Chinese high-tech company Vimicro has broken decades-long foreign
dominance in the digital multimedia CPU chip sector with the success
of its Xingguang digital multimedia CPU chip, marking a milestone
in China's integrated circuit (IC) industry, said a top government
official.
After five years of development, the made-in-China Xingguang
digital multimedia CPU chip occupies over 40 percent of the world
market and 80 percent of Chinese sales.
This is a crucial breakthrough for China's integrated circuit
(IC) industry in research and development as well as the industrialization
of core technologies, said Zhang Qi, director of the Electronic
Information Administration Department at the Ministry of Information
Industry.
"China now stands in the upper reaches of the 3C (consumer
electronics, computers and communications) industrial chain and
has a say in the formulation of industrial standards, which will
influence related industrial sectors in the lower reaches,"
Zhang added.
By the end of 2003, over 10 million Vimicro Xingguang digital
multimedia CPU chips were sold to 16 foreign nations and regions,
including the United States, Japan, South Korea and some European
countries.
A group of leading domestic and overseas IT companies, including
Microsoft, HP, Samsung, Philips, Foxconn, Fujitsu, Legend, China
Telecom and China Netcom, have become clients of Vimicro.
So far, Vimicro's Xingguang digital multimedia CPU chip holds
over 200 patent technologies at home and abroad, according to
Deng Zhonghan, president of the Vimicro Corporation.
As a private high-tech enterprise operated by returning overseas
students, Vimicro has benefited from preferential policies offered
by the central government and Beijing's Zhongguancun Science Park.
(China Daily January 15, 2004)
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