书城社会科学追踪中国——民生故事
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第7章 Eye on China(6)

Despite his illness, Fang successfully applied to volunteer at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and the 60th anniversary National Day celebrations in 2009. “I wanted to paysomething back for all the help I have been given,” he said. Although he was unable to work full-time in October 2009, he was still given a commemorative watch, which never leaves his wrist.

The SARS victims who underwent the hormone therapy are true heroes and should beremembered for putting the public first in times of crisis, said Zheng Gongcheng, a senior professor in social security at Renmin University of China.

“The treatment was used to save their lives and to protect other people from being infected,” he said. “These people took a medical risk in the interests of the public. That’s why the government and society should take care of them for the rest of their lives. Saving them from SARS is not enough.”

He called for the government to create a special system to care for the survivors,including a treatment plan and a budget large enough to cover all their living expenses.

“Most of the survivors have lost jobs and have become disabled. They can’t help themselves, so only the government and society can help them,” said Zheng. “Medical care and social security in China is getting better, but it’s understandable for these survivors to ask for more. The government should seriously consider their requests.”

February 25, 2010

Copy-making vs profit-MAKING

Yes, iPads are hot, but Chinese manufacturers are learning that producing knock-off gadgetry is not as profit-making as it used to be.

Duan Yan reports from Shenzhen.

Lining up to buy a new gadget is nothing new for an Apple fan, but the new hot iPadsand iPhones are ringing in a new level of Apple hysteria. On July 23, the stores that sell Apple products in Hong Kong sold out of all their iPads within hours of the first day of their launch. Some stores sold out within 30 minutes.

In Shenzhen, a city in southern China adjacent to Hong Kong, the iPad’s hot popularity was defined by the speed in which low quality knockoff products were manufactured to copycat the iPad. Only 60 days after Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduced the iPad in January, small electronic firms in Shenzhen were developing and producing iPad lookalikes.

But even though mobile phones, mp3 players, GPSs and computers that copy the looks and features of branded goods have flooded the consumer electronics market in China, the iPad clones are slower coming into the market.

Manufacturers in Shenzhen have realized that it is becoming more difficult to cash in on iPad fever no matter how fast they are copying it, when the only thing left for them to copy is the looks of the original gadget. And with rising labor costs and a shrinking demand for cheap low-end products, the space for them to make money has become limited.

Many companies lost the battle of netbook PCs in 2009, and they’ve discovered that lowering the cost of production is a mission impossible when all the major parts are purchased from other companies.

On the fourth floor of an outdated building in Shenzhen, tablet PC maker Wu Xiaolong brought out a 10.2-inch touch screen PC and photocopy of a patent license.

He claims that Apple’s iPad stole the design of his product called the P88. Wu has drawn the attention of many reporters from around the world, wanting to talk to him about his claims. He is not planning to sue Apple at the moment, since the iPad is not yet selling on the mainland, he said.

Although reporters flocked to Wu’s company, Shenzhen Great Long Brother Industrial Co., Ltd, the four assembly lines of his company are not moving very fast. Wu had learned his lesson: business is not as profitable as it once was. Adjacent to Wu’s office, two assembly lines in the production room are empty. The third one is working on products for other companies. And only one line is working on the touch screen PC, with a dozen workers assembling computer parts for the P88.

Wu Xiaolong’s P88 is priced at nearly 4,000 yuan, a higher price than Apple’s iPad.

“Designing and developing a new product is expensive and risky. If the engineers can’t come up with a solution for my new product, I will lose money, ” Wu Xiaolong said.

Wu’s netbook business was bleak in 2009 when the market was flooded with low quality netbooks. So this time, Wu is more cautious. Even though iPad global sales eventually hit three million, Wu still hasn’t started massive production of his P88 - not before he receives a large order.

Wu said his factory is capable of producing 1,000 tablet PCs each day. With no retail business of his own, most of the orders come from foreign countries.

Wu didn’t want to say how many of his tablet PCs have been produced or sold. “It’s a business secret,” he said.

Although Wu Xiaolong insisted that his product is not a knockoff of the iPad, other companies in Shenzhen are willing to admit they are iPad followers. Wu Yebin, operating director of Teso Computer Technology Company, claims to have developed the first copycat iPad within 60 days of Apple’s launch.

“The key to making money for us is the speed. Those companies need to get into the market before iPad comes into China,” said Wu Yebin, who has no family relations with Wu Xiaolong.

“Right now, no major computer companies have started pushing for tablet PCs yet,”Wu Yebin said. “And the price battle hasn’t started yet.”

About 500 tablet PCs from Wu’s company have been sold all over the country.

“Most of the buyers are within this industry. There are no big retail sales. The major orders are from overseas companies,” Wu said.

Wu Yebin admitted they cannot further lower their price.

“The major parts are not produced by us,” Wu Yebin said, pointing to the parts in his product. “The CPU is from Intel, the hard drive is from Toshiba or Samsung, and the touch screen is from Taiwan. The operating system is either Windows or Android.”