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Sunday, July 31, 2011

Alibaba Mobile OS Aliyun & K-Touch Cloud-Smart Phone W700

Sunday, July 31, 2011
Finaly the suspense is over after Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group has launched its own mobile operating system for handsets and tablets in China. The decision was made after the success of Android and Apple's iOS devices. Alibaba is primarily aiming to promote Chinese industry of IT services and also its online products such as B2B Marketplace (Alibaba.com), Taobao and group shopping in its China with this operating system.

Alibaba subsidiary Alibaba Cloud Computing unveiled the Aliyun OS on Thursday July 28, 2011, and displayed a Chinese-manufactured smartphone using the Linux-based operating system. As per the sources this phone will be available in Chinese makrets by the end of July, 2009 at estimated cost of 2,680 yuan (US$416). A tablet (AKA APAD in China) running the Aliyun is also expected to be launched in China later this year.

Competitive Advantage of Aliyun over Android & Apple iOS

The Aliyun OS not only can run Android apps, but it can also run Web-based apps built with HTML 5 or JavaScript. This feature will allow Alibaba and third-party developers to more easily deliver online products to devices using the operating system without having users to download any software, said Wang Jian, president of Alibaba Cloud Computing.


"The business model on the Web is already established," he said during an interview with journalists. "If you can bring the Web on to the phone, you can basically bring that business model on to the phone."

Initially Aliyun OS comes with 20 "Cloud apps" that access Alibaba company services over the Internet. The apps include Internet search, a barcode scanner to find products online and an app listing group-buying discounts. Alibaba has shared its plans to bring one new Cloud app to the OS each day.

The WOW! thing about Aliyun is that the operating system also provides each user with 100GB of virtual data storage over the Internet. Photos, contact lists and messages can all be saved in a user's online account.

Alibaba Group includes companies such as Taobao Mall and Taobao Marketplace, two of China's largest online retailers. Taobao users numbered more than 370 million at the end of 2010.

Hardware Manufacturer Tianyu & Nvidia

Tianyu a Chines handset manufacturer along with and chip maker Nvidia are reported to have built the first smartphone using the Aliyun OS. The first Aliyun smartphone name is "K-Touch Cloud-Smart Phone W700" and features a 3.8-inch touchscreen with a Nvidia Tegra 2 1GHz dual-core processor.

Said chairwoman Rong Xiuli during a product unveiling on Thursday that Tianyu had a wish to make a phone that could compete with Apple's iPhone.

It took almost three years to Alibaba Cloud Computing to develop the new operating system. Around 1,200 engineers participated in the development process. Following the business model of Android Alibaba is licensing the new operating system for free and is in talks with mobile phone chip-maker Qualcomm to build a lower-end smartphone using the Aliyun OS.

The smartphone could also be sold outside of China if Tianyu chooses to do so, Wang said. The Aliyun OS is being built to support multiple languages, including English.

With the advent of Aliyun, more Chinese tech companies are promoting their products and services through mobile handsets. One of Alibaba Group's companies, Taobao, previously launched a handset with its own brand that came pre-installed with with its e-commerce applications.

The trend is happening as more Chinese users rely on handsets to go online. The country already has more than 900 million mobile phone users. This year, China is forecast to sell an estimated 95 million smartphone units, according to Beijing-based research firm Analysys International.

Smartphones running Google's Android have experienced rapid growth in China, with total units in use increasing in 2010 from 87,000 to almost 11 million. Apple's iPhone 4 has also been a huge hit in the country, attracting long lines outside of retail outlets in Beijing and creating supply shortages.

Alibaba, however, believes it can still attract users to buy phones using its operating system, noting that the company's products are built for Chinese users. "As long as we have a way to bring the Web services easily, that basically means you can provide a very local experience and service," Wang said.

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