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China Orders Replacement of Microsoft's Operating System On Government Computers

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10/27/2014 @ 11:01PM

China Orders Replacement of Microsoft's Operating System On Government Computers

China will replace Microsoft Corp’s Windows operating system on government computers with domestic products, reported Jinghua.cn, a Beijing-based newspaper controlled by the government mouthpiece, People’s Daily.

China will uninstall the Windows operating system from 15% of government computers every year after Ni Guangnan, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, filed an internal report to Chinese decision makers detailing the urgency of replacing the Windows system, Jinghua reported, citing an anonymous source with knowledge of the matter. The source said China’s state-owned enterprises will also stop using Microsoft’s chips, servers and software.

The move follows China’s May decision to ban government use of Windows 8, Microsoft’s latest operating system, out of security concern. By 2020, a “significant” number of Microsoft’s products will be replaced with domestic versions, the source said.

Several phone calls to Microsoft’s Beijing headquarter went unanswered.

The news is another blow to the company that has long struggled with sales in China.Because of piracy, Microsoft’s China revenue is about a twentieth of its revenue in the United States even though the China market is as big, former chief executive officer Steve Ballmer reportedly said in 2011.

Microsoft is also facing an anti-monopoly probe in the country. In July, Chinese investigators raided Microsoft’s offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu. The State Administration for Industry and Commerce said Microsoft is suspected of violating Chinese anti-monopoly rules because of problems with compatibility, bundling and document authentication for its Windows operating system and Microsoft Office software.
 
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It certainly sets a good precedent for other concerns(business、education、healthcare etc)to follow。

good business aaaaaaye
surprise you all didn't do this sooner, lol the Chinese government mainly using XP right??? not like this hurts Microsoft at all :enjoy:
 
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Next step must be to commercialize the OP for general use and ultimately phase out or dramatically reduce Windows OP's footprint in China. Final step would be to compete Windows in overseas markets.
 
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hey, i noticed that all your post was used the site below to "place" your link source, what is it for !?
I can't access to the link, its all direct to that site:

larsonarchive.com Glype® proxy
 
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Next step must be to commercialize the OP for general use and ultimately phase out or dramatically reduce Windows OP's footprint in China. Final step would be to compete Windows in overseas markets.
tahahah compete with Windows overseas
the Chinese OS will probably be based on Linux right???
Kylin (operating system) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
but knowing the Chinese you'll come out with a copy cat Windows :rofl:
 
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FORBES ASIA

10/27/2014 @ 11:01PM

China Orders Replacement of Microsoft's Operating System On Government Computers

China will replace Microsoft Corp’s Windows operating system on government computers with domestic products, reported Jinghua.cn, a Beijing-based newspaper controlled by the government mouthpiece, People’s Daily.

China will uninstall the Windows operating system from 15% of government computers every year after Ni Guangnan, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, filed an internal report to Chinese decision makers detailing the urgency of replacing the Windows system, Jinghua reported, citing an anonymous source with knowledge of the matter. The source said China’s state-owned enterprises will also stop using Microsoft’s chips, servers and software.

The move follows China’s May decision to ban government use of Windows 8, Microsoft’s latest operating system, out of security concern. By 2020, a “significant” number of Microsoft’s products will be replaced with domestic versions, the source said.

Several phone calls to Microsoft’s Beijing headquarter went unanswered.

The news is another blow to the company that has long struggled with sales in China.Because of piracy, Microsoft’s China revenue is about a twentieth of its revenue in the United States even though the China market is as big, former chief executive officer Steve Ballmer reportedly said in 2011.

Microsoft is also facing an anti-monopoly probe in the country. In July, Chinese investigators raided Microsoft’s offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu. The State Administration for Industry and Commerce said Microsoft is suspected of violating Chinese anti-monopoly rules because of problems with compatibility, bundling and document authentication for its Windows operating system and Microsoft Office software.


too late.
 
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good business aaaaaaye
surprise you all didn't do this sooner, lol the Chinese government mainly using XP right??? not like this hurts Microsoft at all :enjoy:

This has to do with XP support having ended.
Windows XP support has ended - Microsoft Windows
This forces all companies to upgrade.

So do people fork over a huge sum or look for an alternative.
 
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Is China's New Computer Operating System a Threat?
Huffington Post
Rebecca Abrahams
CCO Ziklag Systems, a mobile security technology company
co-authored by Dr. Stephen Bryen, Founder & Chairman

China has announced it will introduce a new computer operating system in October to replace Windows. Already deeply embarrassed and unhappy over alleged spying on its computers by the US Government, China has vowed to take action.



Its first step was to stop government agencies from using Microsoft's most recent Windows 8 on their machines. But its latest project, to replace Windows altogether puts China into a new category as challenging US dominance in the ultra-sensitive computer operating system league. Controlling computers today is part and parcel of political power, and China understands this. That's why China is not only replacing Windows, but it wants to get rid of Apple's iOS and Google's Android too.

China has three related opportunities and can be expected to exploit all of them.

The first involves better controlling China's domestic computers and mobile devices by regulating through the operating system what users can, or cannot, do. China is likely to achieve this through a strongly controlled computer software registration system managed not by Microsoft, Google or Apple but by the Chinese government.

China will gain many benefits. It will have tens of millions of users virtually on launch, and it will control all access by being able to directly regulate software and applications that run on its approved operating system. Likewise, China will likely build in some sort of encryption system linking computers to the Internet, which will create problems for any outside organization to penetrate. And China will stimulate development of domestic software alternatives to Western software products. China will also gain vast experience in how to manage an operating system evolution, how to fix vulnerabilities, how to add features, and how to support software in the field. This will grow a domestic industry that will rapidly mature and will benefit the Chinese state.

Beyond its domestic market, China will be able to look to introducing its software in the global market. China can find a number of opportunities to spread its operating system in many parts of the world. For example, it could potentially challenge both Microsoft and Android computer laptop platforms by offering a cheaper and stronger operating system to users. Price is a big factor in low end laptops and netbooks. China controls most computer manufacturing today. Put an operating system on top, especially one that is open enough to support popular software and social networking products and China could well have a winner. Of course, China's commercial OS will be different from the one it promotes internally, but this can easily be handled especially if registration and OS downloads are managed by a location-sensitive server.

A third an even bigger opportunity for China is to team with a non-American foreign company to offer an "independent" operating system to customers. This may prove to be attractive to a European partner because the Europeans are quite unhappy with American spying, and they have far less concern, if any, about China than America has. There are plenty of large European companies who are, in the IT world, always playing second fiddle to the U.S. Here is a great chance for them to get ahead. And they can do it on the cheap, since the software investment will be heavily China's operational and financial responsibility.

Where does this leave US companies? Certainly China will emerge as a heavy weight challenger to the likes of Microsoft, Google and Apple. But it is not just US companies that matter here. The loss of control over where operating systems come from could pose a security challenge for America's intelligence agencies that will be formidable and hard to overcome. While that is still in the future, it would be foolish not to prepare ourselves for the problems on the road ahead.
 
.
Is China's New Computer Operating System a Threat?
Huffington Post
Rebecca Abrahams
CCO Ziklag Systems, a mobile security technology company
co-authored by Dr. Stephen Bryen, Founder & Chairman

China has announced it will introduce a new computer operating system in October to replace Windows. Already deeply embarrassed and unhappy over alleged spying on its computers by the US Government, China has vowed to take action.



Its first step was to stop government agencies from using Microsoft's most recent Windows 8 on their machines. But its latest project, to replace Windows altogether puts China into a new category as challenging US dominance in the ultra-sensitive computer operating system league. Controlling computers today is part and parcel of political power, and China understands this. That's why China is not only replacing Windows, but it wants to get rid of Apple's iOS and Google's Android too.

China has three related opportunities and can be expected to exploit all of them.

The first involves better controlling China's domestic computers and mobile devices by regulating through the operating system what users can, or cannot, do. China is likely to achieve this through a strongly controlled computer software registration system managed not by Microsoft, Google or Apple but by the Chinese government.

China will gain many benefits. It will have tens of millions of users virtually on launch, and it will control all access by being able to directly regulate software and applications that run on its approved operating system. Likewise, China will likely build in some sort of encryption system linking computers to the Internet, which will create problems for any outside organization to penetrate. And China will stimulate development of domestic software alternatives to Western software products. China will also gain vast experience in how to manage an operating system evolution, how to fix vulnerabilities, how to add features, and how to support software in the field. This will grow a domestic industry that will rapidly mature and will benefit the Chinese state.

Beyond its domestic market, China will be able to look to introducing its software in the global market. China can find a number of opportunities to spread its operating system in many parts of the world. For example, it could potentially challenge both Microsoft and Android computer laptop platforms by offering a cheaper and stronger operating system to users. Price is a big factor in low end laptops and netbooks. China controls most computer manufacturing today. Put an operating system on top, especially one that is open enough to support popular software and social networking products and China could well have a winner. Of course, China's commercial OS will be different from the one it promotes internally, but this can easily be handled especially if registration and OS downloads are managed by a location-sensitive server.

A third an even bigger opportunity for China is to team with a non-American foreign company to offer an "independent" operating system to customers. This may prove to be attractive to a European partner because the Europeans are quite unhappy with American spying, and they have far less concern, if any, about China than America has. There are plenty of large European companies who are, in the IT world, always playing second fiddle to the U.S. Here is a great chance for them to get ahead. And they can do it on the cheap, since the software investment will be heavily China's operational and financial responsibility.

Where does this leave US companies? Certainly China will emerge as a heavy weight challenger to the likes of Microsoft, Google and Apple. But it is not just US companies that matter here. The loss of control over where operating systems come from could pose a security challenge for America's intelligence agencies that will be formidable and hard to overcome. While that is still in the future, it would be foolish not to prepare ourselves for the problems on the road ahead.

but it's linux based right :bounce: just like i posted before Kylin. a FREEWARE OS.

The first involves better controlling China's domestic computers and mobile devices by regulating through the operating system what users can, or cannot, do. China is likely to achieve this through a strongly controlled computer software registration system managed not by Microsoft, Google or Apple but by the Chinese government.

CONTROL REGULATE are some keywords here. seems like the Chinese government wants to spy and control what the average Chinese citizen sees and posts.

who would willingly by this over Windows,Apple, and Andriod lol.
 
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CONTROL REGULATE are some keywords here. seems like the Chinese government wants to spy and control what the average Chinese citizen sees and posts.

Your interpretation merely. Besides, if you are not a terrorist, nothing to worry about.

who would willingly by this over Windows,Apple, and Andriod lol.

Then you should not be concerned.

http://www.china-cos.com/
 
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