Microsoft said today it will work with a Chinese operating system developer to create cloud computing products for the country’s market, a move that could help the U.S. company sell to China’s government agencies.
China Standard Software, Microsoft’s Chinese partner, has co-developed a Linux operating system with a defense lab, China’s National University of Defense Technology, and the operating system, called “NeoKylin”, has been approved by a number of government ministries.
NeoKylin is meant for use by government offices, national defense, energy and other sectors of the Chinese economy, and aims to reduce China’s dependence on imported operating systems, the company said.
Microsoft’s agreement with Shanghai-based China Standard involves the two companies building products based on Microsoft’s Hyper-V Open Cloud architecture, reports said. The products will also work with China Standard’s NeoKylin Linux Server operating system.
By the agreement, Microsoft and China Standard will jointly develop and sell private and public cloud computing products. Microsoft and China Standard will also sponsor a joint virtual technology lab in Beijing aimed at making NeoKylin interoperable with Microsoft’s Hyper-V Cloud architecture.
Vendors and analysts expect China’s cloud computing market to grow fast. A survey by research firm Gartner found that 55% of Chinese respondents would like to spend more than 10% of their total IT budget on cloud computing. This compared with 42% in Europe and 49%in the U.S.