NEC Corp. and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. (Panasonic) may establish a joint venture to develop software for cellular telephone handsets, the companies said Tuesday.
No further details of the talks or envisaged venture were available. However the Tuesday morning edition of the Nihon Keizai Shimbun business newspaper said the venture will be established in October. By cooperating the two companies are hoping to reduce the cost of software development for phones, which represents about 70 percent of the expense of developing a new handset, the newspaper said.
NEC and Panasonic are two of Japan's biggest cellular phone makers and a tie-up between the two companies would make sense. Of the top-tier handset makers in Japan, the two companies are the only ones exclusively selling Linux-based 3G cell phones. Other major Japanese handset makers are using the Symbian OS for their 3G handsets. The two companies were also among the founding members of the Linux Phone Standards (LiPS) Forum.
Earlier this year the companies said they were in discussions with Texas Instruments Inc. to set up a three-way joint venture to design, develop and manufacture chips and other components for cell phones. Those discussions are continuing, an NEC spokeswoman said Tuesday.