Microsoft remains strongly committed to China, even after Google's recent decision to shutter the China-based version of its search engine over censorship issues, a top executive said. The US software giant is planning to spend $500 million this year alone on its fast-growing research and development complex in China, said Zhang Yaqin, corporate vice-president in charge of the company's R&D activities in China.
"Microsoft puts great importance on China's development," Zhang told Reuters on the sidelines of the Boao Forum on southern China's tropical Hainan island. "China has been a sales center for Microsoft from early on, and later became an R&D center. Now it is a strategic center." He said a Microsoft R&D center in Shanghai would be able to house up to 1,500 people in its first stage, eventually expandable to 7,000.
The company was also putting its Asia R&D headquarters in Beijing, he added, at a centre now under construction that will be able to accommodate 8,000 researchers. Microsoft is active on a number of fronts in China. Apart from software sales and R&D, the company also operates instant messaging and other Web services in China, including a Chinese version of its highly-hyped Bing search engine that it hopes will someday take on Google.
Last month, Google announced that it would close its Google.cn search engine following a hacking attack that it believes originated in the country. The move was also a protest over China's heavy-handed policies that require all website operators to filter results on sensitive topics like Tibetan independence and the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement.
Despite closing its search site, Google still operates its own R&D center in China, and sells advertising there for its Chinese language search sites. Microsoft launched a beta version of its Bing search engine in China last June, but has yet to pick up any major share from market leaders Google and home-grown search engine Baidu, which collectively control more than 90 percent of the market.
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