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BIZCHINA / Top Biz News |
Conference to talk about wireless Olympics(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-09-24 16:13 The 2007 Silicon Valley-China Wireless Annual Conference (SVCWAC 2007) will take place at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California on September 29. The town Mountain View is the centre of the Silicon Valley of US where Google is based. This event is an annual get-together for global wireless experts, industry leaders, venture capital investors as well as innovative start-ups. This year's theme is "Wireless Olympics: Global Coopetition in Mobile/Wireless Ecosystem." The conference has an extraordinary lineup of executive speakers from Ericsson, Nokia, Motorola, QualComm, Potevio, Lenovo, Palm, Microsoft, Mayfield, GSR, Lightspeed and much more. They will discuss the challenges and opportunities of the Mobile and Wireless Ecosystem, including the inside story of the wireless deployment at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and Shanghai World Expo 2010. They all hold a strong interest in the wireless industry in China and the US. The SVCWAC 2007 is the premier stage in the industry to network, meet renowned industry leaders and authoritative American and Chinese policy-makers and find the best business partners "This is a great opportunity for those interested in Wireless in general, and in developments in China in particular to learn the latest developments and meet key people from China, Silicon Valley, and Eastern US," said Wen-Pai Lu, Ph.D, President of SVCWireless Technology Association. With one-third of the world population equipped with mobile devices such as mobile phones, PDAs, and laptops, the mobile/wireless industry has become a trillion-dollar ecosystem. It is an environment of global mobile handset vendors, wireless operators, and content/application providers. In this world they compete and cooperate with each other. SVCWireless has established to be the leading US-Asia (with a China focus) wireless industry registered non-profit association in Silicon Valley. Since founding in 2000, it now has over 3,800 members globally.
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