You can submit new articles, so we can make unique versions of them and distribute them for you.
If you want to simply publish the same article on 800 websites, you can tell us to do that.
You can see the archive and current status of all your article distributions.
You can order any number of high-quality articles - just let us know your keywords.
You can browse the archive of all the articles we have written for you.
You can order our Complete Service (10 high-quality articles plus 10 article distributions).
You can purchase more credits for our services and check your affiliate earnings.
Much more ...
The following article was published in our article directory on February 16, 2011.
Learn more about SpinDistribute Article Distribution System.
Article Category: Business
Author Name: xia zihui
Huawei Technologies Co awaits United States President Barack Obama's decision on whether it could use patents purchased from US-based 3Leaf Systems last year, which raised national security concerns in the US, China's biggest telecommunications equipment maker said Tuesday.
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, which vets deals on national security grounds, recommended Huawei last week to sell the 3Leaf assets, which the Shenzhen-based company bought for US$2 million in May.
Huawei, however, rejected the committee's recommendation and left the final decision to Obama on whether to block the deal within 15 days, said Bill Plummer, Huawei's Washington-based vice president of external affairs.
"To withdraw would have an adverse impact on our brand and reputation. We want to see the process through. We welcome the presidential review," Bloomberg News quoted Plummer as saying yesterday.
Members of the US Congress wrote at least two letters last year expressing concerns about Huawei's activities, followed by a third letter last week, which specifically raised concerns about the 3Leaf purchase.
The purchase of 3Leaf, a cloud computing firm, was part of Huawei's strategy to expand globally. Cloud computing is an Internet-based resource sharing technology.
In 2008, Huawei wanted to bid for US-based 3Com but gave it up on security concerns.
In 2010, a group of US lawmakers raised national security concerns about the Chinese company's bid to supply mobile telecom equipment to Sprint Nextel Corp.
Huawei Technologies Co awaits United States President Barack Obama's decision on whether it could use patents purchased from US-based 3Leaf Systems last year, which raised national security concerns in the US, China's biggest telecommunications equipment maker said Tuesday.
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, which vets deals on national security grounds, recommended Huawei last week to sell the 3Leaf assets, which the Shenzhen-based company bought for US$2 million in May.
Huawei, however, rejected the committee's recommendation and left the final decision to Obama on whether to block the deal within 15 days, said Bill Plummer, Huawei's Washington-based vice president of external affairs.
"To withdraw would have an adverse impact on our brand and reputation. We want to see the process through. We welcome the presidential review," Bloomberg News quoted Plummer as saying yesterday.
Members of the US Congress wrote at least two letters last year expressing concerns about Huawei's activities, followed by a third letter last week, which specifically raised concerns about the 3Leaf purchase.
The purchase of 3Leaf, a cloud computing firm, was part of Huawei's strategy to expand globally. Cloud computing is an Internet-based resource sharing technology.
In 2008, Huawei wanted to bid for US-based 3Com but gave it up on security concerns.
In 2010, a group of US lawmakers raised national security concerns about the Chinese company's bid to supply mobile telecom equipment to Sprint Nextel Corp.
Huawei Technologies Co awaits United States President Barack Obama's decision on whether it could use patents purchased from US-based 3Leaf Systems last year, which raised national security concerns in the US, China's biggest telecommunications equipment maker said Tuesday.
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, which vets deals on national security grounds, recommended Huawei last week to sell the 3Leaf assets, which the Shenzhen-based company bought for US$2 million in May.
Huawei, however, rejected the committee's recommendation and left the final decision to Obama on whether to block the deal within 15 days, said Bill Plummer, Huawei's Washington-based vice president of external affairs.
"To withdraw would have an adverse impact on our brand and reputation. We want to see the process through. We welcome the presidential review," Bloomberg News quoted Plummer as saying yesterday.
Members of the US Congress wrote at least two letters last year expressing concerns about Huawei's activities, followed by a third letter last week, which specifically raised concerns about the 3Leaf purchase.
The purchase of 3Leaf, a cloud computing firm, was part of Huawei's strategy to expand globally. Cloud computing is an Internet-based resource sharing technology.
In 2008, Huawei wanted to bid for US-based 3Com but gave it up on security concerns.
In 2010, a group of US lawmakers raised national security concerns about the Chinese company's bid to supply mobile telecom equipment to Sprint Nextel Corp.
Keywords:
Learn more about SpinDistribute Article Distribution System. We also offer one of the Best Article Writing Services out there - give us a try if you need great articles on various topics!
Each article you submit at SpinDistribute.com is sent through our innovative Article Distribution System to our network of more than 1840 publishers - about 55% of them are high-quality article directories, 30% of them are niche blogs and 15% of them are other content-rich websites.
To achieve the best possible success we only publish your article to most related websites. This means your article will show up on approximately 640 - 880 most related websites which will give you great SEO results.
We also offer a separate Professional Article Writing Service to everyone who's looking for high quality web content and well researched unique articles.