Special Report:
Boao Forum for Asia
2008
BOAO, Hainan, April 12 (Xinhua) -- China Mobile has not started formal
negotiations with Apple Inc. over the iPhone, despite the intention of both
sides to cooperate.
Details about issues such as business models and commercialization have
prevented the companies from entering formal talks. No time frame was available
either at the moment, China Mobile Chairman Wang Jianzhou said on the sidelines
of 2008 conference of the Boao Forum for Asia on Saturday in China's southern
Hainan Province.
"Our door will remain open as long as there is customer demand," said the
head the country's largest cell phone carrier during a panel discussion on the
sustained growth and development of the telecom industry.
Apple launched its iPhone -- a hand-held device that combines a mobile
phone, a wide-screen iPod and an Internet device into one -- in the United
States in January 2007. It planned to launch it into the Asian market this year.
Wang said China Mobile subscribers currently totaled more than 380 million,
nearly 30 percent of the country's total population. The number had been
expanding six to seven million per month, mostly fueled by consumers in the
rural areas, he added.
He foresaw a robust future for the telecom industry, both at home and
globally, as mobile communications were a "consumption of low energy" and a
stimulus for other products such as mobile music.
More than 200 million China Mobile users have used their phones to download
music or songs, he said.
China, one of the world's fastest-growing cell phone market, was expected
to have nearly 600 million people using mobile phones this year.
