Wu Yebin’s windows 7 + Intel touch screen tablet cost about 2,200 yuan, and he is willing to accept a small profit margin to ensure that his tablet PCs are more affordable than iPads or other tablets PCs.
“These few months are golden times for the companies that came first into the market,” Wu said.
According to Li Yi, founder of discloser.net, an electronics industry chain forum, more than 50 companies have posted ads on the walls at the delivery companies, advertising that they provide iPad lookalikes. The delivery companies act as a sort of middleman in the sales of the knock-off gadgets.
For those smaller manufacturers, developing a copycat iPad is not a cheap investment.
In order to save money, some smaller companies are chipping in to share the mold makingand purchasing for the plastic casings and electronic parts together.
Wang Wei, sales manager of Houfengda Hardware Products Co. Ltd, said that eightcompanies are buying casings from him.
With all the netbook PC products similar in their features, and with the samecomponents, the price battle for low-cost knockoff producing companies was furious,said Li Yi from discloser.net. “The situation was similar to the year of 2009 when manyfactories were producing netbook PCs.”
Sales slow for iPad clones
Just 25 kilometers away, Lin Sheng, a retailer at Shenzhen’s Hua Qiangbei district, is selling iPad lookalikes both on his small counter and in his online store.
The business is not as good as selling the real thing, Lin Sheng said. Apple’s iPad is selling well even though the price of the copycats is more affordable. In the gray market in Shenzhen, a 499 Apple’s iPad smuggled from the US is priced at 4,500 yuan (660). The price of the pirated iPad ranges from 600 to 3,000 yuan.
On July 23, Apple started selling iPads in Hong Kong at HK3,800 (3,388 yuan, or 499), much lower than the current smuggled-in iPads.
“The look-alike iPads don’t really look like an iPad. The best you can say is they are big MP4s or small netbooks with a touch screen,” Zhang Yifei,a 21-year-old college student said as he was checking out the iPad look-alikes at the counter.
Even though the iPad hasn’t started officially selling in Chinese mainland, lots of consumers are purchasing from Hong Kong through friends and online stores. On taobao.
com, one of the largest e-commerce websites in China, the preorders for Hong Kong iPads started running well before the official launch on July 23. At the ports of Shenzhen,passengers’ bags were being checked for smuggled iPads from Hong Kong.
“iPad is just a toy,” Wu Xiaolong said when he demonstrated how well his tablet PC P88 can make Excel tables. In fact, many tablet PC manufacturers share the same view even as they use iPad fever to promote their own products.
On May 18, Liu Yingjian, president of Hanwang Technology based in Beijing, ane-book reader vendor, smashed an apple-shaped ice block at a launch ceremony for their tablet PC: Touchpad.
“There is no breakthrough of the iPad. What surprised the PC makers was the price Apple is offering,” Li Yi said. But still, its success made the manufacturers realize that devices with mobile technology is what people want.
Need for unique content
As one of the organizers of an industry summit for Chinese tablet PC makers, Li saidone of the reasons they rescheduled the conference and moved it from Shenzhen to Beijing is because “there is no future for simply producing knock-off devices. We need to provide consumers with unique content and added values, such as applications, e-books and other contents.”
Li said more than 30 publishers signed up for the conference in August. Companies will have to learn how to come up with original products and exclusive content, Li said.
The protection of intellectual property has been a problem for Chinese companies.
Wu Xiaolong, who developed the P88, admitted that even though he holds the design patent, he can’t stop other companies from copying its looks and design. “I can’t deal with them one after another if they wanted to steal the design.”
For him, his patent licenses are more of a proof to his foreign clients that his company is an original design manufacturer. Wu said he is thinking about having a national commercial on CCTV to promote his tablet PC. He hopes that with the patent and big commercials, he can get more business that can make his assembly lines run at full speed again.
“Many companies have just started to become aware of intellectual property protection, but don’t know much about the details,” said Ai Hong, an intellectual property lawyer at ZY Partners in Beijing. “To apply for a design patent is very easy because it doesn’t need a substantive examination. But it could be nullified later on.”
The selling points of Apple’s products are its features and technology, Ai said.
“Although the design of the product is important, it is not the core of its intellectual property package,” Ai explained. Companies in China can prove they have their own patent for the design, but in court, they would still need to prove it doesn’t infringe upon the technologies of other companies.
“Even if he holds a patent of a product design, he cannot simply just accuse another of stealing his patent. According to the law, scientific analysis and comparison are needed to determine whether the accusation is valid,” said Jiang Zhipei, professor of intellectual property studies at Renmin University of China in Beijing. He told China Daily that if one company accuses the other company of stealing its intellectual property and loses the lawsuit, that company might get sued for libel or defamation later.
July 26, 2010
Magazines turning new page in battle for readers
Imaginative design, relevant articles help periodicals thrive in digital age.
Jiang Xueqing reports in Beijing.
As global media moguls were slashing budgets and jobs in 2009, Zhu Xuedong, editorin-chief of China Weekly, chose a different path and re-launched the magazine in adynamic new format.