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BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 |
Letter from Bush Administration Officials to Beijing Protesting Wi-Fi Encryption Standards China has announced that, beginning on June 1, 2004, it will no longer allow the sale of wireless networking products containing any encryption standard other than the Wireless LAN Authentication and Privacy Infrastructure (WAPI) standard approved by the Chinese government. |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
China.Net China will soon be No. 1 in Web users. That will unleash a world of opportunity |
InternetNews February 24, 2004 Roy Mark |
Wi-Fi Leaders Want to Zap Beijing's WAPI As China plans to impose a proprietary encryption scheme for WLANs within its borders, Wi-Fi players are crying foul and asking Washington for help. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2007 Gao et al. |
Why China Wants Its Own Digital Video Standard High technology license fees have kept the Chinese consumer electronics industry in chains. A new audio and video compression standard will set it free. |
BusinessWeek March 25, 2010 Dexter Roberts |
Closing for Business? Western companies are finding themselves shut out as Beijing promotes homegrown rivals |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Cliff Edwards |
Why China Is Making The Valley Fret U.S. chipmakers worry that a new Wi-Fi standard puts their businesses at risk |
Inc. March 2005 Ted C. Fishman |
How China Will Change Your Business Fourteen things every entrepreneur should know about the capitalist explosion heading our way. But don't assume that conceding China's rise means conceding to China. |
Inc. June 2006 Ted C. Fishman |
How to Stop Intellectual Property Theft in China America's most innovative industries are being robbed every day on the floors of Chinese factories. Here's how to make it stop. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2005 Tekla S. Perry |
Digital TV's 100-Meter Dash China's huge TV industry faces a 2008 deadline. Olympics fans will be watching events unfold in crisp high-definition television, thanks to a state-of-the-art digital TV infrastructure the Chinese government is now furiously assembling. |
InternetNews April 22, 2004 Roy Mark |
China Backs Down on WAPI Deadline Beijing agrees to commit to technology-neutral approaches, drops June 1 date to impose proprietary wireless encryption plan. |
InternetNews March 11, 2004 Eric Griffith |
Intel Tells China: No More Chips The chip giant says it can't meet the deadline to use a proprietary security scheme, so it'll stop selling Wi-Fi there all together. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2005 Kumagai & Hood |
China's Tech Revolution How technology is driving the country's economic boom, and what that means for the world. |
Fast Company March 2004 Hout & Hemerling |
China's Next Great Thing Though China's factories fill our shelves, it has yet to produce truly powerful global companies or brands. That's about to change. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
Does China Pose an Economic Threat to the United States? It would appear so, given the rhetoric in recent months by American politicians and some businesspeople, who have complained about the loss of U.S. jobs to China and unfair Chinese trade practices. But faculty members at business schools say the complaints are misplaced and driven by politics. |
IndustryWeek April 21, 2010 |
China Slows Down the Global Supply Chain China's new import regulations could have an adverse effect on U.S. manufacturers. |
BusinessWeek June 21, 2004 Engardio & Roberts |
Wielding A Heavy Weapon Against China The battle lines have been drawn. Unless Washington and Beijing can find a reasonable middle ground for defining a market economy, it will be open season on Chinese manufacturers. And boom times for U.S. trade attorneys. |
IndustryWeek July 1, 2003 John S. McClenahen |
Unruly Trade As the global economy grows, the rules of international trade take on greater significance. Not every nation plays by the rules -- nor sees them the same way. And that makes a world of strategic difference for U.S. manufacturers. |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
China Goes Shopping Billions of dollars, euros, and yen have been invested to build up companies on the China mainland in the last decade. Now Chinese companies, flush with cash and in command of the world's lowest-cost manufacturing plants, are doing some foreign investing of their own. |
BusinessWeek June 17, 2010 Mark Scott |
A Tailwind for Chinese Wind Turbine Makers Foreign wind turbine makers' market share in China has shriveled. Their strong suit is quality, as Chinese rivals compete abroad. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2004 David Drickhamer |
Manufacturers Like Us When asked to identify the focus of their market strategy, Chinese manufacturers listed "high quality" first, followed by innovation, service and support, and low cost. For U.S. manufacturers, innovation straggled in a distant seventh. |
IndustryWeek September 1, 2008 David Blanchard |
Eye On China As China rapidly evolves into a more service-oriented economy, U.S. manufacturers need to adjust their China strategy to remain competitive. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2007 David Blanchard |
Special Report: Manufacturing in China: Taming the Dragon A look at the current state of manufacturing operations in China. |
InternetNews February 13, 2004 Ron Miller |
Siemens, Huawei in Multi-Million Chinese Phone Venture With 270 million mobile phone customers today, China is the world's largest mobile communication market and is expected to grow faster than the world market for several years. |
BusinessWeek September 18, 2006 Einhorn & Elgin |
Helping Big Brother Go High Tech Cisco, Oracle, and other U.S. companies are supplying China's police with software and gear that can be used to keep tabs on criminals and dissidents. |
InternetNews November 11, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Alcatel Ups 3G Investments in China The telecom equipment giant pumps $32M into a mobile carrier to accelerate joint product development. |
InternetNews March 31, 2004 Roy Mark |
Tech Issues Undermining U.S.-China Trade U.S. trade official tells lawmakers Beijing's chip policy is distorting international investment. |
Wall Street & Technology June 9, 2009 Melanie Rodier |
China's Mutual Fund Industry Goes International China is opening its mutual fund industry to international investing, injecting more than 1 billion potential investors into the international markets. Meanwhile, Western fund managers and technology providers are scrambling to provide much needed expertise to Chinese investment firms. |
BusinessWeek November 8, 2004 Roberts et al. |
China's Power Brands There is tremendous excitement in China about the establishment of power brands, but a good dose of fear about their staying power |
BusinessWeek February 9, 2004 Carol Matlack |
Scared Of China? Not Europe U.S. bugaboos -- a big trade gap and loss of jobs -- don't worry the Continent yet |
PC Magazine April 5, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v25n7 I sense payback for the thousands of hours of depositions and millions of dollars in court costs and legal fees heaped upon AMD for more than a decade. |
CFO January 1, 2004 Ronald Fink |
Battling the Property Pirates In guarding patents abroad, U.S. firms get little help from trade talks. But the cause isn't hopeless. |
BusinessWeek March 7, 2005 Brian Bremner |
Who Wants The Yuan To Rise? Why multinationals aren't joining the U.S. campaign to revalue China's yuan. |
CFO November 1, 2008 Wu Chen |
View from China The credit crunch may soon force China to toughen its export terms. |
Home Theater April 28, 2009 |
China Develops Blu Competitor Look out, Blu-ray. You've got a new competitor in the Chinese domestic market. And it's based, in part, on your old rival HD DVD. |
BusinessWeek December 9, 2010 Bruce Einhorn |
The Chinese Handset Wars Are On After years of lagging multinational rivals, Chinese handset makers are growing fast. Now they're aiming for Western markets. |
Finance & Development September 1, 2007 Jonathan Anderson |
Solving China's Rebalancing Puzzle The trends most likely to drive corporate earnings and the trade surplus back to more sustainable levels over the next few years are the gradual end of excess capacity growth, the subsequent return of net import demand, and lower overall GDP growth. |
The Motley Fool December 7, 2011 Jordan DiPietro |
Stay Away From These 3 Solar Companies Regulation makes the future too uncertain for these three Chinese companies: Yingli Green Energy... Suntech Power... Trina Solar... |
The Motley Fool November 18, 2011 Dan Radovsky |
Congress to Investigate Chinese Telecom Vendors A congressional committee has formally announced it will begin investigations into potential security threats posed by Chinese telecom equipment vendors Huawei and ZTE. |
BusinessWeek July 15, 2009 Roberts & Balfour |
China Revs Up Its Dealmaking Machine The Chinese are in the midst of an M&A craze, doubling overseas investments last year. Could the deals benefit the global economy? |
Home Theater October 12, 2002 |
Dolby's Chinese DVD Deal A deal signed in late September by Dolby Laboratories and the China Audio Industry Association (CAIA) will result in standard worldwide licensing rates for DVD products manufactured by Chinese consumer electronics companies. |
Entrepreneur January 2008 Chris Penttila |
Can You Compete? Chinese manufacturers aren't just making your stuff - they're making their own, too. |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2007 Engardio et al. |
Broken China Beijing can't clean up the environment, rein in stock speculation, or police its companies. Why the mainland's problems could keep it from becoming the next superpower |
BusinessWeek September 27, 2004 Einhorn, Balfour & Reinhardt |
Cell Phones: The Big Boys Are Back In China With more than 300 million cell-phone users, China is a market that the likes of Motorola, Nokia, and Samsung can't afford to lose. |
Registered Rep. April 13, 2010 Nate Wendler |
China Bulls Still Running Rampant In recent years China has grown into both an economic and political powerhouse, dramatically altering both the global economic and political landscape. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2010 Zhu Shen |
China 2020: Walled In No More Pharma sets the pace for China's ambitious new innovation agenda |
BusinessWeek November 6, 2006 Bruce Einhorn |
A Dragon In R&D China's labs may soon rival its powerhouse factories - and multinationals are flocking in for tech innovation. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2005 Marlowe Hood |
Steal This Software And this DVD, and this book, and this handbag, and this car... The Internet has become the most common vehicle for software piracy in China, but their are other options, too. |
The Motley Fool June 28, 2010 Nate Weisshaar |
Cashing In on the Rise of the Chinese Consumer Finding both foreign and domestic companies (from a Chinese perspective) that are focused on the Chinese consumer will provide healthy returns in the years and decades to come. |
Fast Company July 2006 |
China Hands Is China the next economic superpower? Ming Zeng of Cheung Kong business school and Elizabeth Economy from the Council on Foreign Relations hash it out. |
The Motley Fool August 23, 2004 Rich Smith |
Outsourcing Pays Off at Home If a foreign company sells goods to you below its cost to manufacture, but no one loses a job, does anyone care? Here's a look at a Chinese dumping case that no one is talking about because it hurts no one and benefits everyone. |