The Register®

Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/25/china_unicom_iphone/

Apple iPhone poised for China touchdown

1.3 billion to be served

By Rik Myslewski in San Francisco

Posted in Phones, 25th February 2009 03:52 GMT

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It appears that Apple's plan to introduce its iPhone to 1.3 billion potential Chinese customers may have taken one more step towards reality.

According to ChinaTechNews.com [1], China Unicom [2] "reportedly" reached an agreement with Apple that would bring the über-successful smartphone to the world's most populous market as soon as May of this year.

This latest rumor is one in a long series of informed speculation concerning Apple's Chinese plans. One analyst, for example, conjectured that Apple would resurrect [3] its original GPS-free iPhone in order to please a security-conscious Chinese government.

Another theory [4] is that the ChiPhone will be the oft-scuttlebutted iPhone Nano [5], a smaller-screen version of the current model.

If true, China Unicom's success in its iPhone negotiations with Apple would be a blow to China Mobile, whose talks with Apple regarding their handling of Chinese iPhone service reportedly broke down [6] over a year ago.

But the China Unicom deal makes sense - if only because China Mobile has been granted the uniquely Chinese TD-SCDMA standard in the three-way 3G contract distribution recently announced [7] by the Chinese government.

In that three-provider deal, China Telecom was awarded the contract for Qualcomm’s not-terribly-widespread CDMA-2000 standard, and China Unicom was grated the rights to WCDMA.

The iPhone supports WCDMA. China Unicom is a WCDMA provider.

ChinaTechNews.com's rumor makes sense. ®