China should establish a unified standard for the software industry
to make a breakthrough in development and foster the domestic
market, said Xu Guanhua, minister of science and technology.
"Only with a unified software technical standard can we tap the
international market and invest in products with Chinese
characteristics," Xu said at yesterday's opening of International
Software China 2002.
He
called on government departments and software vendors to cooperate
in the establishment of an industrial standard to improve the
compatibility and ensure sharing of data and technological
resources.
Steve Balmer, chief executive officer of US software giant
Microsoft, agreed that the next waves of innovation after the
Internet would hinge on technological standards.
He
said Microsoft would seek more Chinese partners in software
development based on extensible markup language (XML), a universal
software program language.
Microsoft is also expected to launch a "Great Wall" plan to set up
software colleges at Chinese universities to train software
professionals.
Li
Ying, vice-president of the China Center for Information Industry
Development (CCID) under the Ministry of Information Industry, said
informatization will provide a promising future for the software
industry.
She said software will account for 20 percent to 40 percent of
total spending on construction of information systems and that
urban construction and utility management will become hot spots
this year.
Chemical, banking, education, manufacturing, government and telecom
will be the most active forces in using IT technologies, she
said.
According to CCID, China's software sector saw sales of 28.5
billion yuan (US$3.4 billion) last year, rising 23.9 percent
compared with the previous year.
The International Software China 2002, which ends tomorrow, was
organized by CCID and the China Software Industrial
Association.
(China Daily June 27, 2002)
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