Microsoft cashing in on China's new OS policy
With the spokesman for China’National Copyright Administration stating earlier this week that all computers produced and sold in China must include an operating system, China-based PC makers have been lining up to make deals with Microsoft.
Founder Technology on April 13 signed a genuine Windows cooperative engagement agreement with Microsoft, with Founder agreeing to purchase licenses of Simplified Chinese versions of Windows worth $250 million over the next three years, according to a Microsoft press release.
More here at DigiTimes.
SiS DDR2 DRAM modules gain AVL validation
- Motherboard makers suffer inventory pile-up and limited growth in profits
- Netgear picks another draft 11n dance partner
- Buffalo announces Broadcom-based draft 11n line
- We're running out of internet?! Cisco engineers have 8 hour commutes?!! Must be the morning roundup...
- New stacking tech increases capacity, performance of Flash memory
- USGS gives virtual tour of the 1906 San Francisco quake
- Did MPEG LA spark a division in the mobile DRM industry?
- Sony rolls out new Vaio line in Japan
- AMD's first quarter revenues up 71%
MSI to launch multi-processor U5/U6 servers in H2 2006
- Sony debuts 82" Bravia LCD TV in Taiwan
- BenQ: No plans to withdraw from LCD monitor business
- DDR prices stay strong
- Research group says 'quadruple play' the wave of the future
- Google adds calendar app to portfolio
- Apple releases Aperture 1.1
- Ubisoft dumps Starforce DRM - claim
- No Aero Glass for pirates
- Novell and SCO heading for arbitration over Unix claims
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




