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

Health threat of petrol vapour set to evaporate

When you fill up your car with petrol you often find that your hand will reek of petrol unless you have worn gloves. more »

Falling EU economy set to stabilise as measures take effect

The EU is going through its worst recession since WWII. Inflation has slowed, but employment and public finances are hard hit. The situation should stabilise in 2010. more »

ATM outsourcing helps struggling FIs cut costs

In the current economic environment, banks should carefully analyze the current and future total cost of ownership of their technology assets, and evaluate the outsourcing alternative. more »

Reining in risky investing

Commission proposes first EU law on hedge funds and issues guidelines on bank pay practices. more »

Ways Are Sought to Defend Lithuania’s Business Interests Better

On 30 April, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas took part in the round table discussion “The European Union’s External Trade Policy and Lithuania’s Positions: Threats and Possibilities for the Lithuanian Industry”. more »

As the number of e-banking users rapidly increases, Bank SNORAS improves this service

Since 28 April this year, the clients of AB Bank SNORAS will be able to process their financial matters in a clearer and more user-friendly environment of “Internet Bank+” system. more »

Paying for the grey

2009 ageing report: Europe tackling the challenge of an ageing population but the recession threatens a setback. more »

3rd Energy Package gets final approval from MEPs

More choice, investment and security of supply lie at the heart of the 3rd energy package. more »

Swine flu fears boost drug giants

Swine flu, a new strain of influenza, has so far left more than a hundred dead. But in one sector, the illness could have huge benefits. more »

Europe's cross-border deal hunters

Central European bargain hunters are crossing borders for the best buys. Slovakian shoppers in Hungary are making the most of their new eurozone membership. more »