Russian IT and telecom tech solutions pitched to Samsung HQs
Some of them are already present in South Korea
Sep 25, 2015
Russian innovative companies, operating in a range of technology fields, primarily IT and telecom, have pitched their projects to the Samsung headquarters outside Seoul, in South Korea, the Skolkovo Foundation website announced.
Some of them are already present in South Korea. For example, MobilityLab, a Russian developer, has come to a partnership agreement with Samsung, being now Russia’s first developer of corporate mobile apps to join the Samsung Enterprise Alliance Program (SEAP). The SEAP partner status, awarded this past May, is expected to help the Russian company promote its WorksPad business app in the global corporate software market.
Another Russian developer, Moscow’s Intersoft Eurasia, has also reached an agreement with the South Korean tech giant. Intersoft Eurasia is developing a sophisticated dosimeter-radiometer, Do-Ra, a built-in device for mobile gadgets to help users identify radiation levels in an area. According to the Skolkovo Foundation, the company will present its new product to its Korean partner "in a near future." The source quoted Vladimir Yelin, the Do-Ra project manager, as saying that in the fourth quarter of this year Intersoft Eurasia will start making a multiplatform device called "DO-RA.Q," which will be adapted to Tizen, the new Korean operating system Samsung has been promoting internationally.
Some of them are already present in South Korea. For example, MobilityLab, a Russian developer, has come to a partnership agreement with Samsung, being now Russia’s first developer of corporate mobile apps to join the Samsung Enterprise Alliance Program (SEAP). The SEAP partner status, awarded this past May, is expected to help the Russian company promote its WorksPad business app in the global corporate software market.
Another Russian developer, Moscow’s Intersoft Eurasia, has also reached an agreement with the South Korean tech giant. Intersoft Eurasia is developing a sophisticated dosimeter-radiometer, Do-Ra, a built-in device for mobile gadgets to help users identify radiation levels in an area. According to the Skolkovo Foundation, the company will present its new product to its Korean partner "in a near future." The source quoted Vladimir Yelin, the Do-Ra project manager, as saying that in the fourth quarter of this year Intersoft Eurasia will start making a multiplatform device called "DO-RA.Q," which will be adapted to Tizen, the new Korean operating system Samsung has been promoting internationally.






