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Asia finally gets date with BenQ-Siemens

By Juniper Foo


Goodbye Siemens, hello BenQ-Siemens

Ready or not, BenQ-Siemens is now official. Coming three days after its global announcement, the company has finally confirmed dates for the rollout of its phones in Asia.

BenQ Asia Pacific Corp's vice president Philip Newton also revealed at today's press launch that customers can expect 30 percent of BenQ Mobile's portfolio to comprise 3G-based phones, with every three out of four products featuring a music player or FM radio, and every second phone offering at least a 1.3-megapixel camera.

However, first up will be the final two Siemens-branded mobiles, the SL75 and S75, coming out in late January, followed by BenQ's S500 a month later. Handsets appearing under the joint marque--the Sony Ericsson-looking S88, the S68 and 3G-capable Razr-like EF81--will make an appearance in Asia only between February and April.

When asked how the company would create a clearly differentiated product proposition in a highly competitive and saturated market, Newton would say only that there will be "a lot of surprising adaptations to the mobile phones in the next 12 months", with "unique features and innovations that our customers are looking for".

Newton also added that BenQ Mobile will adopt a "holistic approach to service marketing where customers can access information on warranty issues, product updates, etc., 24/7 online". To date, Siemens has two service centers in Singapore, which will now come under the joint brand name.

The takeover of Siemens AG's Mobile Devices Business has certainly given Taiwan-based BenQ an instant leg up to becoming the world's fourth-largest handset maker. As BenQ Corp's CEO KY Lee explained of the acquisition: "BenQ had to sieze the opportunity afforded by Siemens to reach a scale that would otherwise take seven to eight years to achieve." Newton sees the move as complementary: "Our strengths were the same as their weaknesses, and their strengths were the same as our weaknesses."

So can this newcomer follow the same path successfully carved out by another earlier partnership, Sony Ericsson? Only time will tell. But as far as ambitions go, BenQ Mobile has outlined its 2006 growth strategy, at least for Singapore, to be a Top 5 vendor in mobiles with a 5 percent market share, growing to Top 3 with a 10 percent share by the end of 2007.

Model
Availability
Cost
Device specs
February

Local pricing not available

Triband; Bluetooth; 2.0-inch Active Matrix OLED display with 262,144 colors and 176 x 220 pixels; 2-megapixel camera with autofocus; 16x digital zoom; LED photolight; MPEG-4 support; built-in Photo Editor; PictBridge compatibility; 16MB internal memory; microSD card slot; MP3 music player with memory-saving formats AAC+ und AMR; onboard equalizer
March

Local pricing not available

Triband; 3G; 2-megapixel camera; 64MB internal memory; microSD card slot; 2.2-inch internal display with 262K colors
April

Local pricing not available

Triband; Bluetooth; dual speaker system; brushed aluminum surface and keypad; Fax and Document Viewer; 260K-color display
February

Local pricing not available

Triband; infrared; 128MB internal memory; 262K-color dual TFT display with 176 x 220 resolution; 1.3-megapixel camera with Webcam function; side key for MP3 control; In-Call Recorder
January 28

S$638 without line

Triband; Bluetooth; USB; EDGE; 1.3-megapixel digital camera with LED photolight and 5x digital zoom; video player; MP3 player; Dictaphone; 52MB internal memory; 262K-color TFT display with 132 x 176 pixels
January 28

S$538 without line

Triband; Bluetooth; EDGE; infrared; USB; 1.3-megapixel camera with photolight and digital zoom; 3D Phone Pilot; wireless synchronization; 1.8-inch 262K-color TFT display with 132 x 176 pixels; MP3 player with music control key; 20MB internal memory; RS-MMC card slot


 

 

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