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China IT Is Ready, Are You?

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During the past couple of decades, the world has gotten accustomed to the label "Made in China." Over the years, China has worked to shed its reputation of poor quality and has transitioned to a location where companies feel comfortable manufacturing their entire product line -- from the highest tier to the simple commodities. A similar shift is starting to develop in the IT industry. While Chinese Internet companies are relatively unknown within the international market, domestic firms have made marvelous technological and expansion developments in the past few years within China. Many of the social networking services in China are on par with international equivalents, and some are ready to challenge the current leaders on a global scale. Now is the time for us to divert attention towards the Chinese social networking scene and understand the progression in this region; it won't be long before these services penetrate users abroad.

Weibo is often understood to be the Chinese version of Twitter. But to label Sina Weibo in this fashion is to do a disservice to Sina. While Twitter has around 50 million registered users, Sina Weibo has over 300 million -- with over 10 million additional users signing up every month. In truth, Sina Weibo is akin to the $100-billion-valued Facebook. The difference being while the majority of the 800 million Facebook users are outside China, the majority of the 300 million Weibo users are within China. However, Facebook is available in over 70 languages, while Sina Weibo is only available in Chinese. But this will change soon. Sina Weibo has already announced intentions to produce an English version of their service, while Tencent Weibo already did so last year. With no indication that Facebook or Twitter will enter the Chinese market by complying with government regulations, the opportunities to connect China with the world through social networks such as Weibo remain high.

While Tencent Weibo is not the most successful micro-blogging platform within China, Tencent has produced the most popular mobile messaging service, previously called Weixin. Weixin was recently updated with a slew of new features and a rebrand. Internationally known as WeChat, this cross-platform application is set to take the world by storm. Already available in seven languages, WeChat has a photo sharing system similar to Path and a filter option for photos similar to the $1 billion company Instagram -- all of which is compressed impressively to save mobile data. With more features, users and resources than current market leader WhatsApp, WeChat is on the cusp of breaking into the international scene at a time where minor players like LINE and Kik battle alongside ineffective mammoths such as Facebook Messenger and Blackberry BBM -- with a shot at taking home the crown of the coveted mobile messenger space.

These developments in the social networking arena are just the tip of a massive iceberg known as the China IT industry. China has been a leader in manufactured goods for a while, and now appears poised to lead in IT. The international community must be ready to evaluate and analyze these companies, for their offerings reflect maturation in innovation and quality. The world better be ready for IT made in China, because China is ready for the world.

Franck Nazikian: China IT Is Ready, Are You?
 
Weixin 4.0 is Vintage Tencent and the Most Important Chinese Internet Product Since Weibo

Facebook may have shelled out for Instagram, but don’t expect a billion-dollar acquisition of a mobile startup by Tencent anytime soon.

Instead, version 4.0 of the Weixin mobile app is vintage Tencent. The new release adds a host of new SNS features, many of which copy from Path, Instagram, and Google Circles, and still others that are unique. It’s a prime example of the homegrown combination of copying, remixing, and innovation that Tencent executes to perfection.

Moreover, with the release of version 4.0, Weixin (微信) has an official English name: WeChat. Tencent has its sights on the global market: in addition to English and Chinese, the app is now available in Arabic, Vietnamese, Indonesian, and Portuguese.

Weixin is already TechRice’s prediction for product of the year 2012, and this release only strengthens its claim.

Pony and WeChat

Pony Ma is a rare breed of internet CEO in China. Like Mark Zuckerberg, he started as a programmer, and later became a product guy. Inside Tencent he is worshiped by his employees as the “Super Product Manager”.

Pony Ma demands that things get done and rewards employees when that happens. WeChat’s team each received a Macbook Air for the Chinese New Year.

At 4:11 a.m 29th March, Pony Ma posted to his Tencent Weibo announcing that WeChat had just reached 100 million registered user. Just 4 months ago Tecent claimed 50 million registered and 25 million active. After starting with a team of 10 developers, the team now has over one hundred members.

Pony is investing heavily into mobile social networking and WeChat might be his biggest bet of all. The goal is to create a whole new lifestyle for the white-collars in China, a demographic that previously eluded Tencent and its QQ empire.

WeChat 4.0′s New Features

1). Timeline Photo Album

WeChat’s new photo sharing is designed in the same timeline style as Path, but with a simple blue interface design. Users can share photos with comments, i.e. what they were doing and with who.

Since 3.0, Weixin has included a set of special effects for photo editing: think of it as Instagram in Facebook Messenger.

One of the best features is that WeChat’s top-notch compression minimizes the volume of data consumed via this rich multimedia messaging.

2). Circles

Next up, WeChat takes a page out of Google Plus by offering new friends ‘circles’. Contents can be locked as ‘private’ so that they are only accessible to users in the private circle. After starting from one-on-one messaging, Tencent is now experimenting with building out a social network.

Also new is the name card feature: users have a personal card that they can exchange just as they might a business card.

None of these are original ideas on their own, but Tencent is integrating them in a way and at a scale never tried before. By comparison, Facebook is far more conservative with its mobile app: features are an extension of the website, rather than truly new experiences and functionality.

3). WeChat Open API

This is perhaps the most impressive of all new features in 4.0: third-party apps can now access WeChat’s API to share contents from their Apps to the messenger. For example, if I were to find a piece of sharp news in Google Reader, I may soon be able to share it to friends on WeChat.

One new cooperation is with Tencent’s own QQMusic. Users can easily stream songs via that service from within the app’s timeline.

4). Message Forwarding

Received a funny photo that you would like to share with other friends? Just forward it. In WeChat, you can now forward all content to other contacts.

5). Location Sharing

This is a long-overdue feature that I think WeChat really should have included in earlier versions. A few friends of mine beg to differ though: it can lead to rather delicate location-tracking situations for those in a relationship!

6). Favorite Contacts

Wanting to access that special person instantly? Fave her! Or him. WeChat now allows you to keep a collection of starred contacts who’re special to you, so you can find them easily among the hundreds of others.

7). Group Messaging

Finally, this is a feature that in my personal opinion makes WeChat a truly killer app. In China, people love SMS’ing, and now they are hooked in sending messages via WeChat. Goup chat will extend that even further!



Back in September of last year, I saw WeChat as a revolutionary mobile messaging app because it didn’t solely clone, it polished and perfected what it cloned. User experience is everything for the developer team at WeChat, and as a user I love it.

At TechRice we see WeChat as a potential game-changer in how Chinese users communicate with each other via mobile devices. On the one side, more and more users are using smartphones, and on the other side WeChat’s team worked hard on offering a complete cross platform App that now even include Windows Phones (Windows just entered the Chinese market this month, officially).

Our prediction is that WeChat will be China’s Internet product of the year in 2012, perhaps even greater than Weibo was in 2011.With 100 million registered users, torrid growth, a host of terrific new features, it’s looking like WeChat will hit the mark.

Weixin 4.0 is Vintage Tencent and the Most Important Chinese Internet Product Since Weibo | TechRice
 
Weixin 4.0 is Vintage Tencent and the Most Important Chinese Internet Product Since Weibo
Moreover, with the release of version 4.0, Weixin (微信) has an official English name: WeChat. Tencent has its sights on the global market: in addition to English and Chinese, the app is now available in Arabic, Vietnamese, Indonesian, and Portuguese.

O, wonderful, I don't think it include some viruses. :undecided:
 
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