BEIJING, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese homegrown technological standard
that can make seamless connections among computers, television sets and other
electronic products has passed key hurdles with two international standards
organizations, a Chinese developer of the standard said.
The standard, called "Intelligent Grouping and Resource Sharing" (IGRS),
would be the first of its kind for the seamless integration of 3C devices
(computers, communications and consumer electronics) to be recognized
internationally, said Sun Yuning, director of China's IGRS Workgroup.
Sun said the IGRS standard won key votes last week by members of the
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International
Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), two non-governmental international standards
organizations.
This meant that the standard would be promulgated by the ISO as an
international 3C device convergence standard next year, Sun added.
The 3C devices make up the core of the IT industry, but interconnection
efforts have been hampered by incompatible technology standards. With IGRS,
users can enjoy seamless interconnection of their devices, which can identify
the presence of other devices and determine which resources they can share.
China's IT giants, including Lenovo, TCL and Konka, developed the standard
in 2003 and have been upgrading it since.
"3C convergence is the developing trend of global electronic and
information industries. The success of the China-initiated technology standard
will be conducive to breaking through international technology barriers and
monopolies and greatly enhance the influence of Chinese enterprises in
international competition," Sun said.
China's first 3C device that used IGRS was a computer produced by Lenovo in
October 2004. Now, more than 30 kinds of TVs, computers and cell phones use the
technology in China. The cumulative sales volume of these products is expected
to reach 5 million units by the end of this year, according to Sun.