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A man talks on his phone outside a China
Mobile store.(Photo: China Daily)
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BEIJING,
Jun 6 -- China Mobile Tuesday formally launched an instant messaging (IM)
commercial service under its own brand and moved into a market dominated by
Microsoft's MSN division and Hong Kong-listed Tencent Holding Ltd.
Called Fetion, China Mobile's IM tool enables handset
users to chat with other Fetion customers over the mobile Internet offered by
its GPRS network, either with a mobile phone or PC. The interface is similar to
MSN messenger and Tencent's popular QQ.
China Mobile last year started a pre-commercial trial
of the IM service, initially branded Femoo. At the end of the 11-month trial in
April, it had signed up 20.68 million subscribers, said company vice-president
Sha Yuejia.
Fetion's launch underlines the growing convergence of
telephone and Internet networks.
"Any service that can cross over traditional
telephone and Internet networks would be a very promising application," said Lu
Tingjie, a professor with the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications
and a telecom industry veteran.
The Fetion IM tool has already been embedded with
downloads of Colorful Ring Back Tone (CRBT) and an online shop where subscribers
can buy China Mobile's service offerings and check phone bills, Sha said.
"We are expecting to add a number of new offerings
such as games and video phone calls to Fetion," he said.
Fetion is expected to apply competitive pressure on
MSN and Shenzhen-based Tencent, which have been seeking to expand their IM
services to the mobile sector.
Market researchers estimated that Tencent has about 7
million mobile QQ users. For mobile MSN messenger, the figure is estimated at
300,000.
When using the mobile IM tool, users pay for the
mobile Internet traffic over the GPRS network. MSN has been charging users an
additional 10 yuan for the mobile MSN messenger but earlier this year scrapped
the fees. Tencent currently charges 5 yuan each month.
China Mobile said it will not charge the monthly fees
initially and has yet to set a timetable for future charging.
Mobile phone maker Motorola said 11 of its handset
models are already pre-installed with Fetion software.
(Source: China Daily)