Intel is hoping to get more Chinese developers to back its products by
forming a new joint innovation lab with the nation's largest search engine,
Baidu.
The lab is part of an agreement the two companies signed on Thursday that
will focus on developing software for China's mobile Internet market. Developers
in the country will have access to Intel-powered products, including PCs,
tablets, and mobile devices, to test and port software for Baidu and Intel
platforms.
"If you are a developer, you will now have more choices of platform and
more opportunities in business," said Christos Georgiopoulos, Intel general
manager for developer relations.
The companies did not, however, disclose how much was being invested in the
new lab.
Intel is investing in the lab as China has become the world's largest
market for PC and smartphones. But the company's presence in tablets and
handsets is still small. Instead, power-efficient chips from its rival ARM
Holdings are powering many of today's popular products, including Apple's iPhone
and iPad and most Android devices.
The chip maker is, however, steadily delivering new chips for use by
Chinese vendors. PC maker Lenovo earlier this year unveiled its K900 smartphone,
which is designed with Intel's new "Clover Trail+" processor. Chinese handset
maker ZTE is also using the same processor in its latest smartphone, called the
ZTE Geek.
To help Chinese developers design cutting-edge software, Intel will also
make available software tools to them. The company hopes this will help pave the
way for Chinese apps designed with voice-command features along with
facial-recognition, Georgiopoulos said.
Baidu and Intel intend to keep the partnership limited to software and
hardware integration and will not include joint smartphone development, said Li
Ming Yuan, Baidu general manager for mobile and cloud. In 2011, the Chinese
search giant launched its own Android-based mobile platform, now called Baidu
Cloud, which came loaded with integrated company services. The platform has yet
to be widely adopted in China and only comes pre-installed on six smartphone
models.
With the partnership, Baidu wants developers to design mobile apps around
its search and mapping products. The company is aiming to become a destination
for mobile services and last year said it would invest more than $1.6 billion to
build a new cloud computing center.
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