The order of the day

Published: 11 May 2001 y., Friday
While news of sluggish mobile phone sale outlooks cause the handful of international famous brand companies to publish profit warnings, shut down own manufacturing plants and lay off thousands of staff, news about their placement of orders to OEMs or ODMs in Taiwan seems to indicate that shifting responsibilities in such situations is the order of the day. The incredible flexibility of Taiwan manufacturers to fill in seems to be always welcome in uncertain situations. Compal Communication Inc. of Taiwan confirmed last week that they obtained an order for the manufacture of GPRS mobile phones from Motorola. They expect to obtain a five million GPRS mobile phone order from Motorola. Compal Communications, a subsidiary of notebook PC maker Compal Electronics Inc., is regarded as the Taiwan maker to have obtained the largest GPRS mobile phone orders to date. Chen Jen-chung, president of Compal Communication, estimated that the Compal Group would deliver about three million mobile phones in 2001. In related news, Arima Communications Corp., a subsidiary reinvested by Arima Computer Corp. another major notebook PC maker in Taiwan, also obtained mobile phone orders from Ericsson and expects to sell no less then 1 million units in 2001.
Šaltinis: taiwan-technology.com.tw
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Moldova Signs Investment Agreement with Azerbaijan Companies

The Moldovan Government has accomplished negotiations with three Azerbaijan companies - Azpetrol, Azertrans, and Azpetrol - and signed with them, on Wednesday, an agreement on realization of a major investment project in Jurjulesti more »

Eureko purchases Millennium Bank's stake in PZU

Dutch insurer Eureko will purchase a stake of 10% in PZU from Bank Millennium for zł.1.6 billion more »

Warsaw stock market goes on sale

The Warsaw Stock Exchange could be privatised at the end of 2005 at the earliest, with Euronext, OMX and the Vienna, London or Frankfurt exchanges among the potentially interested parties more »

Lithuania starts closing Chernobyl-type nuclear plant

Lithuania shuts down unit one of its Chernobyl-style Ignalina nuclear power plant on New Year’s Eve, as it moves to honour a promise to the EU to close the facility in the coming years more »

Czech Republic's foreign debt on the rise

The Czech Republic's foreign debt rose 17 percent year on year to 946.1-billion koruna ($42.4-billion) in the third quarter, 137-billion koruna higher than in the same period last year more »

Foreign Direct Investment in Lithuania up by 10 Percent

Cumulative Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Lithuania has been consequently growing more »

The Donation for the victims of the Asian tsunamis

Mobile phone text messagers raising millions for Asian tsunami victims more »

Russia may start early debt payments to Paris club in 2005

This year Russia may start early debt payments to members of the Paris club of creditor countries assigning up to $10 billion from its stabilization fund for the purpose more »

Huge pipeline project approved

The Russian government has given the green light to a major energy project, the building of an oil pipeline to the Pacific more »

Ryanair back in court in fresh row over airport subsidies

Ryanair is in trouble again over subsidies received from continental airports, with Air Berlin suing Germany's Lübeck airport over payments of up to €10m (£7.1m) made to Ryanair since 2000 more »