The summer of Taiwan tech independence

By Dana Blankenhorn | Feb 8, 2010 |

This summer Taiwan will declare its independence.

Not from China. Not from America.

From Microsoft.

Symbio CEO Jacob Hsu (right) has been working with Taiwanese OEMs for 10 years and says they are finally ready to kick off the traces and become their own brands.

This surprised me. I was at last year’s CompuTex show, in Taiwan, looking for Linux, and it just wasn’t there.

While many of the Taiwanese businesspeople I talked with expressed a desire to go outside the Microsoft orbit, every booth featured Windows gear, usually with Intel chips.

But Android, the mobile operating system Google has built on top of Linux, is turning heads. “Google put together a complete package” for Android, Hsu said, with “software Development Kits (SDKs) and other things people could use.”

Working with programmers on the mainland, Taiwanese companies have spent the last months seeking to innovate on top of the operating system, Hsu said. The result is “holistic, complete packages, customized and differentiated products on top of open source systems.”

By June this will become obvious in a wealth of new Android tablets — Hsu expects CompuTex this year to be a “tablet show” — followed next year by netbooks running Google’s Chrome OS.

This also spells opportunity for U.S. companies like Symbio, which can deliver “market-focused” software designs based on an understanding of buyers, usability, and retail channels.

What Hsu sees as opportunity, however, is also Taiwan taking big risks.

“Taiwan is capacity constrained right now,” Hsu said, unable to increase hardware production, which is growing on the mainland. China also has more software expertise than Taiwan, which is hardware-focused. Taiwan has to step up and start building brands.

“An original equipment manufacturing (OEM) business has less than 5% margins. Companies with brands are at 15% plus.” Taiwan must march up the value chain.

In that march, the success of HTC, which makes the Google Nexus One phone, is illustrative. “HTC acquired a design shop in California that became their software innovation group,” Hsu said, while some competitors built software shops of 1,000 developers on the mainland and are still spinning their wheels.

“Now it’s a question of execution,” Hsu concluded.

But that means more than it did last year, when you could look at a USB stick shaped like a piece of sushi and estimate its market success. Now reviewers will be looking at user interfaces, and at marketing plans.

Independence is not an easy thing to pull off.

 

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John Dodge

John Dodge has answered the call of journalism for 33 years, most of the time covering technology, engineering and business. While he's run magazines, newsweeklies and web sites, reporting and writing always took up half his time. He has have plied his craft at the WSJ, Boston Globe, PC Week (now eWeek), EDN, Design News, Electronic Business, Bio-IT World, Health-IT World, the Lowell Sun, Haverhill Gazette and Newburyport Daily News. He would have like to have been around when Boston supported seven or more newspapers (1940s) and while steam locomotives still pulled trains, but that era was nearly over by the time he raced into the world. That said, he has been blogging and shooting and editing video, writing for web and other online contents tasks for years now.

He has won numerous journalism awards in the past two years, including two Eddie Golds, one Neal finalist and the IEEE Award for Distinguished Journalism all for his reporting and coverage of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

Besides his family and myriad hobbies, reporting and writing is why he gets up in the morning. His personal blog focuses on netbooks and is called The Dodge Retort.

John Dodge

John Dodge prides himself on completely independent journalism. His opinions, observations and reporting are not influenced by any financial holdings. He holds no shares in computer, electronics, software or Internet companies. He also has no business affiliations with organizations except with those for which he creates content as a freelancer.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a technology reporter since 1982, a business reporter since 1978, and a writer for as long as he can remember. His Schwab IRA has a few tech stocks in it, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials bought over 10 years ago. But the vast majority of his tiny fortune (emphasis on the word tiny) is invested in mutual funds. He presently writes for no one else but ZDNet, SmartPlanet and himself. But if you've got an opportunity let him know. If he takes the gig he"ll first add it to this disclosure page.
The Thinking Tech blog focuses on technologies such as virtualization, smart electric grids, enterprise 2.0, open source, data center management, green technology and the intersection between the innovation and application of these advancements.