There are so much news from China that passes by that we couldn’t possibly cover it all. Here are the Chinese tech industry news that we are lazy to post or left behind. There are stories on Flipboard in China, PayPal vs. AliExpress, high-tech primacy and so on, check them out after the break. Hope everyone have a fresh start to your week and looking forward to the holiday season. Video for this week : China further restricts young kids to go for online gaming …
China has implemented new rules to limit the number of hours minors can play games online.
ZTE to launch high-end smartphone in US (WSJ). The Chinese cellphone maker intends to bring LTE-capable high-end smartphones to the U.S. market in the middle of next year.
Flipboard has officially entered China market (TechNode). The most popular customizable iPad magazine now offers Chinese version for Chinese user, no longer been blocked by GFW.
Microsoft delays Windows Phone 7 China delivery to 2012 (COMPUTERWORLD). The delay is due to the company wanting more time to negotiate deals with partners and to better refine the operating system for Chinese consumers.
China aims for high-tech primacy (NYT). The country booming economy and growing technological infrastructure may thrust it to the forefront of the next generation of computing.
Samsung plans China NAND flash wafer fab (EETimes). Samsung is expected to spend about $4 billion to bring up a plant to service the Chinese makers of smartphones and tablet computers.
Acer plans to stop selling cheap, unprofitable products (ALL Things D). The Taiwan PC maker has mapped out a new strategy to streamline its product lines with a focus on IT products with a stronger competitive edge and higher profits.
Alibaba seeks $4 billion in financing for Yahoo (REUTERS). The deal is expected to help the Chinese e-commerce giant buy back a 40 percent stake in the company owned by Yahoo.
Google begins the construction of its first Asian data centre in Hong Kong (BUZZOM). The Internet giant has begun the construction of its new data centre in the Special Administrative Regions (SARs) of China.
Why China doesn’t have its own Steve Jobs (CHINA HUSH). China’s huge obstacle to foster outstanding people.
PayPal dispute pushes development of AliExpress (WantChinaTimes). A written email by PayPal salespeople has attempted to poach customers from Alibaba’s online wholesale purchasing system.