Chapter 728 exploded.



The flower bar sparked public discontent, leading to the removal of the makeshift team on stage and the replacement with a new one.

The ministers that Xing Baohua knew also stepped down, but he still maintained contact with Koizumi, the head of a large labor export company.

With the change of leadership, many policies drafted by the previous administration have also changed.

Some of them can be implemented, some have been overturned, but there is one that has left the current leadership somewhat uncertain.

That is, whether or not to block the Mount Everest system that comes with rice.

They're blocking the system, not the devices. But the problem is, without the system, Pi Payment can't function.

The Windows version of Pi Payment hasn't been released yet, and even if it were, it wouldn't just be for the Japanese region.

It's a difficult choice right now. Banning the Mount Everest system would affect the interests of the massive financial group PiPay, and the consortium's alliance could also determine the fate of this makeshift operation.

After some discussion, we decided to be patient. We've just taken office and there's a lot to deal with, so let's focus on the domestic economy first.

This time, we did not follow the US decision.

However, in order to silence the Americans, the makeshift team negotiated with several large domestic electronics technology companies to see if they could create a Japanese system to be used on domestically produced equipment.

This is one approach, but it won't work. Building it is possible, but we can't use Mount Everest. So we'll rely on the American open-source system UINX.

Is developing a system really that easy?

In fact, the Japanese had a lot of accumulated knowledge, but the problem was that they didn't disclose it, which led to their suppression by the Americans.

Both hardware and software have been suppressed.

On the hardware front, the Japanese wanted to manufacture chips independently, which displeased the Americans, forcing them to rely on contract manufacturers. As soon as they had this idea, they brought in Samsung, initially supporting them before suppressing them.

Now it's rice's turn to be suppressed, but so far, the effects are not yet visible.

The Japanese learned from their experience of being suppressed that they couldn't complete anything independently, whether it was hardware or systems; they had to bring in a few American companies or companies with capital.

Sony was the first to implement it. They had previously collaborated with Nokia, which also had a system called Symbian, suitable for mobile platforms.

In fact, a single chip, combined with their Symbian system, can make a feature phone run smoothly.

So here's the problem: to enable software download and use, we can't use an embedded system; we need to create a closed-loop system.

Open source code comes at a price.

It's the kind of business that requires a large initial investment and doesn't generate returns for many years. As a large international company, who would be willing to work hard if it doesn't make money?

But there was no other way. Market demand was strong. Seeing how well the rice and system were selling, as a star local Japanese company, how could it not sell equipment to live up to the name of a listed company and to the expectations of retail investors and shareholders?

Thus, Sony's Symbian was the first to appear on the mobile platform market, first releasing tablets, then mobile chip computers, and its mobile phone business was about to be launched.

Are they not allowed to advertise during the sales period? When Sony started advertising its products, Microsoft was dumbfounded.

I told you to boycott rice, and not only did you not follow suit, but you even developed your own system. Isn't this going against us?

If you don't discipline someone for three days, they'll be climbing on the roof and tearing off the tiles, right?

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