Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Bezel-Less Nubia Z11 Android Smartphone To Launch Worldwide This September

Chinese phone maker Nubia is set to launch the Z11, an Android smartphone featuring a bezel-less design, this September. The handset will be available in 14 countries including the United States, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, Thailand and India.

Nubia, which is a brand owned by ZTE, first announced the Z11 back in June and was made available in China in July. The brand isn't that well-known in the West, but with the global launch of the handset, that's about to change.

Nubia Z11The Nubia Z11 comes with a screen-to-body ratio of 80 percent. Photo: Nubia

The Nubia Z11 comes with a 5.5-inch full HD 1080p IPS display and it looks like it doesn't have any bezels on either sides. It has a screen-to-body ratio of 81 percent, making it look like users are just holding a screen.

Under the hood, the Nubia Z11 is powered by a Snapdragon 820 processor with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of internal storage. If that's not enough, users can also pick up the 128GB model which comes with 6GB of RAM. Either way, users will still be able to expand storage via microSD.

Nubia Z11The Nubia Z11 is only 7.5mm thick. Photo: Nubia

In terms of photography, the Nubia Z11 comes with a 16-megapixel rear-facing camera which uses a Sony IMX298 sensor. The camera features an aperture of f/2.0, software image stabilization and phase detection autofocus, according to Engadget.

Accompanying the 16-megapixel camera on the back is a fingerprint sensor. The Nubia Z11 also comes with USB Type-C and a 3,000 mAh battery with Qualcomm Quick Charge 30 support. It runs Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow with Nubia UI 4.0 running on top.

In the audio department, Nubia didn't skimp out on the Z11. The device comes with an AK4376 sound chip and hardware to provide HiFi+ audio quality. The speakers also have Dolby Atmos Surround Sound support.

The Nubia Z11 will be available in starting in September and will sell for €499 or around $557 for the standard silver and grey models. There's also a special black gold color option which costs €599 or around $668. The handset will be available from Nubia's website, Amazon, eBay and other online retailers, according to The Verge.

Nubia Z11Pricing for the Nubia Z11 Photo: Nubia


Source: Bezel-Less Nubia Z11 Android Smartphone To Launch Worldwide This September

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Now, LeEco to assemble smartphones in India

NEW DELHI: Joining peers such as Xiaomi, Vivo and Gionee, Chinese handset maker LeEco will assemble its smartphones in India, investing Rs 50 crore in the facility.

Set up in partnership with Compal Electronics, the facility in Greater Noida will have an initial capacity of 60,000 units a month. This will be ramped up to 2,00,000 by the end of December.

"We have partnered with Compal for the facility and will start with the assembly of Le2. We will invest Rs 35 crore to start with and have earmarked another Rs 12-15 crore for the ramp-up," LeEco COO Smart Electronics Business Atul Jain told PTI.

He added that the facility, spread over 2,00,000 sq ft, will provide jobs to nearly 200 people.

"India will be a global export hub... We are already there in China, Hong Kong and will soon start selling in Russia, Indonesia and the US," he said. Le2, which was launched two months ago, has already sold 2,00,000 units in India.

"The facility will provide us about 6-8 p er cent cost benefit," he said, adding that LeEco has a similar partnership with Compal for its facility in China.

India attracted investment from 37 mobile manufacturing companies in the last one year that have generated 40,000 direct jobs and 1.25 lakh indirect employment. These include the likes of Xiaomi, Vivo, Gionee, Karbonn, Lava, Micromax, Intex, Jivi, iTel, and MTech.

"Handset manufacturing in India rose 185 per cent in value terms in 2015-16 to Rs 54,000 crore and is expected to touch Rs 94,000 crore this fiscal," IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

Also, according to estimates, FDI in electronic manufacturing has touched an all-time high of Rs 1.23 lakh crore in 2016. LeEco launched its handsets in India in January this year and televisions a few weeks ago. The company has already sold one million units of smartphones in India.

"The partnership with Compal is non-exclusive and both partners can work with other players," he said


Source: Now, LeEco to assemble smartphones in India

Monday, August 29, 2016

Images Of Meizu’s Star Trek-Themed Smartphone Surface

According to leaked images doing the rounds of the Chinese media, Meizu may be in line to release a Star Trek edition smartphone sooner rather than later. While not much is known about the device itself in terms of its hardware specifications, the image above seems to show off the Star Trek logo on the back of the phone, just above the speaker grill. Curiously, however, the device looks fairly regular at first glance, with not a whole lot going on in terms of themes or color schemes, which is something you might have expected from a device that comes with a movie or cartoon theme. Either way, as the image below indicates, the launcher will also be customized by the looks of it, but the app drawer will continue to remain conspicuous by its absence, as is to be expected considering this is a Meizu-branded smartphone.

The new Meizu Star Trek comes at a time when the latest Star Trek movie, 'Star Trek Beyond', is about to hit movie theaters in China, so the collaboration will likely bring publicity both for Meizu and for Paramount Pictures. According to reports, the movie will be released in China this Friday, September 2nd. There is, however, no info on when the phone will be launched. There's also no word at the moment on whether the upcoming phone from Meizu will be just a limited edition model of an existing device, or if the company is bringing an all-new smartphone to the market, so we'll have to wait to see how this whole thing actually plays out.

Limited edition smartphones themed around movies or cartoons are hardly a novelty. Samsung has already launched Avengers-themed Iron-Man editions of its premium smartphones, as well as Avenger-themed accessories featuring The Hulk, Thor, Captain America and Iron Man. Batman is yet another popular character that has featured prominently in Samsung phones, including this year's 'Injustice Edition' Galaxy S7 Edge. Chinese smartphone manufacturers haven't shied away from tying up with movie franchises either. OPPO brought out its Transformers-themed Find 7 and Vivo collaborated with Marvel for its Iron Man and Captain America-themed V3 and V3 Max smartphones earlier this year.

Meizu Star Trek leak KK (1)


Source: Images Of Meizu's Star Trek-Themed Smartphone Surface

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Apple, Samsung stay on top of fierce smartphone world

The smartphone business is cutthroat, and no one can stay on top for long. Even tech industry die-hards would have had trouble predicting that two Chinese upstarts, Oppo and Vivo, would come out of nowhere to collectively sell one in 10 new smartphones worldwide, as they did this spring. 

My Gadfly colleague Tim Culpan wrote a compelling column about how Chinese smartphone brands have their sights set on the U.S. and will inevitably steal sales in a country where Apple and Samsung sell a majority of smartphones — a much larger market share than they have in other parts of the world.

I'm not sure Tim is right. It's hard for relatively unknown brands to catch on in the U.S., at least not without expensive marketing campaigns or buying a brand already well known, as Lenovo did by purchasing IBM's ThinkPad laptop business a decade ago.

If Tim is correct in predicting a shake-up in the U.S. smartphone sales ranks, it still won't budge the profit picture, which has been as reliable as a metronome despite the ups and downs in the tumultuous industry. When it comes to what matters, Apple and Samsung rule, and they're unlikely to be dislodged soon. 

Mike Walkley at Canaccord has been keeping close tabs on the communications technology industry for more than 15 years. According to his data, since early 2012 — practically an eternity in the smartphone business — Apple and Samsung together have generated 100 percent or more of all operating profits among makers of premium-priced smartphones, which grab enough buzz to lift an entire brand. Yup, that means every other competing company is bleeding money or barely breaks even on what should be a high-margin product. 

There are a few important caveats in the Canaccord profit data. It doesn't include some important private companies, including China's Huawei and Xiaomi, which are selling a bigger chunk of the world's smartphones both in their home country and in fast-growing smartphone markets like India. Still, those companies aren't likely making much of a profit and certainly not enough to alter the picture of Apple and Samsung's profit dominance of higher-priced phones.

The bigger question mark is how the changing complexion of the smartphone market will dent the Apple and Samsung profit duopoly. Most of the volume and nearly all of the growth in smartphone sales is happening in places like India, Indonesia and the Middle East, where lower-cost smartphones rule.

India in particular seems up for grabs, and Apple is trying desperately to make India a foundation for future iPhone sales as the country nears passing the U.S. as the world's second-biggest buyer of smartphones behind China. But it's unclear whether premium-priced phones will ever catch on among India's consumers. The average smartphone sales price there is expected to be $102 by 2018, according to research firm IDC, while an iPhone sells for an average price of nearly $600.

What's happened in the high-volume end of the smartphone market hasn't eroded profits at the luxury end — at least not yet. But it's easy to imagine that Apple and Samsung will need to concentrate less on their flagship iPhones and Galaxy phones, and more on the lower-priced tier to the point where their profit advantage erodes. Already the average iPhone sale price slipped to a two-year low in the June quarter after Apple introduced a lower-priced iPhone for the masses.

Even as the smartphone industry shifted from hypergrowth to barely budging, Apple and Samsung have continued to gorge all available profits at the fat end of the market. The question is whether the dominance its rivals can't shake might be undone by the slow-growth, more profit-conscious smartphone market that we're entering now.  


Source: Apple, Samsung stay on top of fierce smartphone world

Saturday, August 27, 2016

China’s Huawei - Honor 8 officially launched in Europe

The Huawei Honor Note 8 can be a great alternative for the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 (Photo : YouTube / Weebo)

Huawei launched its amazing smartphone in China in July, last week in United States and on Aug 24 in Europe. The Chinese giant who took the top spot in Chinese smartphone market recently as per IDC reports is trying to strengthen its position in the World market.

With the launch of Honor 8 in US and Europe, the company is expecting huge profits with this release. According to store.hihonor, the company claims that Honor 8 is the best in its price range when compared to other smartphones. The smartphone is tremendously well designed and its features will make the world own it.

Design - The slick body of Honor 8 is made up of heavy 2.5D glass on the front screen. The back of the phone is a glass slab with 15 different layers beneath it. The smaller size of this phone gives it a sturdy feeling. The finished aluminum alloy and ultra-narrow bezel design give a much stronger design.

Fingerprint Sensor - This is one of the innovative features of this phone and reads the finger print more accurately and correctly for the first time. The scanner can also be used for gestures, Swipe up and down to access the notification menu or side to side to scroll through photos. With the Fingerprint technology, you can unlock your Honor 8 in only 0.4 seconds.

CPU - Honor 8 is powered with Octa-core CPU @4x2.3Ghz + 4x1.8Ghz on a 16mm architecture. The CPU chipset contains i5 co-processor which controls honor 8 sensors and other features. Both 32 Giga bytes and 64 Giga bytes internal storage phones have 4 Giga Bytes of RAM.

Display - It is made up with 5.2-inch FHD display, 96 percent high color gamut, color enhancement and dynamic pixel level contrast adjustment provides a better viewer experience, with vivid and crisp images. To reduce eye strain, the mobile is equipped with eye care mode feature.

Battery - Honor 8 is equipped with fast charging type battery in which 46 percent of the battery from 0 percent can be charged in just 30 minutes with the help of 9V/2A fast charging technology. The smart phone is powered with 3000mAh battery.

Intelligent communication - Smart double antenna switch and smart dual-band Wi-Fi support the features Honor 8 to be the best phone for connectivity. Smart control 4.0 allows the user to control devices even in the absence of internet connection.

Speakers - Integrated speakers provides high-quality music playback.

According to Android Authority, the Chinese company has set up a price of 445 USD for 32 Gigabytes phone and 500 USD for 64 Gigabytes phone in Eurozone. The company is expecting a good business of Honor 8 in Europe and US markets.

Honor 8 hands on - a new stylish affordable flagship!

 

Copyright 2015 en.yibada.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.


Source: China's Huawei - Honor 8 officially launched in Europe

Friday, August 26, 2016

First China, Now the US Military Wants Artificial Intelligence Weapons

Hot on the heels of confirmed reports that China is getting ready to equip cruise missiles with artificial intelligence targeting capability, a "summer study" on autonomy done by the Defense Science Board shows that the U.S. has already been thinking of weaponizing artificial intelligence.

The DSB is a federal advisory committee to the U.S. Secretary of Defense, also known as SecDef, a post currently held by Ashton Carter. He is also the CEO of the United States Department of Defense.

According to the publicly available DSB study, it "offers important recommendations to identify the science, engineering, and policy problems that must be solved to permit greater operational use of autonomy across all warfighting domains."

The 121-page report then goes on to describe detailed recommendations that address the following areas:

  • Accelerating DoD's adoption of autonomous capabilities
  • Strengthening the operational pull for autonomy
  • Expanding the envelope of technologies available for use on DoD missions
  • The report also outlines various projects that the government can undertake that will utilize the power of artificial intelligence, machine learning and data analytics to automate several dangerous processes that are currently carried out manually, such as "offensive maritime mining" and "mine counter measure" missions.

    Although the report focuses mostly on defense aspects, it is clear that the DSB is strongly recommending the use of artificial intelligence and related technologies for warfare.

    Last week, we reported that China was developing cruise missiles that could pick their own targets and make course alterations using AI technology. While this new report from the DSB is in no way a response to China's threat – because it predates the Chinese announcement – it clearly shows that artificial intelligence may now have extended application capability in the defense and offense efforts of the United States of America.

    If you're thinking of cyborgs delivering lethal payloads and smart sensor systems that activate defense countermeasures, you've hit the nail on the head. That's exactly what the DSB is recommending. It also suggests ways in which media and devices confiscated from "adversaries" can provide intel on the adversaries movements and decisions.

    It's a scary thought, but the preservation of human life features heavily as an undertone throughout the document. By recommending artificial intelligence and autonomous systems, the DSB suggests some very hazardous situations that can better be handled without human intervention.

    As dangerous as it sounds, artificial intelligence and autonomy of defensive and offensive could actually be a good thing. For one, fewer lives will be lost in the services; but the key factor here is that artificial intelligence research could get a big boost if the government is funding it. Current investments in the AI space are primarily made by corporates creating viable lines of business for their future. Whether it's Apple Siri or IBM Watson, that is the primary purpose. But when the U.S. Government comes into the picture, the entire AI ecosystem will get a booster shot of steroids.

    Besides, there is precedence to lend credibility to that view. Here are just a few of the military's inventions that you and I cannot live without today.

    GPS:

    Global Positioning System technology is what enables the use of advanced navigation systems that we now have right in our hands – in our smartphones, cars and other connected devices. Ex-President Bill Clinton was the one who made it publicly available in 1996, before which it was restricted to military applications.

    Cargo Pants:

    Believe it or not, this was invented for British soldiers in the 1930s as a better way to carry ammunition. But it would not be until the 1990s that the public found them "cool" enough to start wearing as a fashion trend that has lasted for more than two decades now.

    Computers:

    Yes, the world's first programmable computer, ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer), was designed and built during the late 1930s and early 1940s during World War II for ballistics research.

    Microwave:

    Nuking your food would have never been possible if the military hadn't done it first! Without the discovery that the radar transmitters of World War II actually generated enough heat to cook food, we wouldn't have microwave technology today.

    Hundreds of products that we consider indispensable today originally had military applications, including the Jeep, duct tape, superglue, digital photography, silly putty, nuclear energy and believe it or not, virtual reality.

    Much of our consumer world is filled with erstwhile exclusively military tech, so it shouldn't come as a surprise that the DSP is urging DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) to go on another tech research spree into the world of artificial intelligence.

    If you're reading this on Apple News, please favorite the 1RedDrop channel (next to our logo) to add us to your news feed, or Like our page on Facebook. Please bookmark our site for more insightful articles on current and future technologies that are changing our lives.


    Source: First China, Now the US Military Wants Artificial Intelligence Weapons

    Thursday, August 25, 2016

    iBerry Auxus 4X Flagship Smartphone Launched in India with 4GB of RAM at Rs. 15,990

    iBerry Auxus 4X Smartphone: iBerry a China-Based smartphone making company has silently launched a new Flagship smartphone under its Auxus series in India – the Auxus 4X with a price tag of Rs. 15,990. It is now exclusively available to buy Via. eBay India only in black colour option. According to the company This new Auxus 4X is "India's first 4GB RAM unibody premium smartphone. check more details about iBerry Auxus 4X below.

    iBerry Auxus 4X Flagship Smartphone Launched in India with 4GB of RAM at Rs. 15,990 iBerry-Auxus-4X-Flagship-Smartphone-Launched-in-India-with-4GB-of-RAM-at-Rs.-15990

    iBerry-Auxus-4X-Flagship-Smartphone-Launched-in-India-with-4GB-of-RAM-at-Rs.-15990

    iBerry Auxus 4X Flagship Smartphone Launched in India with 4GB of RAM at Rs. 15,990

    Specifications: The New iBerry Auxus 4X Flagship handset features a 5.5-Inch Full HD IPS 1920×1080 Pixels resolution display with a Pixel density of 400ppi. The Handset supports Dual SIM with 4G connectivity and runs on Android 6.0 Marshmallow Operating system out of the box. It is equipped with a 32GB of Internal storage, that can be expandable later via micro SD card up to 128GB. This new smartphone is powered by a 2GHz octa-core Helio P10 MT6755 processor, with Mali-T860 GPU that is paired with 4GB of RAM.

    The Handset Sports a 13-megapixel Primary rear camera, with a Dual tone LED Flash and a 5-megapixel secondary front facing camera on board for better selfies and Video calling. It also comes with Anti-scratch rugged finish back panel to ensure a firm grip on your hand. It is Packed with a 3000 mAh non-removable battery pack, that claims to offer up to 12 hours of talk time on 4G network and also supports a Quick Charging support.

    Coming to the connectivity options, The Auxus 4X Handset offers 4G-LTE, 2G/3G Wi-Fi, GPS, FM radio, Bluetooth 4.0, WiFi Hotspot, GPS/ A-GPS, and USB Type C and measures 148.40×74.20×7.30 mm. It is now exclusively available to buy Via. eBay India with a Price tag of Rs. 15,990 only for the limited period of time and will come in black colour option.

    Stay tuned for more news and updates and Press CTRL+D right now to bookmark this page: FitNHit


    Source: iBerry Auxus 4X Flagship Smartphone Launched in India with 4GB of RAM at Rs. 15,990

    Wednesday, August 24, 2016

    Vivo launches 4G VoLTE-enabled smartphone in India

    New Delhi: Chinese smartphone company Vivo on Wednesday launched a new 4G VoLTE-enabled smartphone in India at Rs 7,490.

    Y21L features 4.5-inch FWVGA display with a resolution of 854×480 pixels and is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 410 processor paired up with 1GB RAM.

    The device has 16GB of internal memory, expandable up to 128GB via micro-SD card and runs on Funtouch OS 2.5 based on Android 5.1 Lollipop operating system and houses 2,000mAh battery.

    "With this device, we reassure our commitment to offer quality products to our valued customers," said Vivek Zhang, CMO, Vivo India, in a statement.

    The device is equipped with 5MP rear camera, 2MP front camera and has features like palm and voice capture.

    IANS


    Source: Vivo launches 4G VoLTE-enabled smartphone in India

    Tuesday, August 23, 2016

    Indonesia’s smartphone market shows continued weakness

    Indonesia's smartphone market remained in the doldrums in Q2, with shipments down 5 per cent year-on-year as new local content regulations have slowed growth, according to a report from Counterpoint Research.

    In a market where smartphone penetration is still below 50 per cent, the slowdown is surprising.

    Even though the market rose 8 per cent sequentially, after a sharp fall in Q1, Counterpoint senior analyst Jim Lee said there is still a lack of clarity regarding local content sourcing rules.

    "The regulations have been largely inconsistent as government continues to tweak the 'Make in Indonesia' rules, now making it a 'multi-tier scheme' introducing contribution from software as well." He noted that this will make it even more complex to calculate the real value addition of a brand to the overall production in the country.

    With the country's mobile operators rolling out 4G networks in more than 100 cities over the past year, sales of LTE models have soared – rising 900 per cent year-on-year in Q2.

    The government's push for 30 per cent of content to be sourced locally for LTE smartphones has driven local production, with 88 per cent of the 4G models now manufactured locally.

    The top fiveSamsung remained on top with a 22 per cent market share, while Oppo climbed to second for the first time with a 17.3 per cent share (see chart below, click to enlarge). Indonesia is now Oppo's second largest market after China.Indonesia smartphone Q2Oppo has invested heavily in domestic manufacturing and distribution channel expansion, and had aggressive offline campaigns targeting the youth through its selfie-centric phones.

    Asus was third with a 13.9 per cent share. Its Zenfone C was the fifth bestselling model during the quarter.

    Chinese vendors continued to boost their share and accounted for a third of Indonesia's total smartphone shipments in Q2.

    Local brands Evercoss and Smartfren remained in the top five, with market shares of 6.4 per cent and 5.9 per cent, respectively. A shift in strategy for Evercoss to higher ASP phones led to a decline in smartphone shipments during the quarter.

    E-commerce channels accounted for 12 per cent of smartphone shipments.

    Two-thirds of handset shipments during the quarter were smartphones, and 65 per cent of mobile phones were manufactured in Indonesia.


    Source: Indonesia's smartphone market shows continued weakness

    Monday, August 22, 2016

    Well-performing smartphone that’s worth its price

    After launching the affordable Rs 7,999 TCL 560 smartphone with a unique eye-verification feature in India, Chinese global consumer electronics brand TCL Corporation has unveiled another one in the budget category.

    The Rs 10,990 TCL 562 smartphone features a 5.5-inch full-HD IPS display, octa-core Helio P10 MT6755M processor, 3GB RAM and runs on Android 6.0 Marshmallow operating system.

    The device has 32GB internal memory, 13MP auto-focus rear camera with LED dual tone flash and a 5MP front camera with wide-view angle and houses 2,960mAh battery.

    Here is what works for the device.

    The curved metallic, diamond-cut design frame is sleek and modern, making the smartphone thinner and lighter and making for a comfortable in-hand fit.

    Weighing 150 grams, TCL 562 is lighter than its competitors like InFocus M680, Redmi Note 3 and Honor 5C despite packing a larger 5.5-inch screen.

    The fingerprint scanner at the home button unlocks the device within 0.3 seconds, thanks to 360-degree precision.

    We also set up biometric protection for few apps and those would not open without the fingerprint, hence added security for your apps. You can set up this feature for up to five apps with five different fingerprints.

    For example, if you use Instagram regularly, you can configure any one fingerprint for the site. Every time you unlock the phone with that finger, Instagram will open instantly.

    The full-HD IPS display enhances viewing experience and produces bright, sharp colours and is ideal for multimedia consumption and for those looking to create, share and enjoy digital content on the go.

    Running on octa-core Helio P10 processor combined with 3GB RAM, the TCL 562 performed with finesse even with more than five apps running in the background.

    When playing graphic-intensive games like "Asphalt 8: Airborne", the device did not heat up over extensive usage, defying the current norm where almost all smartphones heat up while performing high-end tasks.

    The TCL 562 sports a bigger 13MP rear camera as compared to 8MP rear camera in the TCL 560 and captures good-quality images in bright-light conditions. The 5MP front camera with flash is good for selfie lovers.

    The 84.4 degree wide angle does make a difference while taking selfies, adding more scene into the pictures, thereby making the images look more stunning.

    The TCL 562 also offers an in-built Kindle app for book lovers.

    The battery easily ran for a day-and-a-half under mixed usage of internet surfing, light gaming and video watching. (Here, Redmi Note 3 in the same price range with 4,050mAh battery has an upper hand.)

    What does not work.

    We found the outdoor visibility of TCL 562 to be low and you need to set the brightness to 80 per cent or higher for a bright and comfortable viewing experience.

    Under low-light conditions, the 13MP camera struggled a bit to capture good shots.

    Conclusion: The TCL 562 packs a newer Android version and with a balanced configuration, the device is worth your money.


    Source: Well-performing smartphone that's worth its price

    Sunday, August 21, 2016

    Indian Smartphone Market Grew 17.1% In Q2 2016: IDC

    New Delhi: The Indian smartphone market registered a healthy 17.1 percent growth over the previous quarter this year and a marginal 3.7 percent growth over the second quarter of 2015, market research firm International Data Corporation(IDC) said on Friday.

    According to the IDC`s "Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker", smartphone market revived after declining for two successive quarters by registering 27.5 million units of smartphones shipments in Q2 2016. 

    Both global and Indian vendor`s shipments declined year-on-year, while China-based vendors` shipments grew at 75 percent.

    Online share of smartphones dipped to 28 percent in from 35 percent in the previous quarter. 

    "Healthy growth in the offline channel, online-focused vendors expanding their footprint into retail channel followed by stringent norms to restrain excessive discounting on online platform are some of the reasons that could be attributed for online share decline this quarter", said Karthik J, Senior Market Analyst, Client Devices, IDC, India in a statement. 

    Apple`s iPhone SE failed to make any significant impact in the premium segment while its previous generation iPhone 5S continued to contribute majority volume.

    Samsung continued to lead the Indian smartphone market with 25.1 percent share, registering 10.9 percent sequential growth over previous quarter and 15 percent growth from the same period last year. 

    Micromax retained second position with 19.9 percent growth over the previous quarter. 

    Lenovo Group (including Motorola) with 10.3 percent growth over the last quarter regained the third position in smartphone market. 

    Intex slipped to fourth position as its shipments dropped 9.8 percent sequentially and 30.1 percent over last year. 

    Reliance Jio maintained its position as the fifth largest smartphone vendor with 12.3 percent sequential growth in Q2 2016, the report said. 

    Read Also: Income Tax Collection From Mumbai Rises 9PCt To67,185 CroreNiFCO To Raise $50mn Through Offshore Fund In 4-5 Months

    Source: IANS
    Source: Indian Smartphone Market Grew 17.1% In Q2 2016: IDC

    Saturday, August 20, 2016

    Nokia Is Bringing Their OZO 360 Camera To China - With A $15K Price Cut

    The OZO 360 degree camera from Nokia is arguably the best in its class, but for the world's most enthusiastic VR market, China, it's been out of reach, selling only in Europe in the U.S. – until now.

    Nokia is planning to sell the device through a partnership with Chinese internet LeEco, and it's getting a new price to match its new market.

    The company has slashed the camera's price tag by a quarter globally, bringing the cost of the camera down to $45,000 USD just six months after it launched in Europe and the U.S. for $60,000 USD.

    OZO, which claims to be the world's first "professional" VR camera, is a teardrop-shaped device that holds eight 2K cameras, capturing spherical video and surround sound for immersive VR experiences.

    Nokia will partner with LeVR, the VR division of LeEco, to distribute the camera. LeEco, often dubbed the 'Netflix of China', has diversified heavily in the past two years, investing in everything from entertainment to autonomous cars. The company took their first public steps into the VR market in December with the launch of their first headset, the LeVR Cool 1. Currently the headset is only compatible with LeEco phones.

    For Nokia, tapping the Chinese market is an important step. The country's enthusiasm for VR has surpassed other markets, with top internet companies and device manufacturers scrambling to give consumers their first VR experience. It's an enthusiasm that's matched on the consumer side too, as low-cost smartphone-enabled headsets flood the market, and VR immersion experiences, such as gaming arcades, gather steam in mainland China.

    It's a country that remains incredibly price sensitive however, which could factor into Nokia's decision to slash the price of the OZO by 25 percent. According to Nokia, the price cut and LeVR partnership in the Chinese market will "increase the availability of OZO and make the camera available to a broader range of professional content producers."


    Source: Nokia Is Bringing Their OZO 360 Camera To China - With A $15K Price Cut

    Friday, August 19, 2016

    Lenovo, Xiaomi among chinese cos pushing up smartphone shipments in India

    Smartphone market in India posted a 17.1 per cent sequential rise in shipments to 27.5 million units in April-June quarter, with Chinese vendors like Lenovo, Xiaomi and Vivo driving the growth, research firm IDC said.

    The shipments have revived after two successive quarters of decline. Handset makers had shipped 23.5 million units in the first quarter of this year.

    Shipments were up marginally 3.7 per cent from 26.5 million units in the second quarter of 2015, International Data Corporation (IDC) said in a report on Friday.

    Samsung continued to lead with 25.1 per cent market share followed by Micromax (12.9 per cent), Lenovo Group (7.7 per cent), Intex (7.1 per cent) and Reliance Jio (6.8 per cent).

    About 33.7 million units of feature phones were shipped in the second quarter this year, up 2.6 per cent over last year.

    "Cautious spending behaviour of consumers clubbed with feature phone's continued relevance to the target customer's usage needs and vendors re-calibrating the channel to increase their share are some of the factors which are driving the volumes for feature phones," IDC said.

    With the festive season approaching, IDC expects shipments of both smartphone and feature phone to sequentially grow in the third quarter.

    Until now, Lenovo was the only China-based vendor to ship over a million units in a quarter, while this quarter saw additional three vendors joining the million shipment bandwagon, Senior Market Analyst, IDC India said.

    The premium segment (over Rs 20,000) saw Chinese vendors capturing around one-third market share in April-June quarter, up 9 per cent from the year-ago period.


    Source: Lenovo, Xiaomi among chinese cos pushing up smartphone shipments in India

    Thursday, August 18, 2016

    Huawei G9 Plus Smartphone Launched in China with 3GB/4GB of RAM and Snapdragon 625 Soc

    Huawei G9 Plus Smartphone: Huawei a Chinese multinational networking Company has recently launched a new Flagship smartphone with a Dual Rear camera in India – The Huawei P9, Now the China-based company officially launched a new 4G smartphone under its G series in China – The Huawei G9 Plus starting at 2399 Yuan or roughly Rs. 24157. It is the successor of Huawei G9 Lite which is sold in foreign markets with the name of Huawei P9 Lite. check mored details about this latest handset below.

    Huawei G9 Plus Smartphone Launched in China with 3GB/4GB of RAM and Snapdragon 625 Soc Huawei-G9-Plus-Smartphone-Launched-in-China

    Huawei-G9-Plus-Smartphone-Launched-in-China

    Huawei G9 Plus Smartphone Launched in China

    Specifications: The New Huawei G9 Plus features a 2.5D curved glass 5.5-inch Full HD 1920 x 1080 pixels resolution in-cell display. The Handset is powered by 2.0GHz Snapdragon 625 octa-core processor with Adreno 506 GPU. It will be available in two RAM and storage options – 3GB RAM/32GB Internal storage and 4GB RAM/64GB Internal storage options. Both the storage versions can be expandable Later Via. MicroSD card slot up to 128GB.

    It supports Dual SIM with 4G LTE and runs on Android 6.0 Marshmallow Operating system with EMUI 4.1 Skin on the top. The Huawei G Plus Sports a 16 Megapixel Primary rear camera with LED Flashlight, AF, OIS, PDAF phase focusing. It can also record 4K Video Capability along with a suite of shooting modes that help you in adding different effects to the photos captured. The G9 Plus sports an 8-Megapixel Secondary front facing camera on board for better selfies and Video Calling.

    Coming to the connectivity the new Huawei G9 Plus handset offers, 4G LTE, 2G/3G, 3.5mm Audio Jack, FM Radio, USB OTG, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, and USB Type-C options. The P9 measures 7.3mm of thickness and weighs 160 grams. It also features some of the sensors like Gravity Sensor, Compass, Ambient Light Sensor, Proximity Sensor, Gyroscope and Hall Effect Sensor. The 3GB RAM/ 32Gb Storage version will be available with a price Tag of 2399 Yuan or roughly Rs. 24157 INR. There is no Price and availability details about the 4GB RAM version. The registrations for the device has been already started and sale will start from 25th August 2016.

    Stay tuned for more news and updates and Press CTRL+D right now to bookmark this page: FitNHit


    Source: Huawei G9 Plus Smartphone Launched in China with 3GB/4GB of RAM and Snapdragon 625 Soc

    Wednesday, August 17, 2016

    Lenovo first-quarter profit leaps, helped by asset sale, but smartphone losses linger

    By Yimou Lee

    HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's Lenovo Group 0992.HK, the world's biggest PC maker, said first-quarter profit jumped nearly two-thirds, helped by a one-off asset sale, but its mobile arm lost money again as a $3 billion bet on buying Motorola to diversify has yet to pay off.

    Lenovo said on Thursday net profit climbed 64 percent to $173 million for the quarter ended June compared with a year earlier, when profit was hit by restructuring costs. A $132 million gain from the sale of a Beijing office property boosted profit well beyond the $130.1 million average estimate of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters SmartEstimates.

    But the company, which bought the Motorola handset business in 2014 to reduce exposure to a shrinking global PC market, said global smartphone shipments plunged 31 percent in the quarter from a year ago. It said the mobile division - housing Motorola and other operations - won't make a profit before the fiscal half beginning October 2017.

    "We can completely turn the business around," Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Yang Yuanqing told Reuters in an interview. Lenovo is eyeing the more lucrative premium smartphone sector, he said, while ramping up marketing expenses.

    Lenovo previously said it expected a turnaround by this quarter in Motorola's mobile operations, bought from Google GOOGL.O. On Thursday, Yang said Motorola "has made a lot of progress", though the company declined to give numbers for the operations, saying they're now merged into its overall mobile business.

    At 0540 GMT (1.40 a.m. ET), Lenovo shares were up 3.2 percent, outperforming a 1.2 percent gain in the broader market .HSI.

    The firm's drive into smartphones comes as growth in the global market slows while competition intensifies. According to researcher TrendForce, Lenovo had a 4.5 percent share of the global smartphone market in April-June, making it a distant seventh after top player Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's 005930.KS 24 percent and Apple Inc's AAPL.O 15 percent.

    Like Chinese peer Xiaomi Inc [XTC.UL], Lenovo has been focusing on diversifying away from intense competition in low-margin devices in China - still the world's largest handset market but affected by the slowing Chinese economy.   Continued...


    Source: Lenovo first-quarter profit leaps, helped by asset sale, but smartphone losses linger

    Tuesday, August 16, 2016

    Apple To Set Up Research Center In China Announces Tim Cook

    Concerned over falling iPhone sales and the phenomenal rise of Chinese smartphone players, Apple CEO has pledged to set up a full-fledged research and development facility to be open later this year in the country.

    According to a wall Street Journal report, Cook met senior Chinese government officials including Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli, during his visit to the country this week.

    "We look forward to expanding our operations in China with a new research and development centre as we continue to grow our talented team here," an Apple spokesperson said.

    According to the report, China has been the biggest drag on Apple's sales in the past two quarters.

    Greater China sales, once Apple's fastest growing market, fell to $12.49 billion in the second quarter -- a 26 per cent year-over-year decline.

    On his last visit to China, Cook announced to invest $1 billion in Chinese ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing.

    Apple and Chinese bank card association UnionPay Shoppers also launched Apple Pay earlier this year.

    Nearly 20 Chinese banks have let their customers tie their bank accounts to Apple Pay, and UnionPay has provided compatible point-of-sale (POS) terminals for users to complete the transactions.

    Cook last year said China would be Apple's largest market within two years and that the number of Apple stores in China would almost double to 40 within that time frame.


    Source: Apple To Set Up Research Center In China Announces Tim Cook

    Monday, August 15, 2016

    IDC: Top 3 China Smartphone Vendors Maintains Streak with Combined 47% Total Market Share in 2016Q2

    Press Releasedotted lines IDC: Top 3 China Smartphone Vendors Maintains Streak with Combined 47% Total Market Share in 2016Q2

    15 Aug 2016

    BEIJING, August 15th, 2016 – According to the latest International Data Corporation (IDC) Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, the top smartphone vendors Huawei, OPPO and vivo cornered 47% of the China smartphone market in the second quarter of 2016. In 2015 and 2016Q1, the top three smartphone vendors for that period had a market share of 43% and 45% respectively. This shows that the market continues to consolidate further as the share of the top three vendors continue to increase.

    "The success of Huawei, OPPO, and vivo in the market can be attributed to their concerted effort to build their brand and aggressive marketing to attract the consumers, along with the focus on product differentiation," says Xiaohan Tay, Senior Market Analyst, Client Devices Research, IDC Asia/Pacific.

    Some of the key highlights in the China smartphone market in 2016Q2 include:

    Strength in offline channels. OPPO and vivo continued to excel largely due to the strength of their offline channels, with their shops and advertisements occupying most of the Tier 3 to Tier 5 cities. This is still a more convenient option for consumers living in these cities, as they can easily head to one of the physical shops for after-sale services. In the Tier 1 and 2 cities, they continued their focus on sponsorships of key entertainment shows to win consumers over. JD's 618 sale event last June also saw OPPO and vivo posted growth in terms of the number of phones sold through eTailers.

    Focused marketing messages on a key technology. The marketing messages of the top two vendors for 2016Q2, namely OPPO and Huawei, also focused on one or two key attributes. OPPO promoted its fast-charge technology along with its famous tag line 'charge for 5 minutes to be able to talk on the phone for 2 hours' and focused on camera/selfie features when promoting its latest R9. On the other hand, Huawei focused on promoting P9, making it one of the key products for the quarter. Huawei specifically targeted consumers in search of a good camera in its marketing messages, putting emphasis on its Leica lens and its flatness. The tactic worked and spread like wildfire through WeChat, and helped it to gain consumer interest.

    Celebrity endorsements. With growth coming mainly from replacement users in PRC, vendors employed aggressive marketing in the past few months. OPPO hired a few brand ambassadors to launch its R9 series prompting other vendors to follow suit after seeing their strong success. vivo hired a famous Korean star who's wildly popular in China as its brand ambassador while Xiaomi hired three different ambassadors for its Redmi line. Recently, Huawei also announced a brand ambassador for its Honor line in China – a departure from its previous marketing message focused on product features. Most of these ambassadors seem to target the younger crowd. While having brand ambassadors is not a new phenomenon in China, vendors seem to be more aggressive with their marketing strategies. This is seen to be a new tactic for vendors such as Xiaomi that never used to spend on advertising.

    While the Chinese vendors all saw QoQ growth in the market, Apple continued to decline in its shipment volumes. The iPhone SE was not a hit in China, where consumers prefer larger screen-sized phones. In 2016Q2, close to 90% of phones shipped in China had screen sizes that were 5 inches and above. Apple fans are holding out for the new iPhones to be launched in 2016Q3, which could likely give Apple a boost in China.

    "In the past, Xiaomi started the trend of selling its phones online and other vendors soon followed suit and created their own online brand. After vendors witnessed OPPO's success with its R9, they also started riding on the trend of hiring celebrity endorsers to represent their brand and appeal more to the young crowd," adds Tay.

    Despite the market being saturated and driven mainly by replacement users, vendors are still aggressive with their marketing tactics, experimenting with new ways to win over consumers.

    "Hiring celebrity endorsers may help increase numbers in the short-term, but this alone may not be sufficient to drive numbers in the long run. As there is very little differentiation across products to warrant significant brand loyalty, vendors must constantly think out of the box to get people hyped up about their products," ends Tay.

    - END -

    About IDC Trackers

    IDC Tracker products provide accurate and timely market size, vendor share, and forecasts for hundreds of technology markets from more than 100 countries around the globe. Using proprietary tools and research processes, IDC's Trackers are updated on a semiannual, quarterly, and monthly basis. Trackers offers timely and critical intelligence to aid our clients in strategic and tactical planning to compete effectively in China.

    About IDC

    International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory services, and events for the information technology, telecommunications, and consumer technology markets. With more than 1,100 analysts worldwide, IDC offers global, regional, and local expertise on technology and industry opportunities and trends in over 110 countries. IDC's analysis and insight helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment community to make fact-based technology decisions and to achieve their key business objectives. Founded in 1964, IDC is a subsidiary of IDG, the world's leading technology media, research, and events company. To learn more about IDC, please visit www.idc.com. Follow IDC on Twitter at @IDC

    Related IDC Tracker

    China Quarterly Provincial Mobile Phone Tracker

    China Monthly Mobile Phone Tracker

    -# # # -

    For enquiries, please contact:

    Frank Wang

    Associate Vice President, IDC China

    Phone: (+86-10) 5889 1588

    Email: fwang@idc.com

    Juliana Yu

    Sr. CSR, IDC China

    Phone: (+86-10) 5889 1536

    Email: jyu@idc.com

    Jessica Qiao

    Sr. Marketing Manager, IDC China

    Phone: (+86-10) 5889 1766

    Email: jqiao@idc.com

    Contact

    For more information, contact:

    Juliana Yujyu@idc.com+86-10-5889 1536

    Frank Wangfwang@idc.com+86-10-5889 1558

    Jessica Qiaojqiao@idc.com+86-10-5889 1766


    Source: IDC: Top 3 China Smartphone Vendors Maintains Streak with Combined 47% Total Market Share in 2016Q2

    Saturday, August 13, 2016

    Price Motorola Moto E3 Power and specifications, Smartphone Batteries Tough Marshmallow

    Price Motorola Moto E3 Power and specifications, Smartphone Batteries Tough Marshmallow

    Price Motorola Moto E3 Power and specifications, Smartphone Batteries Tough Marshmallow

    Price Motorola Moto E3 Power and specifications, Smartphone Batteries Tough Marshmallow

    Price Motorola Moto E3 Power and specifications, Smartphone Batteries Tough Marshmallow

    Company promises autonomous flying car, coming soon

    Company promises autonomous flying car, coming soon

    Gionee S6s prices and specifications, Phablet Fingerprint with 8MP Camera Selfie

    Gionee S6s prices and specifications, Phablet Fingerprint with 8MP Camera Selfie

    Taking a page from Tesla's playbook, Volvo now advertises its cars as 'self-driving'

    Taking a page from Tesla's playbook, Volvo now advertises its cars as 'self-driving'

    Should you wait for the iPhone 8?

    Should you wait for the iPhone 8?

    Hack makes it possible to factory reset any Samsung phone without a password

    Hack makes it possible to factory reset any Samsung phone without a password

    There's already an Android phone with 8GB of RAM on the way

    There's already an Android phone with 8GB of RAM on the way

    Samsung may not make the high-performance Note 7 everyone wanted

    Samsung may not make the high-performance Note 7 everyone wanted

    Google might have just leaked a picture of its next-gen Nexus phone

    Google might have just leaked a picture of its next-gen Nexus phone


    Source: Price Motorola Moto E3 Power and specifications, Smartphone Batteries Tough Marshmallow

    Calling China

    Wang Zhao—AFP

    Wang Zhao—AFP

    Phones are everywhere in world's biggest market.

    Sometimes it seems that no one in China, from toddlers to octogenarians, ladies in swimming pools to deliverymen mid-maneuver, is without a cellphone at hand—and statistically it is more or less true. There are almost as many mobile accounts as people in the world's most populous country.

    China had 1.3 billion mobile users by the end of 2015, and nearly 30 percent of them—a swathe of humanity larger than the whole population of the United States—were connected to the 4G network, according to its ministry of industry and information technology.

    The zoned-out zombie stare of the smartphone addict is a common sight everywhere on the increasingly mobile-addled planet, but it can seem all the more ubiquitous in China. People retreat behind their little blue screens at any time of day or night, in dark concert halls, taking a break from the kids on the playroom floor, or in the company of a crowd of uniformed coworkers doing exactly the same thing.

    Nearly everyone who accesses the Internet—a staggering 92.5 percent—does so via their mobile, official Chinese bodies say. They are hedged in by the "Great Firewall," strict regulations that block politically sensitive content and foreign sites such as Facebook, Google and Twitter.

    As a result Chinese smartphone users spend much of their time on native apps that may have begun as knock-offs of censored foreign services but are now paving the way for the future of Western technology.

    These days, Chinese users can send their grandmother a virtual red envelope of money, order a box of live scorpions or summon a beautician to the door for an in-house manicure, all without even leaving the interface of a single app, such as the monstrously popular WeChat.

    The huge population of mobile users, which boomed as a result of a burgeoning middle class, represents one of the world's most important markets for companies such as Apple. The California giant's profits slumped last quarter due in large part to slowing sales in Greater China, including Hong Kong and Taiwan, where revenues dropped 33 percent in the face of increasing competition from homegrown brands such as Oppo, Huawei and Xiaomi.

    Businessman Chu Ling, 48, has come a long way since 1989, when he got his first mobile: a huge, boxy Motorola. He now communicates with colleagues and clients primarily via WeChat—an app he barely used a year ago—and gets a new handset every six months. His latest is a shiny Samsung acquired in March that, unlike an iPhone, is able to hold both his work and personal SIM cards.

    "Things change so much here, even within the space of a single year," he said. "The West went through desktop computers and laptops before they hit smartphones, and so people still find those convenient, but in China, we were willing to jump directly over to doing everything by mobile. It's like we skipped a few stages."


    Source: Calling China

    Friday, August 12, 2016

    Vivo V3: Smartphone with good audio, smooth fingerprint scanner

    NEW DELHI: Even among the many Chinese players that have taken the Indian smartphone market by storm with their large marketing spends and increasing retail presence, Vivo stands out. It is the only one that has a full-fledged manufacturing unit in India, and is rapidly powering into tier II and III cities.

    And it has not disappointed customers either. Vivo recently launched two devices -- the V3 Max and the V3 -- that seem to have found traction in the market, with the V3 Max standing out in the Rs 20,000-25,000 segment.

    Let us see today what its sibling, the V3 -- cheaper at Rs 14,980 -- holds for you.

    An evenly-built smartphone, it has a lightweight refined aluminum alloy body treated with zircon sand coating and anodised for a shimmering finish. The side panels perfectly complement the curvy 2.5D tempered glass front cover.

    Although the device does not have an impressive display as compared to others in the segment, it fares well when it comes to qualit y. The 5-inch bright-screen is excellent for playing games and watching videos.

    One of the best features of the dual-SIM device is its fingerprint scanner. It was very responsive and unlocked the device as soon as I touched it. You can even use the fingerprint scanner to unlock different apps.

    With a 3GB RAM and Adreno 405 GPU, Vivo V3 is powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 616 octa-core processor. It comes with an internal 32GB storage which can be further expanded up to 128GB using a microSD card.

    The 2,550mAh battery works for a day with normal usage.

    Another striking feature is the hi-fi music output. It is fitted with an exclusive "AK4375 Hi-Fi" chip that makes listening to music a good experience. Try this with different types of headphones and equalisers and you will feel like a disc jockey.

    The output through three speakers is better than most of the smartphones available in the market in this segment.

    The device has a normal camera. You can click a selfie in four ways -- tapping the camera button, showing your palm, by voice control feature and the fingerprint sensor.

    Vivo runs on Android 5.1-based FunTouch UI. The icons of the UI are similar to Apple's iOS. The UI has an "S-capture" feature that lets you save screenshots with a twist.

    With this feature, you can save one long screenshot instead of multiple small screenshots. Another option provides different patterns to capture screenshots.

    What doesn't work?

    Firstly, the UI did not impress much. There is no drop-down menu. Instead, it has a pull-up menu which is a bit odd.

    At Rs 14,980, the device should have packed in some great features. Especially when, owing to growing competition, devices in Rs 10,000-12,000 price segment are offering much better specifications.

    Conclusion: Grab it if you are a music lover and looking for a device with a better fingerprint scanner.


    Source: Vivo V3: Smartphone with good audio, smooth fingerprint scanner

    TCL's struggling smartphone unit outshone by TV business

    HONG KONG -- Not all handset makers have benefited from the smartphone boom of recent years. TCL Communication posted disappointing results on Friday in what could be its last first-half earnings briefing, as the struggling smartphone unit of China's TCL Corp. gears for delisting by the end of this year.

    TCL Communication, a 65%-owned subsidiary of electronics producer TCL, said on Friday net profit plummeted 98% to 11 million Hong Kong dollars ($1.41 million) in the six months ended in June.

    Revenue fell 17% to HK$10.9 billion on the year, hurt by weak sales of smartphones at home and overseas. Sales of handsets fell the most in mainland China, declining by almost 70%, followed by Latin America, the Middle East and Africa, although sales in Asia-Pacific rose 48%.

    The group attributed its slowing China business to a transition from producing cheap mobile phones to mid- to high-end devices. "We are in a stage of transition. Any slowdown is not surprising, but rather expected," said Chief Executive George Guo. The group would count on new product launches, including smart watches, tablets and its latest IDOL 4S smartphones that come with virtual-reality headsets to boost sales, he added.

    TCL's smartphone business has lagged behind its peers. According to Gartner, TCL- Alcatel, a joint venture with the French telecom company, was ranked 10th globally as a smartphone brand in the first quarter, after global peers like Samsung and Apple, as well as local rivals Huawei, Lenovo Group and ZTE.

    Sagging valuation

    Analysts say the delisting of TCL Communication comes amid the parent's uncertainty over its sluggish smartphone business and the unit's sagging stock valuation in Hong Kong. In June, TCL announced a cash offer of HK$7.5 per share, or about HK$3.5 billion, to take the unit private, pending shareholder and regulator approval. Asked about the deal on Friday, Guo said there were no further details to disclose.

    Despite a boost in the share price thanks to the buyout, some analysts were cautious. Kary Sei, a Hong Kong-based analyst at China Everbright Securities gave TCL Communication a "sell", citing its weaker fundamentals. "The positive news about the takeover has been digested by the market," he wrote in a note on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, TCL Multimedia, a unit of TCL's television business, fared comparatively better. First-half net profit fell 30% to HK$ 95 million on the year, while revenue was down 7.6% to HK$14.2 billion despite an increase in sales volume.

    Sales volume of LCD TVs in its overseas markets grew 18% on the year to 4.28 million sets, outstripping its 4.6% growth at home. The company put the blame on the falling Chinese yuan, as well as fierce market competition and cheaper panel costs that had lowered the average selling price of its TVs. New products such as curved TVs, ultra-high-definition TVs and large screens would be some of the "brighter spots" for business growth ahead, said TCL Multimedia's Chief Financial Officer Michael Wang.

    Parent TCL is the world's third-largest LCD TV producer with about a 6% market share in the first quarter. With overseas sales accounting for 40% of revenue, it has extended its multinational footprint over the years through acquisitions of bankrupt German TV maker Schneider in 2012 and Toshiba China in 2014. Its latest move is the formation of a joint venture with Brazilian home appliance company SEMP in July, with a target to boost market share in Brazil to 10%.

    Shares of TCL Communication closed 1.6% higher at HK$7.07 on Friday, before results were posted. Shares of TCL Multimedia edged up 0.68% to HK$4.46. Shenzhen-listed TCL has been suspended from trading since Aug. 4, pending an announcement.


    Source: TCL's struggling smartphone unit outshone by TV business

    Thursday, August 11, 2016

    The Twilight of China’s Online Consumer Paradise

    For the past year, Li Weiling has been living large on the cheap in Beijing, courtesy of deep-pocketed investors from around the world. 

    The 30-year-old advertising professional's been swinging like a sultan on a salary of just 6,000 yuan ($903) a month: summoning chauffeured cars during the rush hour and getting lunch delivered to her doorstep, all while snapping up cheap movie tickets and just about anything else under the sun. It's the Chinese dream, underwritten by the record sums that titans of the internet, sovereign wealth funds and global investors funneled into the burgeoning on-demand economy. And it's probably too good to last.

    Startups backed by Baidu Inc., Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. once offered plentiful and steep discounts on everything from on-demand massages to personal trainers in a massive land grab. But as consolidation revs up -- seen most recently in Didi Chuxing's acquisition of Uber Technologies Inc.'s Chinese operations -- this peculiar golden era for smartphone-wielding consumers is waning. Didi's deal wasn't the first merger intended to end internecine subsidy wars, and it won't be the last -- and that means fewer doorbusters for Li and millions of her cohorts.

    The subsidy "wars have just been brutal. Well, great for the consumer, but brutal in terms of burning cash," says William Bao Bean, an investment partner at SOSV. "And they've trained Chinese consumers to not be loyal, but instead to go anywhere to seek out bargains. Consumer loyalty means nothing in China."

    China's consumers are a force to be reckoned with. They drive global prices on commodities from steel to coal and siphon up exports from the U.S. to Japan. And now they've taken to on-demand services like no other, as startups piled onto the so-called online-to offline (O2O) bandwagon and raged a furious war of discounts to hook users. It worked: the so-called Chinese sharing economy was worth $1.95 trillion in 2015 and involved 500 million people, Didi cited official data as showing.

    Yet the discounts they've enjoyed thus far will shrink because of two mega-trends convulsing the domestic industry landscape: consolidation, and a deepening investment drought. In recent years, investment in Chinese tech burst on the scene like James Brown on a dance floor: Get on up! Last year, $20.3 billion of venture capital surged into Chinese internet businesses, eclipsing the $16.3 billion that flowed to U.S. internet firms, and that's after more than quintupling from 2012, according to PriceWaterhouseCoopers.

    What goes up can also tumble down. The volume of private equity and venture capital flowing into China's tech sector, as well as investments in the country as a whole, peaked last fall. Wilson Chow, a PwC analyst in Shenzhen, estimates that private equity and venture investment may be down about 25 percent in the first half of 2016 compared with 2015's final six months. Rui Ma, a partner at 500 Startups who splits her time between California and China, surveyed several of the most active VC funds in China, who told her their deal volume has halved from last year.

    "The slowdown is a global phenomenon, and it's still ongoing: we're in the middle of the winter," says Kai-fu Lee, founder of prominent VC firm Sinovation Ventures in Beijing. "The Chinese market has a tendency to accelerate uptrends as well as downtrends: When things are trendy, they will double or triple quickly – and then when they're out of favor, they will drop like a brick."

    "A lot of VCs believed in the formula that if you have tremendous user growth, there will be some way to convert that into profitability. If you can just get 1 million, or 3 million users, then the rest will work itself out," Lee said. "Too many people believed that and pumped in more cash, and now we see a lot of O2O companies still can't make money."

    And that spurs consolidation. The on-demand arena has seen a string of multi-billion-dollar mergers since 2015: Didi-Kuaidi (ride-hailing), Meituan-Dianping (group-buying and food), Ganji-58.com (classified ads), Ctrip-Qunar (online travel). All were backed by at least one of the country's internet troika of Baidu-Alibaba-Tencent (BAT), who as investors were said to have orchestrated the mergers to staunch losses. Uber and Didi alone are estimated to have spent billions trying to undercut each other.

    "It's not that they want to feed the Chinese consumer and give them goodies, it's that they thought the end result would be a monopoly that is worth a lot of money," said Richard Lim, a managing partner at GSR Ventures and an early Didi investor. "So the end justified the means."

    Didi, Baidu and other prominent players in the on-demand economy are open about their tactics (though none will outline amounts). But now that the wave of big-ticket mergers have created dominant players with unrivalled pricing power, outsized discounts are no longer needed. And given pressure from shareholders to curtail costs, BAT are likely to lean on their startups to back off.

    The question now is how consumers addicted to dirt-cheap services will react. 

    The Didi Chuxing application is displayed on a smartphone screen in this arranged photograph taken in Shanghai, China, on Sunday, May 22, 2016.

    Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

    Take ride-sharing: subsidies for several popular services have plunged by more than 80 percent in recent months. Discounts on peak-hour Uber rides in Beijing have dropped to about 1.40 yuan from 8 yuan three months ago, according to a customer's record.  That means a ride that cost 8 yuan in May will now cost about 13 yuan. Users of Shenzhou Zhuanche, a.k.a. UCar, report that they now get 20 yuan towards their next ride for every 100 yuan deposited into their accounts, versus about 100 yuan earlier this year.

    Other sectors have begun to cut subsidies as well. Edaixi, one of China's largest online laundry services, has begun to lay off the discounting, said Zhang Rongyao, founder and chairman of Edaixi's owner Rongchang Yao China Network Technology Beijing Co. 

    "The laundry service can survive without heavy subsidies because of strong demand," he said. "The key to success in O2O is the size of demand. Laundry and food delivery services are more likely to survive because both businesses can easily scale up."

    Plus, new habits may die hard. Consumers could grudgingly pay up to maintain their lifestyles, even if it means fewer savings in the long run. "If people are addicted to new conveniences, they may find it difficult to go back to the old ways," PwC's Chow said. 

    Even if Li, the Beijing advertising worker, does cut back on non-essential services – perhaps going to fewer concerts or movies – the overall market for new services will continue to expand, says Arthur Kroeber, managing director of GaveKal Dragonomics, a research service in Beijing. That's simply because Chinese economic expansion, even if it decelerates sharply, will continue to fuel the growth of the affluent class. He estimates middle-income households could more than double to 180 million over the next decade.

    For now, there're still discounts to be had -- in some categories. Li will just have to hunt harder for a service that offers the sweet deals on meals that she's grown accustomed to. 

    "One of them will offer the rates I'm happy with. It'll just take more time to find them." 

    --With assistance from Tian Ying.

    Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal. LEARN MORE
    Source: The Twilight of China's Online Consumer Paradise

    Is Qualcomm Past Its Licensing Issues In China?

    It has been more than a year since Qualcomm (NYSE:QCOM) has been struggling to get Chinese OEMs to comply with the new licensing terms laid out by the Chinese government. The company was accused of monopolistic practices by the NDRC of China and had to pay $975 million and lower its royalty rates in the region as a result of the settlement in 2015. However, slow progress by Qualcomm in implementing the NDRC licensing terms and non-compliance by Chinese OEMs of these terms have been affecting the company's licensing profits since then. Nevertheless, recent developments, as discussed below, suggest that Qualcomm is making significant progress in solving the compliance issues in China and it can soon be over the hump in the large smartphone market.

    Major Chinese Players Are Now In Compliance With The Terms

    Recently, Qualcomm concluded licensing deals with two major Chinese smartphone makers — Oppo and Vivo. Given that both these players have seen a rapid increase in their sales recently and have managed to secure a spot among the top five smartphone makers globally, this deal is significant for Qualcomm and should boost its licensing profits going ahead. Together Oppo and Vivo accounted for around 11.4% of the global smartphone market share in Q2'16.

    Further, the company has already signed licensing deals with other major smartphone vendors such as Huawei, Lenovo, Xiaomi and ZTE, over the last few quarters. It is worth noting that significant shifts in market share have occured.  While Huawei held the third position in the global smartphone market in Q2'16, Lenovo and Xiaomi — which were at the fourth and fifth place, respectively, in market share during Q4'15 — have now been overtaken by Oppo and Vivo, respectively.

    All these deals confirm that Qualcomm is quickly closing the gap in China by bringing the major Chinese smartphone makers in compliance with the terms of the judgement. This should help the company post strong profits going ahead. This comes from the fact that licensing revenues constitute more than 70% of Qualcomm's operating profits. Also, recent licensing deals should help the company garner additional income from catch-up payments.

    Qualcomm's Lawsuit Against Meizu Technology Was Significant

    In an effort to decrease the under-reporting of sales in China, Qualcomm filed a lawsuit against Chinese OEM – Meizeu Technology, earlier this year. This move has likely gone as a clear message to other OEMs in the region, who have not yet agreed to comply with the new terms. Going ahead, this should further increase compliance in the large Chinese smartphone market.

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    Source: Is Qualcomm Past Its Licensing Issues In China?

    Wednesday, August 10, 2016

    LeEco to invest $3B in electric car factory in China

    Ambitious Chinese technology company LeEco plans to invest CNY20 billion ($3 billion) to build an electric car production facility in Zhejiang province in China, with a planned production capacity of 400,000 cars per year, China Daily reported.

    The company will build the factory in two phases at a 2.87-square-kilometre facility. The first phase will cost CNY6 billion. The company declined to say when production will start, and it was also unclear whether the plan was approved by industry regulators, the newspaper said.

    It also plans to produce cars at a factory near Las Vegas in the US in cooperation with Faraday Future, in which LeEco founder Jia Yueting has invested, Reuters said.

    The announcement comes two weeks after it announced plans to acquire Vizio, a California-based TV manufacturer, for $2 billion, giving it a footprint in North America from which to sell smart TVs.

    LeEco, a relative newcomer to the smartphone market, is better known in China for its streaming video service. A month ago it added an 11 per cent stake in smartphone maker Coolpad, making it the largest shareholder in the firm with a 29 per cent interest.

    LeEco said it plans to hire 800 people worldwide as it expands its range of branded smartphones, internet-connected TVs and moves into autonomous cars.

    In February luxury carmaker Aston Martin announced it was partnering with LeEco to develop a range of next-gen connected electric vehicles, including a production version of Aston Martin's RapidE concept car.


    Source: LeEco to invest $3B in electric car factory in China

    Coolpad unveils Coolpad Mega, a nicely designed budget smartphone for India

    Coolpad has unveiled the Coolpad Mega, its latest budget smartphone for India.

    In a press conference in New Delhi today, Coolpad unveiled the Coolpad Mega, a lightweight, nicely designed affordable smartphone. Powered by the latest CoolUI 8.0 based on Android 6.0 Marshmallow, the Coolpad Mega supports dual SIM dual standby with VoLTE support and offers 4G LTE network.

    The company claims that with the launch of Coolpad Mega, Coolpad aims to capture 13-15% of the online smartphone segment of phones priced under ₹8,000 – a growth rate of 100% YOY. In the first flash sale for Coolpad Mega, the company wants to sell 50,000 phones.

    While the first phase of Coolpad Mega devices will be imported from China, later they will be manufactured in India under the 'Make in India' initiative.

    Category Features Operating System Android Marshmallow 6.0 with CoolUI 8.0 Display 5.5-inch HD (1280 x 720) IPS LCD | 2.5D curved screen Processor 64-bit 1.0GHz MediaTek MT6735P Quad-core processor | Mali-T720 GPU RAM 3GB Internal Storage 16GB; expandable up to 32GB via a microSD card Camera 8MP front camera with 83.6-degrees wide-angle lens + 8MP rear camera with LED flash Battery 2500mAh Dimensions 153 × 76.8 × 7.85mm Weight 143gms

    Priced at ₹6,999 ($105), Coolpad Mega will be exclusively available on Amazon in gold, white, and black. The smartphone will go on sale starting August 24 via flash sale for which registrations have already begun. Coolpad has also teased a disruptive product before Diwali this year, without sharing any details of the same.

    The Coolpad Mega is an elegant looking smartphone, and looks pretty good on the specifications sheet for a budget smartphone. Would you be interested in picking one up? Tell us in the comments.

    See at Amazon


    Source: Coolpad unveils Coolpad Mega, a nicely designed budget smartphone for India

    Tuesday, August 9, 2016

    Try These 8 Tips & Tricks on your New Oppo F1s Smartphone

    Quickly capture screenshot with three finger drag

    Simple Mode to save your battery

    Block unknown numbers with ease

    Screen-off gestures for better use

    Enable 'Quiet Time' for better office meetings

    Security Center for better management of smartphone

    Double Exposure in camera application

    O-Cloud to back up your SMS and Contacts


    Source: Try These 8 Tips & Tricks on your New Oppo F1s Smartphone

    China's Coolpad, LeEco seek 100m smartphone sales a year

    HONG KONG -- Chinese smartphone maker Coolpad Group aims to sell 100 million units annually within two years together with Beijing-based partner and media company Leshi Internet Information & Technology, or LeEco.

    The sales target set Tuesday would be four times the aggregate total for the two companies in 2015, and it would boost their combined Chinese market share to third place behind leaders, including Huawei. LeEco, a provider of online videos, also sells smartphones under its own brand. The partners plan to sell 50 million to 60 million smartphones this year.

    Coolpad and LeEco are merging research and development functions as well as supply chains. The two seek to lift the share of online sales from 20% overall to 50%.

    The partners this month will launch the Cool 1 smartphone, a low-cost device they developed jointly to target the younger demographic. The Cool 1 will be priced lower than Coolpad's other handsets, which can cost over 2,000 yuan ($300), or LeEco's lineup, which runs between 1,500 yuan and 2,000 yuan, Coolpad Vice President Jiang Chao told reporters in Hong Kong.

    LeEco invested in Coolpad last summer, then lifted the stake to roughly 29% as of this month, becoming the largest shareholder. LeEco founder Jia Yueting took over as Coolpad's chairman Friday. LeEco said in July it will spend $2 billion to acquire U.S. television maker Vizio.


    Source: China's Coolpad, LeEco seek 100m smartphone sales a year

    Monday, August 8, 2016

    Chinese tourist ends up living in a German refugee home for 12 days after trying to report his lost wallet to police and being mistaken for an asylum seeker

  • Chinese tourist, 31, had to spend 12 days in a refugee home in Germany
  • The backpacker tried to inform police he had lost his wallet in Stuttgart
  • He couldn't speak German and unwittingly signed an application for asylum
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    A 31-year-old Chinese tourist was forced to spend 12 days in a refugee home after he was mistaken for an asylum seeker when he reported his lost wallet to police. 

    The backpacker, who didn't speak a word of German or English, attempted to inform officers that he had misplaced his wallet in Stuttgart, south west Germany. 

    But he ended up at a different municipal office which then handed him an application for asylum. 

    The tourist, who was not identified, unwittingly signed the request and was swiftly placed in a shelter 260 miles north in Dortmund.

    A poster aimed at refugees which read 'Welcome to Germany' was placed on a wall in Dortmund, Germany

    His passport was taken from him after he got tangled up in the red tape of Germany's migrant influx by mistake.   

    C hristoph Schluetermann, of the German Red Cross, told news agency DPA: 'Machinery kicked into gear from which he couldn't immediately escape.'

    Public broadcaster WDR said the man complied with standard procedure for refugees including allowing his fingerprints to be taken, undergoing a medical examination and accepting pocket money.

    But staff eventually noticed that the man was unusually well-dressed for an asylum seeker and when the likelihood of a mistake dawned on them, sought help at a local Chinese restaurant.

    The owners suggested Schluetermann try using a Mandarin smartphone translation app and it soon became clear that the man didn't want asylum but to continue his European tour.

    Workers had to containers at a construction site for a refugee centre to house asylum seekers in Germany (stock photo) 

    WDR reported that one of the translated messages read: 'I want to go walking in a foreign country.'

    Twelve days into his stay, the man was able to set off for France and Italy.

    Germany let in nearly 1.1 million migrants and refugees last year, posing an enormous challenge for its overstretched bureaucracy.


    Source: Chinese tourist ends up living in a German refugee home for 12 days after trying to report his lost wallet to police and being mistaken for an asylum seeker

    Would Apple Inc. (AAPL) be Able to Move Up in Chinese Smartphone Market?

    Tech giant Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) continues to face trouble in retaining its growth story. By the looks of it, the situation isn't getting any better for the iPhone maker. For the quarter ended June 30, 2016, the $589 billion company posted a 33% year-on-year decline in revenue from Greater China, including the mainland, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. This is quite alarming for investors, given that after its primary market, the US, China was supposed to serve as the next high-growth smartphone market for Apple. However, that is no longer the case.

    Apple is no longer delighting the Chinese consumer. While it was seen as a "status symbol" for consumers in China when it launched 13 years ago, that is no longer the case. Majority of consumers in the country have smartphones made by local competitors such as Huawei and Xiaomi, which offer equally good alternatives at cheaper prices.

    The iPhone maker promoted its smartphone, for years, as a highly innovative device. Over the years, rivals caught up with the features, and Apple failed to keep innovating. Now, the company is set to launch the next-generation iPhone this fall. While rumors suggest the device would have two front cameras, that is hardly a surprise anymore, given that Huawei's P9 and Xiaomi's Redmi Pro both of wich have already been launched have dual-lens.

    Based on the fact that up till the second quarter of fiscal year 2016 China remained Apple's fastest-growing market, the company needs to act fast to make amends. It has also had its iTunes service banned in China, and has also faced a lawsuit in which a Chinese company accused it of misusing the iPhone trademark.

    According to research group Canalys, the top three smartphone brands in China include Oppo, Vivo, and Huawei. Market research firm Counterpoint Technology said that Oppo bagged the top rank with a 22% market share for the second quarter. According to Canalys, Apple ranked fifth in this race, with a 9% share, with Samsung ranking sixth. The firm also said that the Chinese smartphone market grew 3% over the quarter.

    IDC analyst Bryan Ma believes Chinese consumers are very indecisive, and they get tired of technology much sooner than the average consumer. Another problem that has worried Apple investors is that leaked iPhone 7 images show that it does not differ incrementally from the iPhone 6S.

    It appears that Apple's woes in Chinas are only about to worsen. The Country Caller will continue to update you on the relevant developments.


    Source: Would Apple Inc. (AAPL) be Able to Move Up in Chinese Smartphone Market?

    Sunday, August 7, 2016

    HTC China President Warns PSVR Price Is Misleading

    The PlayStation VR headset is almost here, set for a release in October. While most existing virtual reality setups require the use of a PC, Sony's VR unit will be used with the PlayStation 4 game console, and that's not the only difference, it will also be less expensive than some of its competitors, like the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive. But Alvin Wang Graylin, head of HTC's Chinese VR division, warns that the $399 price tag of the PSVR is a bit misleading.

    While the unit itself will cost $399, there are other requirements in order for the buyer to use it. In addition to the PlayStation 4 game console, it also requires the PlayStation 4 camera and is designed for use with PlayStation Move controllers (though they are not required). PlayStation 4 owners who do not have the needed additional peripherals will have to purchase them separately, driving up the cost. The reason behind Sony's decision to sell the peripherals separately is probably to keep customers from purchasing extra equipment they don't need. While those who don't have the PlayStation Move controllers and PlayStation 4 camera will have to buy them, some players have already purchased them for use with other games, so selling them separately may be the best way to avoid including unneeded parts in the box and making customers pay again for devices they already own. There will be some retailers that will be selling bundles for those who need to purchase all of the pa rts, which may make the overall cost of the entire system a bit more reasonable.

    Although selling the unit by itself may be the most practical approach, Graylin cautions potential buyers, who may not be aware that the PlayStation VR requires other equipment, that $399 may not be the full amount you have to pay to be able to take advantage of virtual reality on the PlayStation 4. He also felt the unit itself left a bit to be desired, saying that he had "tried the product but not just been entirely comfortable after ten minutes." Meanwhile, other very inexpensive VR options are available for those with VR capable smartphones. The Samsung Gear VR, for example, is a $99 headset that works with a Samsung Galaxy smartphone to provide a similar VR experience at a much lower price. Of course, it probably won't perform on par with high-end options such as the Oculus Rift, but at a fraction of the cost, it does make VR accessible to more people. One of the strengths of the PlayStation VR will be its fantastic selection of games, with 50 games planned for release between the launch of the headset and the end of the year.


    Source: HTC China President Warns PSVR Price Is Misleading