and beyond corporate trust boundaries. Customers such as HP, the Ohio State University Medical Center, EDGAR Online Inc. and Siemens AG are already experiencing the benefits of developing advanced Web services solutions based on WSE 2.0.

The Ohio State University Medical Centre required a solution that allowed authorised users to remotely and more securely monitor, record and replay generated vital-signs data and correlate this data with medications administered in the operating room.

"Microsoft was the only company that offered an implementation of the Web services protocol specifications (WS-Security, WS-Trust, WS-Policy, WS-SecureConversation) required to make the project a success," said professor Furrukh Khan, director of technology for the Collaborative for Applied Software Technology, Electrical and Computer Engineering at The Ohio State University. "By using WSE 2.0, we were able to focus on the solution's business logic instead of writing security code. WS-Policy allowed us to simply install digital certificates and write a few hundred lines of XML that describes how the Web services are to use them. Another big enabler was WS-SecureConversation, which gave us the security that was required without sacrificing performance."

WSE 2.0 enables developers to build advanced Web services using the latest protocol specifications. Developers can use WSE to more easily enhance Web services security by incorporating WS-Security (based on the 2004 Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) standard), including WS-Policy, WS-Security Policy, WS-Trust and WS-SecureConversation.

Additional features include extensible transports, support for custom policies, the ability to host Web services independent from IIS, and asynchronous messaging based on the WS-Addressing specification.

To further support integration of systems using security-enhanced Web services, Microsoft also announced the Technology Preview release of the BizTalk Server Adapter for WSE 2.0. Using this adapter, BizTalk Server customers can easily orchestrate new business processes out of security-enhanced, autonomous Web services, creating further levels of business agility using service-orientation design principles.

Using Web Services to Help Information Workers and Developers Harness the Power of Microsoft Office for IT
The Microsoft Office Editions are some of the most widely used applications in enterprises today, but customers typically have to leave the Microsoft Office experience when they want to access many kinds of business data. Developers now have the opportunity to create intelligent business solutions that address today's demanding business requirements while giving information workers the powerful, familiar user interface of the Microsoft Office Editions. In order to enable software developers to more powerfully leverage existing systems and information even when it is stored in multiple disparate back-end systems, Microsoft today released the technical beta of the Microsoft Office Information Bridge Framework.

The Information Bridge Framework provides developers with a set of tools and components to quickly and cost-effectively build smart client solutions that connect Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003 to multiple enterprise systems via Web services. Information Bridge reduces the costs of solution development for IT professionals and increases flexibility and manageability of Office-based information integration solutions.

In addition, Information Bridge-based solutions empower information workers to easily find, access and work with line-of-business information within the familiar Microsoft Office environment.

The Information Bridge Framework provides the following:
* A client-side component that interprets XML markup, which describes the Information Bridge-based solution behaviour, including its user interface and user actions

* A server-side component that enables Web services to expose the data, views and actions embodied by line-of-business applications

* Information Bridge Metadata Designer, a plug-in for the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET development system that creates and manages solution metadata

"We're very excited about the possibilities of the Information Bridge Framework. Not only does it make it easier for our developers to build and manage integrated solutions that connect Office to our enterprise, but it also improves the productivity of our employees by building upon the Microsoft Office user interface," said Ken Meidell, chief information officer at Cascade Designs. "We were able to save money and improve our product development process significantly by building upon Information Bridge and Office."


Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 23 additional comments
(1 reply) #1 kairon on 27 May 2004 - 17:54
China is so stuck up. They should just help existing standards instead of going off and making their own crummy little formats.
#1.1 em_te on 28 May 2004 - 01:12
Didn't another article somewhere say that EVD was more technologically advanced than DVD? Like it had a higher capacity and better quality.
#2 Gary_Player on 27 May 2004 - 18:11
I really hate China sometimes...*sigh*...
#3 Kasteo on 27 May 2004 - 18:37
Go China... why follow the others?
(1 reply) #4 neufuse on 27 May 2004 - 19:21
this almost sounds like the old self reliant country theory... you want only your products to run for you... which in pratice has never worked
#4.1 tonyunreal on 28 May 2004 - 00:47
Obviously you never lived in Japan. Your rules worked just well in there.
(1 reply) #5 macster on 27 May 2004 - 20:02
Wow they are really scare of the westerners
#5.1 SirEvan on 28 May 2004 - 09:57
Easterners too, don't forget Japan produces technology too.. Someone should go make china an island.
#6 nic on 27 May 2004 - 20:25
Well, to put all of this simply: they don't want to compete. And their form of government isn't really about competition, as much as making the people wealthy (ideally, not realistically).
(8 replies) #7 icecaveman on 27 May 2004 - 20:27
In a few years China will not be dependant on foreign technology anymore, they are preparing for a rougher time in the future.

The Chinese goverment is horrible and has no respect at all for human rights so it's no surprise they want to isolate the country even more.
#7.1 tonyunreal on 28 May 2004 - 00:49
"The Chinese goverment is horrible and has no respect at all for human rights"

What do you know about the Chinese government? Did you ever study Chinese history? Have you ever come to China for once?
#7.2 Kasteo on 28 May 2004 - 01:40
I'm totally agree. I would say the US government is no any better than the Chinese government.
#7.3 Aron.H on 28 May 2004 - 01:57
People said American's human rights be orrogant and bias to others.I think it's right.

Last edited by 56914 on 28 May 2004 - 02:18
#7.4 supersaiyanjericho on 28 May 2004 - 02:11
QUOTE (#7.1)
"The Chinese goverment is horrible and has no respect at all for human rights"

What do you know about the Chinese government? Did you ever study Chinese history? Have you ever come to China for once?

I got one number for you

1989

ring any bells?

#7.5 coexist on 28 May 2004 - 02:35
True, but that was 15 years ago - and many things have changed since then. We shouldn't let our thinking be stuck on things in the past.
#7.6 tonyunreal on 28 May 2004 - 04:39
QUOTE (#7.4)
I got one number for you

1989

ring any bells?

So you mean you WERE there and saw the mess yourself?

Wait a second...I got something for you too.

July 28th, 1932

What do you think, huh?
#7.7 chilliadus on 28 May 2004 - 09:01
This is not a political forum, so STFU!
#7.8 toematoe on 29 May 2004 - 00:45
haha u tok abt the numbers ...
then we should tok abt the numbers that US invasion of other country.

the list goes on. it is never ending.
PANAMA incident is one of them and very well documented..
#8 yukycg on 28 May 2004 - 13:17
just let them do whatever they want, you cannot voice over the chinese gov't... beside it is great that they came up with something even better than the american and hopefully the japs too, welme to china
#9 toematoe on 28 May 2004 - 15:40
actually doesnt it work the same for alot of companies? and alot of countries?
why china only? peeps are so "racist" nowadays.

(1 reply) #10 youyou on 29 May 2004 - 00:11
hey guys, i am a chinese, stop talking about politics here, all politicians are liers, let's talk about technology. as a chinese i didn't like the new standard, there is no product for it, people don't wanna trust a "thing" in someone's head.
#10.1 toematoe on 29 May 2004 - 00:42
I am chinese too. but there are always new invention create every other day and why not accept it? just like the evolution of music data that were store in "old" turntable disc > cassette tapes > cd > even dvd...

and these changes take time and we are accepting this kind of media... even DVD has region codes restriction and there are still no stopping from buying other regions dvd player at all or even dvd media. What China is doing. Many developed countries had already done them.. this is to cultivate a sense of belonging to the country. made in " insert country name" for " insert country citizen " I can even point fingers but no i am not. These sort of technology when stable will be distributed out of China eventually. Chinese aint "stupid" or "backward" just like any other race. Japan lock itself up during the world wars and eventually what happened? Their cameras production line shot up and were distributed world wide after they open up and was one of the biggest producers of cameras countries back then.

China is just doing their best to invent new technology.
#11 AXiao on 29 May 2004 - 05:51
im chinese here, and i think it's great to not rely on foreign technology, i mean, china is big, plenty of resources and work forces, and i hate to see it COMPLETELY relying on foreign tech, that's quiet sad

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