Friday, September 29, 2017

Gionee unveils full-screen smartphone

Gionee unveils full-screen smartphone

A model takes photos with M7 at the product launch in Beijing. [Provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

Shenzhen-based smartphone maker Gionee has unveiled its first-ever full-screen smartphone, in its push to scramble for a presence in China's fiercely competitive autumn smartphone war.

M7, as the new device is called, comes with a 6.01-inch AMOLED screen, which can deliver high-definition viewing experiences for consumers.

Unlike rivals such as Xiaomi Corp and Vivo, who are targeting young consumers, Gionee wants to impress businesspeople and professionals by highlighting its security functions.

The new handset, priced from 2,799 yuan ($421), comes with two built-in security encryption chips, one for protecting personal information and the other for ensuring mobile payment security.

M7 also features a large battery with a capacity of 4000mAh and a dual-camera setup, which the company said can take 3D photos.

A report from US telecom research company Strategy Analytics said that Gionee is among the top smartphone brands in China and ranked in the top 10 worldwide, with 30 million handsets sold last year.

Gionee is also stepping up efforts to expand its presence in India. It is one of five Chinese brands which collectively held more than half of India's smartphone market in the second quarter of this year, according to a report by Canalys.


Source: Gionee unveils full-screen smartphone

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Samsung and Lenovo stumble in China's smartphone market

CHONGQING -- Samsung Electronics and the Lenovo Group -- big names around the world -- are being cut down to size in certain Chinese markets.

Samsung, recently crowned Asia's most valuable brand, holds 1% of China's smartphone market. Lenovo has even less.

"Chinese brands today have functions as good as those on Samsung smartphones," said a sales clerk at a smartphone shop in Beijing. "Few customers these days specifically look for Samsung products. And those who used to buy Samsung handsets appear to have shifted to Huawei."

It was not long ago that the South Korean brand played a key role in popularizing smartphones in China. While Chinese went on a smartphone-buying binge from 2012 through 2014, Samsung shipped more units than any other maker. In the peak year of 2013, the South Korean company controlled more than 20% of the market.

But that piece of pie kept getting eaten into, especially by Chinese players like Huawei Technologies and Xiaomi.

Some of the damage was self-inflicted. Samsung tarnished its brand image a year ago when it released phones that were prone to catching fire or exploding. Eventually, the fires forced Samsung to terminate its flagship model, but not before many Chinese consumers had grown wary of the brand.

There was also collateral damage -- from North Korea's repeated missile and nuclear tests. South Korea reacted by installing a land-based anti-missile defense system developed by the U.S. China, feeling encroached upon because the system's radar can reach beyond North Korea, retaliated against South Korea economically.

In the April-June quarter, Samsung's share of China's smartphone market stood at 1.6%.

The South Korean company is also struggling to sell flat-panel TVs in China. According to IHS Markit, a London-headquartered consultancy, Samsung in 2016 was the world's No. 1 TV seller, controlling over 20% of the market. In China, however, Samsung was No. 9, with a 3% share. Hisense, Skyworth and other Chinese brands, meanwhile, are gaining share.

Perhaps it's too late

Lenovo's smartphones are also in trouble in China -- despite the company's buoyant personal computer sales.

At its peak in 2013, the Chinese company had a 14% slice of its home country's smartphone market, the second largest. Now its market share is difficult to see. "As Oppo and Vivo rolled out stylish, inexpensive models, customers began leaving Lenovo," said an executive at a smartphone distributor in Beijing.

Lenovo in 2014 bought Motorola's smartphone business from Google only to suffer brand integration struggles. Those problems led the company to record a net loss for the April-June period.

"We are very confident of turning around our mobile business" in the latter half of the fiscal year, Lenovo Chairman and CEO Yang Yuanqing said in August. Lenovo hopes to regain its share with new high-end models under the Motorola brand.

But it might be too late. The buying binge is over, and China's smartphone market is contracting. According to Beijing-based Sigmaintell Consulting, Chinese smartphone shipments in the April-June quarter fell 6.6% on the year to 112 million units. The consultancy's full-year projection suggests a 3.4% decline.

As the market shrinks, fights for bigger slices of the pie will surely intensify.


Source: Samsung and Lenovo stumble in China's smartphone market

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

The 'Smartphone Effect' Is Weakening

The rush to upgrade smartphones may be ebbing, prompting economists to dial back the outlook for Asian exporters.

Early indications, including signs of disappointing orders, point to a mixed reaction to the latest iPhones, hurting the share prices of Apple Inc.'s Asia-based suppliers. Given that smartphone improvements help power demand for electronics components from supply-chain powerhouses such as South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, a weaker upgrade cycle would have macro-economic implications too.

The weakening "smartphone effect" is not the only reason economists are sensing a peak in this year's better-than-expected trade performance in Asia. Other threats include forecasts that China's economy is slowing again and the shift by some developed-world central banks away from years of extraordinarily easy money.

"It feels like we are toward the tail end of the upswing at a time, ominously, that the other key driver of Asian exports –- China -– is showing signs of resuming its economic slowdown," said Rob Subbaraman, chief economist for Asia ex-Japan at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Singapore.

The smartphone cycle and firmer Chinese growth were among reasons Asia defied predictions of trade wars, deflation and tepid demand to instead see increased exports of everything from cosmetics to semiconductors. In the year-to-date through August, the region's exports have been the strongest in dollar terms since 2011, according to economists at Morgan Stanley.

There is no precise measure of the impact of smartphone production on Asian trade, but economists say it's sizable. Take South Korea: Exports of semiconductors jumped 57 percent in August to a record $8.8 billion, owing to the release of new phones and increases in DRAM capacities. That was about 18.6 percent of the country's total exports for the month.

Signs of Cooling

There are other signs that Asia's trade recovery is starting to cool. China's year-to-date exports are up 7.6 percent, but growth slowed to 5.6 percent in August and imports are showing signs of consolidating. And some analysts say South Korea's impressive export growth rates could soften in coming months as a weak performance in 2016 is no longer the base for comparison.

Slipping activity at major Asian ports, including hubs such as Busan and Shenzhen, are among indications that a recovery in the global container trade may have peaked, according to economists at Bloomberg Intelligence.

A new Asian trade tracker from Goldman Sachs also registered slower export momentum in August, and a broad deceleration across sectors, with the exception of semiconductors. Imports are also weakening. A recent moderation in commodity prices has played a part, Goldman said in the report.

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports on Apple's new products including iPhone 8.

(Source: Bloomberg)

Other Drivers

To be sure, few are predicting trade will slump, particularly in the near term.Klaus Baader, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Société Générale SA, says Asia's trade recovery goes beyond smartphones and China. New drivers will include an expected acceleration in business investment, especially in electronics and software, which would have knock-on consequences for Asian manufacturers, Baader said.

"There is a lot more to the Asian electronics trade than just the iPhone," he said.

Exports from Japan will remain strong through the next six months or so, but economic momentum may slow as global interest rates start to rise, said Hiroaki Muto, chief economist at Tokai Tokyo Research Center. "The second half of next year may be a bit dangerous," Muto said.

Some of the gloss on Asia's export performance is bound to come off as volumes in 2018 are compared to the stellar performance in 2017, the World Trade Organization warned last week. It upgraded its estimate for growth in global merchandise trade volume this year to 3.6 percent from 2.4 percent, due in large part to Asia's robust performance.

Expectations for tighter monetary policy in the U.S. and Europe along with China's push to rein in credit growth will weigh on trade growth in 2018, the WTO said. Geopolitical risks such as tensions with North Korea and trade disputes between the U.S. and its large trading partners could also derail the Asia trade story.

That all points to reason for caution, said Nomura's Subbaraman.

"'Enjoy the party but stay close to the door' is my mantra," he said.

— With assistance by Jiyeun Lee, Iain Marlow, James Mayger, Miao Han, and Connor Cislo


Source: The 'Smartphone Effect' Is Weakening

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Porsche Design rolls out its first-ever laptop in China

The world-renowned automobile manufacturer Porsche announced on Tuesday its plan to roll out the firm's first-ever laptop, BOOK ONE, in China, after bringing it to 17 other countries.

Having partnered with Huawei to roll out a smartphone last year, Porsche Design—the design subsidiary of the automobile maker—this year teamed up with Microsoft, Intel, and Quanta Computer to launch a convertible laptop. The BOOK ONE is designed to be an alternative to Microsoft's Surface Book.

Porsche Design BOOK ONE

Porsche Design BOOK ONE (Image credit: TechNode)

The BOOK ONE comes with a touchscreen and can serve as a tablet, a 2-in-1, and a detachable laptop. The silhouette of the laptop uses a milled aluminum surface and features subtle Porsche Design branding on the edge of the screen. TechNode's partner TechCrunch published a review on the product and suggested that the convertible laptop needs some fixing in the speaker and its physical stability where the top end of the screen might tilt the laptop backward every now and then.

"In general, we are targeting people who value design and the efforts put into the design," Tobias Hüttl, Head of Studio F. A. Porsche Asia, told TechNode at the launch event in Beijing. "I think the product itself is very versatile. It caters to all kinds of different professionals."

"The Porsche Design BOOK ONE embodies the DNA of our brand down to the tiniest detail and, as our first 2-in-1 unit, has expanded our product portfolio by adding a new category: Porsche Design Computing. In Microsoft and Intel, we have two renowned partners who were a great help in implementing this strategically important project," said Jan Becker, CEO Porsche Design Group, in the firm's press release.

Porsche Design BOOK ONE (Image credit: TechNode)

Porsche Design BOOK ONE (Image credit: TechNode)

Porsche Design BOOK ONE is priced at RMB 18,888 (roughly $2,848) in China, whereas in the US it retails for $2,495. It's worth noting that the company has partnered with JD.com for exclusive sales in China. The pre-order in China has started and the laptop will be available in mid-October.

Related


Source: Porsche Design rolls out its first-ever laptop in China

Monday, September 25, 2017

WhatsApp service disrupted in China as censorship tightens

The encrypted messaging service WhatsApp is suffering intermittent disruptions in China as communist authorities tighten censorship controls ahead of a major ruling party meeting.

Attempts to set up new WhatsApp accounts on some Chinese mobile phones on Tuesday were met with network error messages. Others reported difficulty sending images and video.

Chinese authorities are tightening controls on social media ahead of the party congress next month at which President Xi Jinping is due to be appointed to a second five-year term as leader.

WhatsApp, which is owned by Facebook, offers Chinese users more privacy than government-monitored domestic services.

On Monday, regulators fined WeChat's parent company and two other social media services for failing to fully enforce censorship.


Source: WhatsApp service disrupted in China as censorship tightens

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Chinese consumers are purchasing new phones less frequently: Survey

Chinese people are becoming less inclined to buy new smartphones, a recent report suggests.

According to a recent report by Penguin Intelligence, a Tencent backed research organisation in China, only 16 percent of iPhone users in 2017 said they are planning to change to a new handset each year, down from 27.8 percent last year.

The report, based on a survey of over 70,000 smartphone users in China, indicated that about half of users intend to change to a new phone every two years.

People using Android-powered phones are more inclined to change to a new handset every year, with 23.5 percent saying that they are planning to do so, although the number declined from 34.7 percent in 2016, the report said.

Xiaomi users purchase new phones most frequently, with 32.3 percent of them changing to a new handset once a year, followed by Oppo's 28.2 percent and Vivo's 25.9 percent. Apple users were at the bottom of the brand chart, at 16 percent, said the survey.

The report also said that Huawei users show the highest brand loyalty, with 72.8 percent saying they will purchase another Huawei phone. This was followed by Apple's 65.7 percent and Xiaomi's 54.9 percent, while only 24.9 percent of Samsung users said they will stick to the brand.

Among those who used to be an iPhone user but are now using an Android phone in 2017, 41.6 percent of them are using Huawei phones, while 16.8 percent are using Oppo and 16.1 percent are using Vivo.

Despite the high-end pricetags of iPhones, the expensive handsets have already successfully penetrated less developed areas in China. In 2010, 96 percent of iPhone users were living in Chinese first and second-tier cities. But today, only 61 percent of them are from the most developed parts in China, while 39 percent are living in third and fourth-tier cities, as well as other counties or rural areas.

Although 77.5 percent of iPhone users indicated that Apple's iOS system is more advanced than other Android-phones, only 22.8 percent of them said iPhone cameras are superior and 14.2 percent said iPhones have a more innovative design than Android phones, said the report.


Source: Chinese consumers are purchasing new phones less frequently: Survey

Saturday, September 23, 2017

China OEM Smartphone Manufacturer Cnoems Bezel-Less Budget Smartphone Doogee Mix

September 23, 2017 -- !-- AddToAny BEGIN -->

The price war for tapping the global Smartphone market has already gained momentum and top manufacturers around the world have slashed down the prices of their products. China OEM Smartphone manufacturer Cnoems recently launched a bezel-less budget Smartphone, Doogee Mix, to jump on the bandwagon.

Cnoems, a global leader in budget Smartphone segment, recently rolled out their latest innovation Doogee Mix, a budget Smartphone which comes with bezel-less full display and silver body. Apart from the bezel-less Smartphone, the China OEM factory has also launched three other Smartphones, namely Doogee Mix 2 Full Display Smartphone, Doogee Mix Lite Full Screen Smartphone, and Doogee Mix Full Display Smartphone. The owners claimed that the Doogee Mix series phones come with all the premium features that a Smartphone buyer would normally expect in high-end mobile phones.

?Its one of the best OEM Smartphone products that we have engineered till date. The product has been reviewed by experts and all the variants have passed the tests. We are happy to announce the commercial launch of the Doogee Mix Smartphone, said a top sales and marketing executive of Cnoems. She also said that the product has already received rave reviews from experts and underscored that the phone has all the features to be pitted against high-end and expensive phones.

The company, which previously got massive response for its M109 budget Smartphone, is planning to fit their future phones with exclusive features. However, for now, the Doogee Series Smartphone products are the flagship products of Cnoems a China OEM factory in the process of expanding its market beyond China and OPEC countries. The company has already started shipping the phone to India, one of the largest markets for budget Smartphones, and to parts of Europe and North America as well. The executive hinted that Doogee Mix price is their biggest USP at this moment.

The CEO of Doogee Company said that the price of the product does not truly reflect the exciting features that come bundled with the budget Smartphone. ?Anybody who is interested in buying a budget Smartphone can read the Doogee Mix review written by top industry experts. However, Doogee Mix price does not speak volumes about the high-end features, which can be explored by reading the in-depth reviews, said the CEO and managing director of Cnoems, which is now popularly referred as the ?Doogee Company.

About the Company

Cnoems is a top OEM Smartphone manufacturer from China.

To know more, visit https://www.cnoems.com/ or https://doogee-mix.cnoems.com/

Media ContactCompany Name: Cnoems.comContact Person: Media RelationsEmail: [email protected]Country: ChinaWebsite: https://www.cnoems.com/

Related Keywords:India, Manufacturing & Industry,

Source:Copyright (c) AB Digital, Inc. All Rights Reserved


Source: China OEM Smartphone Manufacturer Cnoems Bezel-Less Budget Smartphone Doogee Mix

Friday, September 22, 2017

Your daily briefing on China

Hi, here's what you should know about China for the past 24 hours.

HANGZHOU, China, Sept. 23 (Xinhua) -- China will bid to inscribe its centuries-old freshwater pearl farming as a Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System, a world heritage equivalent.

- - - -

LONDON, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- China's bike-sharing company ofo decided to increase the number of its bikes in London's Hackney following its recent launch in the borough, the company announced Friday.

The company said it will increase the number of its bikes to 750 from an initial 200 over the coming month in Hackney, hoping to provide a blueprint for ofo in the rest of the capital as it looks to address transport options for the "last mile" of travel.

- - - -

HAVANA, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- An Air China's 747 aircraft arrived Friday at Jose Marti International Airport with humanitarian aid to Cuba after the Caribbean nation was badly hit by the Hurricane Irma.

The first plane with 86 tons relief materials like tents, generators, folding beds, blankets, water pumps, luminaires, among others, sent by China to Cuba on Friday.

- - - -

BEIJING, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- China hit back Friday at the S&P Global Ratings' downgrade of the country's sovereign credit rating, with the finance ministry calling it a "wrong decision."

The Ministry of Finance (MOF) website described the decision as "perplexing," with the economy on a firm footing.

- - - -

BANGKOK, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- Chinese tech giant Huawei has put forward digital transformation plans for 10 major industries, such as city management, energy, agriculture and education, for Thailand in a bid to help the country fulfill its ambition of Thailand 4.0.

The company showcases its products and solutions including Smart City, Smart Energy, Smart Parking, Digital Railway, Smart Airport, Smart Government, Smart Agriculture, among others, at its booth at the Digital Thailand Big Bang, the largest digital technology expo in Southeast Asia.

- - - -

LANZHOU, China, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- After a long day at work, Yang Haitao pulls out his smartphone, opens the WeChat social networking app, and asks one of his friends where they should meet for dinner.

While this seems normal for many people, it's significant for Yang, who is blind and previously couldn't use a smartphone. Enditem


Source: Your daily briefing on China

Thursday, September 21, 2017

HTC working on a new phone called U11 Plus, may launch in China on Nov 11: Report

On Thursday, Google announced that it is buying part of HTC at $1.1 billion, or more specifically the HTC team that collaborated with Google on creating the Pixel phones. Google has signed this agreement with HTC, especially to make more exciting products in the coming 20 years or so. "This agreement is a testament to the decade-long history of teamwork between HTC and Google," notes Rick Osterloh, Senior Vice President, Hardware, Google. Basically, the Cupertino major is buying HTC employees to manufacturer better Pixel phones. Meanwhile, some reports making rounds the web claim that HTC is working on a new smartphone which will reportedly succeed the recent flagship device by company - the HTC U11.

The information comes from France, and is reported by GSM Arena. Going by the reports, HTC is apparently working on HTC U11 Plus. HTC is still working on new smartphones, despite the confusing Google buyout of some employees from its hardware department. The Taiwanese company has said that by signing the agreement with Google doesn't really mean that HTC will not launch any phone. Instead, there were reports that HTC will be announcing three new smartphones by the end of the year.

HTC in its official statement on the agreement said, "This agreement also supports HTC's continued branded smartphone strategy, enabling a more streamlined product portfolio, greater operational efficiency and financial flexibility. HTC will continue to have best-in-class engineering talent, which is currently working on the next flagship phone, following the successful launch of the HTC U11 earlier this year."

Some information coming from France hints at the coming of HTC U11 Plus. The report further reveals that the new phone will be launching in on November 11 in China. There are not much known about the phone as of now.

A couple of reports and rumours suggest that the upcoming HTC U11 Plus will be called with a codename - Ocean Master. Going by the specs details, HTC U11 Plus is expected to come with minimal bezel and 18:9 aspect ratios on display.

The phone is further expected to come with a 5.99-inch screen with a 1440x2880 pixel resolution. Like the HTC U11, the Plus variant of the phone will be powered by Qualcomm's latest processor - Snapdragon 835 chipset. The HTC U11 Plus is expected to come in two variants - one with 4GB/64GB storage and second variant which will be a top end version will come with 6 gigs of RAM and 128GB of internal storage.

The camera details of the upcoming HTC U11 Plus are also revealed. In the imaging department, the phone is expected to come with 12-megapixel camera at the rear. On the front, the phone is expected to include an 8-megapixel selfie shooter. The U11 Plus is also expected to come with IP68 certification - which means that the phone will be both water and dust resistance. It is also said to support Qualcomm QuickCharge 3.0 and also include the HTC U11 like squeezable feature.

For more news from India Today, follow us on Twitter @IndiaTodayTech and on Facebook at facebook.com/indiatodaytechFor news and videos in Hindi, go to AajTak.in.ताज़ातरीन ख़बरों और वीडियो के लिए आजतक.इन पर आएं.


Source: HTC working on a new phone called U11 Plus, may launch in China on Nov 11: Report

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Google to buy HTC's Pixel smartphone unit in $1.1-bn deal

HTC will continue to run its remaining phone business

TAIPEI, Sept 21:  

Alphabet Inc's Google said it would pay $1.1 billion in cash to acquire the division at Taiwan's HTC Corp that develops the US firm's Pixel smartphones, its latest push into hardware manufacturing.

Google has sought to beef up its hardware capability with deals and product launches, and last year hired Rick Osterloh, a former Motorola executive, to run its hardware division.

"For Google, this agreement further reinforces its commitment to smartphones and overall investment in its emerging hardware business," the search giant said in a statement.

Under the deal, Google will also receive a non-exclusive license for HTC's intellectual property. The Taiwanese firm will continue to run its remaining smartphone business.

HTC is a long-time partner of Google and some analysts estimate that Pixel smartphones account for 20 percent of HTC's smartphone shipments.

But the Taiwanese firm, which once sold one in 10 smartphones globally, has seen its market share dwindle sharply due to competition from Apple Inc, Samsung Electronics Co and Chinese rivals.

Its sharp decline had some analysts questioning the wisdom of the deal.

"HTC is past its prime in terms of being a leading hardware design house, mainly because of how much it has had to scale back over the years as because of declining revenues," said Ryan Reith, an analyst at research firm IDC.

"Unless Google really wants to control hardware for its other businesses like Home and Chromebooks in addition to smartphones, then I dont see this as being a bet that pays off."

The deal marks Google's second major foray into smartphone manufacturing. It purchased Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion in 2012 and sold it off to China's Lenovo Group Ltd for less than $3 billion two years later.

"Its still early days for Google's hardware business," Osterloh said in a blog post, adding it is focused on bringing together the best of Google software and hardware for a suite of its core products.

Other hardware initiatives include its acquisition of thermostats maker Nest for $3.2 billion in 2014, while product launches include voice-controlled speaker Google Home and virtual-reality device Daydream View.

Google's strategy of licensing Android for free and profiting from embedded services such as search and maps has made Android the dominant mobile operating system with some 89 percent of the global market, according to IDC.

But it has long been frustrated by the emergence of many variations of Android and the inconsistent experience that has produced. Pushing its own hardware will likely complicate its relationship with Android licensees, analysts said.

HTC shares were on a trading halt on Thursday. The stock has suffered steep declines over the past couple of years. It has fallen 12 per cent so far this year and the company is worth around $1.9 billion.

HTC's worldwide smartphone market share declined to 0.9 percent last year from a peak of 8.8 per cent in 2011, according to IDC. Google's Pixel had less than 1 percent market share since it was launched a year ago, with an estimated 2.8 million shipments, IDC estimates.

The transaction, which is subject to regulatory approvals, is expected to close by early 2018.

Evercore served as financial advisor to HTC and Lazard served as financial advisor to Google.

(This article was published on September 21, 2017)

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Source: Google to buy HTC's Pixel smartphone unit in $1.1-bn deal

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

App Annie's new product offers insight into consumer trends in China

FRANKFURT, Sept 19 (Reuters) - The pioneer of mobile app analytics, App Annie, on Tuesday said it has begun tracking Android app usage in China, a landmark for understanding consumer behavior in the world's top smartphone market, which increasingly sets the pace for global trends.

App Annie said it was now able to offer real-time statistics on mobile application usage in China by tracking hundreds of thousands of Android users there, both through its own apps and with additional data supplied by external partners. Statistical methods are used to identify general trends, it said.

"It's crucial to provide an accurate picture to app publishers and brand (marketers) of what's happening in China but also what's happening globally in terms of app usage," said Bertrand Schmitt, chief executive and co-founder of App Annie.

App Annie, which tracks mobile software downloads, counts 94 of the world's top 100 app publishers as customers. They use the service to monitor the performance of their own apps against rivals. Major advertising brands such as McDonald's, Nike, Citibank and AstraZeneca also use App Annie to target customers with their own apps.

The company said its new China Android monitoring service can track usage metrics on 5,000 top apps such as active users, which apps are used together and data usage, both for app makers looking to track their performance versus rivals there or brand marketers looking to target advertising spending within apps.

China accounted for 60 percent of the world's $1.3 billion total app spending including ecommerce, paid app store downloads and in-app advertising in 2016, according to App Annie.

Four of the world's most played mobile games come from China, while Tencent's WeChat ranks No. 3 globally among messaging apps behind Facebook's WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger.

App Annie was founded in Beijing in 2010 to measure the growth of the nascent smartphone apps market. It has tracked app usage on Apple iOS since its early days in China and expanded to cover Apple and Android users globally since then.

But the explosion of smartphones in China since 2012 thanks to Android phones, which now outnumber Apple users by 6 to 1 in a market with more than 700 million phone users, has been guesswork because of a lack of independent data on the market.

"When you look at mobile usage behavior and attitudes, China is really leading. The Chinese market is definitely ahead of the curve," said Forrester mobile analyst Thomas Husson. "It was more or less a black box, so you need some clarity as to what's going on, in aggregate, in the world's biggest market."

Dozens of mobile app analytics firms compete worldwide, including big software names such as Adobe, Facebook , Google and IBM and more focused players such as Apmetrix, Localytics, SimilarWeb and Taplytics. But only App Annie so far offers an integrated global view, including China.

App Annie is now headquartered in San Francisco and has $150 million in funding from venture investors including Sequoia Capital and IDG Capital Partners. Two-fifths of its 500 employees and most of its engineering staff are based in China. (Reporting by Eric Auchard; Editing by Adrian Croft)


Source: App Annie's new product offers insight into consumer trends in China

Monday, September 18, 2017

Samsung Galaxy A (2018) Smartphones Rumored to Feature Exynos 7885 and Exynos 9610

Samsung is rumored to be working on 2018 versions of Galaxy A3, A5 and A7 smartphones. These phones are expected to be unleashed at the end of this year or in January 2018. An industry insider has claimed that the South Korean company may use Exynos 7885 to power the Galaxy A (2018) phones and in some regions these phones may feature Exynos 9610

In July, the rumor mill had revealed that Samsung is developing new chipsets like Exynos 7885 (14nm) and Exynos 9610 (10nm). Speculations are rife that these new chipsets will be unveiled before the end of the year.

The leaked specifications of both the chipsets have revealed that the Exynos 9610 is more powerful and is capable of delivering a performance that is similar to Exynos 8895 that powers flagship phones like Galaxy S8 duo and Galaxy Note 8. The new mid-range chipsets from Samsung are expected to deliver a performance that is similar to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 660 chipset.

Previous reports have revealed that the Exynos 9610 is a 64-bit octa-core chipset that features four cores of ARM Cortex A73 working at 2.4 GHz and another four cores of the power-efficient Cortex A53 whose processing speed is not available. The chipset includes Mali-G71 MP20 graphics and a fully integrated LTE modem. Even though fresh reports claim that it is a 10nm chipset, earlier reports had stated that it could be a 14nm chipset.

Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)

Read More: Samsung Galaxy S9 Reportedly Arriving with 1,000 FPS Image Sensor

The Exynos 7885 is said to be weaker chipset compared to Exynos 9610. It is rumored to arrive with two cores of ARM Cortex A73 working at 2.1 GHz that is coupled four cores of Cortex A53. It also features Mali-G71 GPU and an integrated LTE modem.

The same industry insider had also claimed around three years ago that all the Galaxy A (2018) smartphones would be equipped with dual rear cameras. The leaked specs of the Galaxy A7 (2018) have already appeared.

The handset is pegged to come with 5.7-inch FHD display and it seems to be powered by Exynos 7885 and 3 GB of RAM. The front and rear sides of the smartphone respectively feature 16-megapixel snappers. The native storage of the phone is 32 GB and it is loaded with Android 7.1.1 Nougat. A report from the previous month claims that the Galaxy A5 (2017) and Galaxy A7 (2017) would be featuring Samsung's Infinity Display. More information on the upcoming 2018 Galaxy A phones are expected to appear in the coming weeks.


Source: Samsung Galaxy A (2018) Smartphones Rumored to Feature Exynos 7885 and Exynos 9610

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Asia foreshadows rise of Chinese smartphones as iPhone X unveiled

BANGKOK -- On Saturday morning the MBK Center, a regional electronic gadget Mecca in the heart of the Thai capital, was crowded with young technology buffs after the unveiling of the iPhone X, the latest smartphone model from Apple. Yet despite the worldwide buzz over the tech titan's latest handset, with a starting price tag of $1,000 it will struggle to find a broader audience here. 

While the iPhone and Samsung Electronics' Galaxy lead the global smartphone market by sales, Southeast Asia's consumer landscape looks different. In a region home to some 600 million people, Chinese vendors are gaining ground, with one in five smartphones shipped locally now Chinese brands.

In the MBK Center, small smartphone shops stand cheek by jowl, enticing young customers with latest products. One store owner, Suwimol Khongsiriphaiboon, began offering Oppo and Vivo smartphones three years ago after becoming acquainted with the brands in China.

Both are produced by the Guangdong province-based BBK Electronics, and both were almost totally unknown in Thailand until recently. Today, however, Suwimol said Oppo and Vivo were some of her best selling products. Chinese brands, including Oppo, Vivo and Huawei, account for about half of the 70 handset sales her shop makes every month, and the shift in customer demand to Chinese smartphones has been much swifter than Suwimol could have imagined. "Oppo and Vivo are now very popular brands, thanks to effective advertising using famous Thai actors and actresses," she said.

Chinese smartphones are priced at around $500 at the high end of the market, yet they are not outdated knock-offs of earlier generation Samsung and Apple models, with 20-megapixel cameras and high-resolution liquid crystal displays considered standard. At Suwimol's shop, Vivo's V5Plus model is available for 12,000 baht ($362), a little over half the price of the Galaxy S7.

The rise of Chinese smartphones is not a phenomenon confined to Thailand. In Vietnam, Oppo's market share has already surpassed 20%, second only to Samsung's. Consumers in emerging markets, where budgets for smartphones are limited, increasingly see Chinese brands as attractive choice.

Ngoc Lan, a senior student at a language university in Ho Chi Minh City, was looking for a smartphone that fit within her 3 million-dong ($150) budget. "The model, form, style and color of the affordable smartphone, such as the Oppo, are similar to iPhone and Samsung products. These products are suitable for teenagers and students," she said.

As a result of the rapid expansion of Chinese brands' presence, the competitive landscape of the Southeast Asian smartphone market has seen seismic shifts. According to research firm IDC, total smartphone shipments in six Southeast Asian emerging countries, including Thailand and Indonesia, increased 4.3% year on year to 101.3 million units in 2016. Samsung of South Korea, the world's largest smartphone maker, was also the top player in the Southeast Asian market with a 23% market share. But the second and fourth players were Oppo and Huawei, both Chinese companies. The combined market shares of Oppo, Huawei and another Chinese brand Vivo amounted to 21%, closing in fast on Samsung's market leadership.

Comparison with the 2012 data underscores the market's changes. Samsung was by far the biggest player, commanding 37% of the market, over 2.5 times larger than the share of second-ranked BlackBerry. Third-ranked Apple held an 11% share, a record high for the U.S. company in the Southeast Asian market. By 2016, according to data compiled by IDC Asia senior market analyst Jensen Ooi, Apple had fallen to sixth with a market share of 4.5%.

"All these [Chinese] brands are not inferior to Samsung or Apple anymore. They have succeeded in pushing their brands up in the market," said Ooi, noting that most fast-selling smartphones in Southeast Asian emerging markets had price tags from $200-$400. China's Xiaomi recently unveiled a razor-thin smartphone, the Mi Mix 2, which features a liquid crystal display panel that stretches to the device's edges and a high-resolution camera. The price of this new flagship model is 3,299 yuan ($500) still half that of the iPhone X.

These developments demonstrate the competitive edge of Chinese brands in a market where commoditization -- the narrowing of difference in function, quality and other factors between competing brands -- has progressed rapidly. In other sectors, such as home appliances and personal computers, the same phenomenon has knocked what were once highly lauded market leaders off their predominant positions. 

Competition growing

Chinese smartphone companies have developed marketing strategies focusing on Southeast Asian consumers in an effort to expand their clout. Mark Xing, chief executive of Thai Oppo, said his advertising strategy relied on touting the camera quality of Oppo products while targeting 15 to 30 year old women who snap away selfies wherever they go and post the photos on Facebook. "Their desire is to look more beautiful and charming (in their photos)," he said.

Xing's strategy has borne fruit, with women making up 60% of Oppo users in Thailand. By raising brand awareness among Thai people through advertising, Thai Oppo began seeing local smartphone shops approaching the firm for deals. When Xing became the head of Oppo's Thai business two years ago, the number of stores selling its smartphones was less than 2,000 around the country. Now the number exceeds 10,000.

Chinese smartphone companies are also known for their aggressive retailing tactics. At Suwimol's shop in Bangkok, a buyer of Vivo V5Plus can get wireless earphone, a car charger, a protective case and a sheet of film to protect screen as complimentary extras. In Malaysia, where Apple is still second on market share, Oppo and Vivo's marketing blitz is so aggressive that they are paying the salaries of salespersons on behalf of dealers.

Competition between Chinese companies is also intensifying. Xiaomi, which so far has been selling its products directly to end users through e-commerce in Malaysia, started pushing its products through dealers in May to compete with Oppo and Vivo. It opened its first retail experience store in Penang and is planning for another in Kuala Lumpur by the end of the year, allowing the brand's followers, known as Mi fans, to try out other home appliance products.

Indonesia, the biggest market in Southeast Asia, has called for raising the local production rate for domestic smartphone sales to 30%. Many foreign smartphone makers have already cleared the requirement by entrusting production to Indonesian manufacturers. Samsung meets the rule by newly installed smartphone assembly lines at a home appliance plant in West Java.

Apple has occasionally been forced to delay the release of new iPhone models in Indonesia because of its failure to clear the local content requirement. The iPhone 6s, which went on sale in September 2015 in the U.S., Japan and elsewhere, was not released in Indonesia until this year. In order not to repeat the blunder, the company plans to open a software research and development center in Indonesia, possibly in October.

In emerging Asia, a region which comprises seven countries including Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and India, overall smartphone demand will total 234 million units in 2017, an 11% increase year-on-year, according to market research firm GfK. The rise of Chinese brands is signaling a new era to match this demand.

It does not appear that the latest iPhone will lure back Indonesian and other Southeast Asian consumers who have already embraced Chinese brands. After new iPhone models were unveiled in California last week, it was clear that Apple has resolved to push ahead in its pursuit of greater technological sophistication for its smartphone line. The resulting price tag of the iPhone X will make it hard for the company to claw back ground across the region. 

A group of six young men hanging out at the MBK Center on Saturday all owned iPhone 6 handsets released three years ago. Students at the time, each of them asked their parents to buy them the model at the time. Now in the workforce, they will need to pay for their next smartphone. Asked whether they would buy the next generation Apple product when it hits the Thai market in the coming months, all six said it was far too expensive for their budgets. 

CK Tan in Kuala Lumpur, Kim Dung Tong in Ho Chi Minh City and Jun Suzuki in Jakarta contributed to this story.


Source: Asia foreshadows rise of Chinese smartphones as iPhone X unveiled

Saturday, September 16, 2017

Chinese Smartphone Industry, Application Processors by Number of Cores, Overview & Analysis 2016

(EMAILWIRE.COM, September 15, 2017 ) This report presents a recent review of the Chinese smartphone industry in the first quarter of 2016, including shipment volume of major smartphone brands in China, breakdowns of each vendor's shipment volume share by chipset maker, application processor model, ASP, panel size, camera pixel, resolution, as well as 3G and 4G technologies. The report also examines major chipset maker's product mix for major smartphones available in China.

For more information about this report: http://www.reportsweb.com/the-chinese-smartphone-industry-1q-2016

The report finds that the Chinese smartphone industry's shipment volume reached around 105.6 million units in the first quarter of 2016, up 11.9% year on year, with a total number of 274 new models launched during the January-March period. By shipment volume, Huawei was the market leader with shipment volume reaching around 16.7 million units, followed by Xiaomi, which shipped around 14.1 million smartp hones. It is worth noting that Chinese vendors Oppo and Vivo had made significant progress to take the third and fourth places, respectively. Meanwhile, Apple and Samusng ranked fifth and sixth with around 11.1 million and 6.7 million units of smartphones shipped, respectively. Emerging vendors, such as Meizu and LeEco, are anticipated to play a more important role in the changing dynamic of the Chinese smartphone market. In particular, LeEco, the first online video service company in China to make forays into hardware, managed to rise rapidly on the back of strong smartphone sales. The company is estimated to have shipped around 3.3 million smartphones in the first quarter of 2016.

Request Sample Copy at http://www.reportsweb.com/inquiry&RW0001351043/sample

Table of ContentsChinese Smartphone Shipment Volume, April 2015 - May 2016Chinese Smartphone Newly Released Models, April 2015 - May 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Volume Share by Operation System, April 2015 - May 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Share by ASP (RMB), 1Q 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Share by Camera Pixel, 1Q 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Share by Panel Size, 1Q 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Share by Resolution, 1Q 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Share by 3G Technology, 1Q 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Share by 4G Technology, 1Q 2016Chinese Smartphone Vendor's Shipment Volume Rankings, April 2015 - March 2016Chinese Smartphone Shipment Volume by Vendor, 1Q 2016Shipment Volume of Application Processors to Chinese Smartphone Branded Vendors, 1Q 2016Shipment Volume of Application Processors by Number of Cores, 1Q 2016MediaTek's Shipment Volume Share by Application Processor Model, 1Q 2016Qualcomm's Shipment Volume Share by Application Processor Model, 1Q 2016Samsung's Shipment Volume Share by Application Processor Model, 1Q 2016Hisilicon's Shipment Volume Share by Application Processor Model, 1Q 2016Huawei Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Xiaomi Smartphone Shipment s in China, 1Q 2016Oppo Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Vivo Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Apple Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Samsung Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016CoolPad Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Gionee Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016ZTE Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Meizu Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Lenovo Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016LeEco Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Microsoft Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016Hisense Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016ASUS Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016TCL Smartphone Shipments in China, 1Q 2016

Inquire before Buying at http://www.reportsweb.com/inquiry&RW0001351043/buying


Source: Chinese Smartphone Industry, Application Processors by Number of Cores, Overview & Analysis 2016

Friday, September 15, 2017

Huawei sort to cheaper smart phones to boost market share in Kenya

China's Huawei Technologies has changed its strategy in Kenya this month to showcase an affordable $100-200 range of smart phones, hoping the increased sales will boost its local market share, the company's country manager said on Thursday (September 14).

Huawei is ranked number three in the fast-growing local smart devices market, behind South Korea's Samsung Electronics and Tecno, owned by Hong Kong's Transsion Holdings.

Derek Du, the local boss of Huawei, said the company had started offering three smart phones with retail prices starting at 8,999 shillings ($87) to 22,999 shillings ($220), as part of a strategy to lift its market share in that segment from 4 percent to 15 percent.

"This year, why we focus on this we found that Kenya market is price sensitive market and also entry level smartphone is popular here. So we also from this year not only launch high level we also in Kenya the market size is also the biggest so we highlighted this," he said.

Safaricom, the biggest operator with 72 percent market share or 28 million users, said there are 13 million smart phones on its network, up from 10 million last year.

Consumers have been giving up their well-worn feature phones to take advantage of relatively fast Internet speeds and applications such as WhatsApp and those that facilitate banking and taxi-hailing services.

He said the new strategy will help the firm to boost its overall market share to 25-30 percent, from the current 14 percent, in the next two years.

"Actually we are growing a bit slow than our competitors like Samsung, Tecno and actually our market share is only 14 percent so we want to approach higher but actually Kenyan market is hard to say, its a different market in a low cost level," said Du.

Huawei previously focused on the mid-range of smart phones, where it has a 30 percent market share. It also sells the premium "Mate" series phones in the Kenyan market for the well-heeled.

Huawei, which is based in Shenzhen, China, competes with Apple and other devices vendors for global consumers.

"They trend like right now we have launched the mid range phones where people do love them they move like daily we could sell like 10 to 20 phones," said sales rep, Anthony Makau.

"Its nice its not that much expensive, its good, the price is ok, not expensive, actually right now am going to look for something and then I come for it," said Bill Koremo, a customer.

The annual average Kenyan wage is $1,200, official figures show, so most people cannot afford expensive smart phones.

Reuters


Source: Huawei sort to cheaper smart phones to boost market share in Kenya

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Why 500 Million People in China Are Talking to This AI

When Gang Xu, a 46-year-old Beijing resident, needs to communicate with his Canadian tenant about rent payments or electricity bills, he opens an app called iFlytek Input in his smartphone and taps an icon that looks like a microphone, and then begins talking. The software turns his Chinese verbal messages into English text messages, and sends them to the Canadian tenant. It also translates the tenant's English text messages into Chinese ones, creating a seamless cycle of bilingual conversation.

In China, over 500 million people use iFlytek Input to overcome obstacles in communication such as the one Xu faces. Some also use it to send text messages through voice commands while driving, or to communicate with a speaker of another Chinese dialect. The app was developed by iFlytek, a Chinese AI company that applies deep learning in a range of fields such as speech recognition, natural-language processing, machine translation, and data mining (see "50 Smartest Companies 2017").

Court systems use its voice-recognition technology to transcribe lengthy proceedings; business call centers use its voice synthesis technology to generate automated replies; and Didi, a popular Chinese ride-hailing app, also uses iFlytek's technology to broadcast orders to drivers.

But while some impressive progress in voice recognition and instant translation has enabled Xu to talk with his Canadian tenant, language understanding and translation for machines remains an incredibly challenging task (see "AI's Language Problem").

Xu recalls a misunderstanding when he tried to ask his tenant when he would get off work to come sign the lease renewal. But the text message sent by the app was "What time do you go to work today?" In retrospect, he figures that it was probably because of the wording of his question: you'll work until what time today? "Sometimes, depending on the context, I can't get my meaning across," says Xu, who still depends on it for communication.

Xu's story highlights why it's so important for a company like iFlytek to gather as much data from real-world interactions as possible. The app, which is free, has been collecting that data since it launched in 2010.

iFlytek's developer platform, called iFlytek Open Platform, provides voice-based AI technologies to over 400,000 developers in various industries such as smart home and mobile Internet. The company is valued at 80 billion yuan ($12 billion), and has international ambitions, including a subsidiary in the U.S. and an effort to expand into languages other than Chinese. Meanwhile, the company is changing the way many industries such as driving, health care, and education interact with their users in China.

iFlytek is headquartered in Hefei, China.

In August, iFlytek launched a voice assistant for drivers called Xiaofeiyu (Little Flying Fish). To ensure safe driving, it has no screen and no buttons. Once connected to the Internet and the driver's smartphone, it can place calls, play music, look for directions, and search for restaurants through voice commands. Unlike voice assistants intended for homes, Xiaofeiyu was designed to recognize voices in a noisy environment.

Min Chu, the vice president of AISpeech, another Chinese company working on voice-based human-computer interaction technologies, says voice assistants for drivers are in some ways more promising than smart speakers and virtual assistants embedded in smartphones. When the driver's eyes and hands are occupied, it makes more sense to rely on voice commands. In addition, once drivers become used to getting things done using their voice, the assistant can also become a content provider, recommending entertainment options instead of passively handling requests. This way, a new business model will evolve.

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In the health-care industry, although artificial intelligence has the potential to reduce costs and improve patient outcomes, many hospitals are reluctant to take the plunge for fear of disrupting an already strained system that has few doctors but lots of patients.

At the Anhui Provincial Hospital, which is testing a number of trials using AI, voice-based technologies are transforming many aspects of its service. Ten voice assistants in the shape of a robot girl use iFlytek's technology to greet visitors in the lobby of the outpatient department and offer relief for overworked receptionists. Patients can tell the voice assistant what their symptoms are, and then find out which department can help.

Based on the data collected by the hospital since June, the voice assistant directed patients to the right department 84 percent of the time.

Doctors at the hospital are also using iFlytek to dictate a patient's vital signs, medications taken, and other bits of information into a mobile app, which then turns everything into written records. The app uses voice print technology as a signature system that cannot be falsified. The app is collecting data that will improve its algorithms over time.

Although voice-based AI techniques are becoming more useful in different scenarios, one fundamental challenge remains: machines do not understand the answers they generate, says Xiaojun Wan, a professor at Peking University who does research in natural-language processing. The AI responds to voice queries by searching for a relevant answer in the vast amount of data it was fed, but it has no real understanding of what it says.

In other words, the natural-language processing technology that powers today's voice assistants is based on a set of rigid rules, resulting in the kind of misunderstanding Xu went through.

Changing the way machines process language will help companies create voice-based AI devices that will become an integral part of our daily life. "Whoever makes a breakthrough in natural-language processing will enjoy an edge in the market," says Chu.


Source: Why 500 Million People in China Are Talking to This AI

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Samsung launches Note 8 in China, confident in winning back consumers

D.J. Koh, president of mobile communications at Samsung, delivers a speech at the Galaxy Note 8 launch event in Beijing on Sept 13, 2017. (Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn)

D.J. Koh, president of mobile communications at Samsung, delivers a speech at the Galaxy Note 8 launch event in Beijing on Sept 13, 2017. (Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn)

Just hours after Apple Inc unveiled its next iPhones to the world, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, the world's largest smartphone vendor, launched its flagship Galaxy Note 8 in Beijing on Wednesday.

D.J. Koh, president of mobile communications at Samsung, said at the event that China is an important market for Samsung, and he is confident the company will win back Chinese consumers' love.

"We will do that by consistently listening to Chinese consumers and delivering technology and innovation that matters to them," Koh said.

As most specifications of the phablet were already released at its original launch event in New York on Aug 23, the unveiling of Note 8's price in China was the highlight of the event.

The high-end handset, available in 64 GB, 128 GB and 256 GB internal storage options, is priced at 6,988 yuan ($1,069.97), 7,388 yuan and 7,988 yuan respectively in China, Samsung announced.

Sporting a 6.3-inch AMOLED screen and continuing Samsung's dual-edge curved display design, the Note 8 is powered by a Snapdragon 835 processor and is Samsung's first smartphone to feature a dual-lens camera system equipped with optical image stabilization.

It also supports a range of biometric features, including iris, fingerprint and face recognition.

In addition, S Pen, the unique accessory for the Note 8, can now be used to directly write memos on the screen without unlocking the handset first.

To eliminate the battery explosion concerns caused by the Note 7 last year, Samsung hired UL, a global independent safety science company, to test the battery of the Note 8.

Sajeev Jesudas, senior vice-president of UL, endorsed the handset's safety at the event, saying the Note 8 has successfully completed a rigorous series of device and battery safety compatibility tests.

However, after only seizing 3 percent of China's market and slipping to sixth place in the second quarter of this year, Samsung has fallen behind its Chinese competitors and Apple, according to data from a Counterpoint Research report.

The South Korean company entered the Chinese market 25 years ago. With nine manufacturing bases, seven R&D centers and one design center established in China, Samsung still has belief in its localization strategy, Koh said.

Chen Liren, vice-president of Samsung's content strategy department in China, announced the company's mobile payment tool Samsung Pay now supports Tencent's WeChat Pay and Alibaba's Alipay and will include JD.com Inc's payment tool in the future.

In addition, Samsung has partnered with China's leading bike-sharing company Mobike, Chen said.

Instead of opening Mobike's app, the Note 8 smartphone's camera can scan the QR code of Mobike's shared bike and unlock it directly, a Mobike executive said.

The two companies also have partnered in adopting NFC, or near-field communication, technology to unlock bikes, the executive said.

As pre-orders for the Note 8 in China will run from Wednesday to Sept 26 and its sale will begin on Sept 29, the market's attitude toward Samsung will be clear soon.

Koh said he feels confident in the company, as the number of pre-orders for Note 8 from about 40 countries has hit the highest-ever record for the Note series, according to a report by Asia Today.

In addition, he said Samsung has a plan to launch a foldable smartphone in 2018, according to Reuters.

  


Source: Samsung launches Note 8 in China, confident in winning back consumers

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Lucky 8? $1,000 price tag dampens iPhone enthusiasm in China

(This version of the September 11 story corrects paragraph 17 to clarify Tencent is not an investor in Fenqile)

By Cate Cadell

BEIJING (Reuters) - Apple Inc (AAPL.O) will launch an expected "iPhone 8" on Tuesday, hoping the number's auspicious connotations in China will help turn around fortunes in the world's biggest smartphone market.

The latest model is tipped to have a price tag upward of $1,000, compared with less than $800 for the top-end iPhone 7 Plus. That is unlikely to make a major dent in U.S. sales, analysts say, but could have a greater impact in China, where the cost is roughly double the average Chinese monthly salary.

The success of Apple's next iPhone in China is crucial for the Cupertino-based firm, which has seen its once-coveted phone slip into fifth position in China behind offerings from local rivals Huawei Technologies Co Ltd [HWT. UL], Oppo, Vivo and Xiaomi Inc [XTC.UL].

Greater China, which for Apple includes Taiwan and Hong Kong, accounted for roughly 18 percent of iPhone sales in the quarter ended in July, making it the company's top market after the United States and Europe. Yet those sales have been declining steadily and are down 10 percent from a year earlier, in contrast with growth in all other regions.

And the iPhone's share of China's smartphone shipments fell to 9 percent in January-June, down from 14 percent in 2015, showed data from consultancy Counterpoint Research.

While the iPhone 6 took China by storm in 2014, models since have received a more muted response.

"I'll wait for a drop in price, it's too expensive," said Angie Chen, 23, a project manager in Nanjing and iPhone 6 owner.

Chen said she might wait for the new phone's successor, when prices will f all. "It's a nice number to hear, but there's no rush."

Eight is the luckiest number in China because it sounds similar to the phrase meaning "to get rich".

"Apple really needs to launch a very innovative product this time around," said Mo Jia, Shanghai-based analyst at Canalys. However, the rising clout of local rivals would nevertheless make life tough for the U.S. firm, he said. "It has its work cut out."

The iPhone 7 suffered from the perception that it was too similar to earlier models. This time, despite talk of wireless charging, advanced touch screen and facial recognition technology, Chinese netizens are yet to replicate the online mania around previous iPhone launches.

Mentions of "iPhone 8" on popular Chinese social media platform Weibo - an indicator of consumer interest - were running slightly ahead of the similar period before the iPhone 7 launch , but were far more muted than with the iPhone 6.

A woman looks at the screen of her mobile phone in front of an Apple logo outside its store in Shanghai, China July 30, 2017. REUTERS/Aly Song

Apple declined to comment on the new phone, price or supply.

In the United States, analysts are less certain that a $1,000 price will have a dramatic effect. Around four out of five of the consumers who in the past bought the top end model would likely be willing to do so again despite the price jump, estimated analyst and veteran Apple watcher Gene Munster of Loup Ventures.

Beyond that, Apple is expected to cover other price points by retaining some sort of low-end model similar to the current iPhone SE, which sells for $399. That is likely to ensure iPhone customers stay within the Apple ecosystem even if prices on top-end models rise.

"They need to still offer something for each market. Th ey still will have that," Munster said.

Another factor for U.S. sales will be discounts from carriers, which might opt to use the buzz around the new iPhone launch to lure customers away from their competitors by offering deals that would soften the blow of higher prices.

"The weapons of competition are increased phone subsidies, discounted phone payment plans and device trade-in offers," BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk wrote in a note to clients. "Promotions are already on the rise for the Samsung phones introduced earlier this year."

BUY ON CREDIT

In China, one effect of Apple's costliest phone to date will be the rise of sales on credit.

Wang Yang, who runs a bricks-and-mortar smartphone store in Beijing's largest tech market, said he expected more purchases online this time, as consumers make payments by instalment.

"We will continue to stock th e cheaper models or we won't sell much," he said.

Fenqile, a service founded by a former Tencent Holdings Ltd (0700.HK) executive that allows users to pay in instalments, said shoppers buying iPhones on the site had increased alongside rising prices - spiking in the second quarter of the year.

Services backed by Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd (BABA.N) and JD.com Inc (JD.O) have also introduced features this year aimed at price-conscious smartphone buyers, including flexible payment services and second-hand smartphone rentals.

Apple itself has launched an instalments plan in China supported by three state-linked banks.

"If it's under $1,100 then I'll buy it," said Liu Song, 29, who works for a fintech startup in Beijing.

Reporting by Cate Cadell; Additional reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Chri stopher Cushing and Rosalba O'Brien


Source: Lucky 8? $1,000 price tag dampens iPhone enthusiasm in China

Monday, September 11, 2017

China's Latest Crackdown on Message Groups Chills WeChat Users

Self-censorship is kicking in fast on WeChat as China's new rules on message groups casts a chill among the 963 million users of Tencent Holdings Ltd.'s social network.

Regulations released Sept. 7 made creators of online groups responsible for managing information within their forums and the behavior of members. While they don't take effect until October, authorities have jumped into action by disciplining 40 people in one group for spreading petition letters while arresting a man who complained about police raids, according to reports in official Chinese media.

The prospect of punishment for the actions of others has led many administrators to disband groups while others circulate self-imposed rules discouraging the spreading of rumors or unauthorized information about Hong Kong and Taiwan. Some are turning to alternatives, such as encrypted messaging apps, to avoid government scrutiny. The regulations are the latest in a series of moves carried out by authorities, as China ramps up for the politically sensitive period of the 19th Communist Party congress.

"WeChat is really the modern printing press, so of course there will be restrictions," said Duncan Clark, chairman of technology consulting firm BDA China Ltd. and a shareholder of Tencent. "If you are an investor in Tencent, you are basically betting on management's ability to adjust to policies and yet still be able to create a product that people like."

Tencent's WeChat and QQ, which has 662 million mobile users, evolved from instant messaging to become true social networks by adding news feeds, photo sharing and other services. Anyone can create a group, usually of as many as 500 people, to share pictures, voice chats and links to websites.

Jane Yip, a spokeswoman for Shenzhen-based Tencent, didn't respond to a request for comment.

Weibo Corp., China's equivalent of Twitter, went through similar tightening a few years ago when users were required to reveal their real identities and opinion leaders were arrested for comments. As smartphones became pervasive, users shifted to then-nascent WeChat, which was under less scrutiny, fueling Tencent's rise to become a $400 billion-empire today. Weibo has a market value of $23 billion.

Qiao Mu, a former journalism professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University who recently emigrated to the U.S., had four personal WeChat accounts and 16 public ones deleted without his consent.

"Wechat groups scared the party because it's the simplest way to mobilize and organize a group of people," Qiao said. "The new rule is an upgrade, as they want to hush people and enforce self-censorship. They want to avoid mass incidents and prevent crises before they emerge."

Whether Tencent can navigate the more stringent policies while keeping users happy remains to be seen. The new rules apply to all internet and mobile forums, meaning there are few alternatives.

While virtual private networks can provide access to blocked messaging services such as Line and Telegram, the country is zeroing in such services. Apple Inc. is removing many VPNs from its Chinese app store to comply with local rules.

"People in China are really between a rock and a hard place," said Lokman Tsui, an assistant professor at the School of Journalism and Communication at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.


Source: China's Latest Crackdown on Message Groups Chills WeChat Users

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Android 8.0 Oreo Customs ROMS Arrives for Popular Samsung, Xiaomi, OnePlus, Motorola Phones & More

Android 8.0 Oreo was officially unveiled on Aug. 21 and since then a couple of smartphone OEMs like BlackBerry, HTC, Nokia and Sony have confirmed on the devices that will be upgraded to the newest Android version. The Android 8.0 will be arriving preinstalled on the forthcoming smartphones and it will be available as the first or second major update for the existing smartphones. It means several smartphones from 2015 and older smartphone are unlikely to receive the official Android 8.0 Oreo update. However, Android 8.0 can be installed unofficially on numerous smartphones through custom ROMS.

XDA Developers has the biggest community collection of Android 8.0 custom ROMS. The list of devices for which AOSP Oreo and Lineage OS 15 ROMs are available is updated regularly. Some of the ROMs that have been made may not function in a very stable manner.

Read More: Android 8.0 Oreo OTA Update Now Available for Android Beta Program Devices; How to Get it Now?

ASUS ZenFone 5, LG Nexus 5, Motorola Nexus 6, OnePlus One, OnePlus 5 (on experimental basis), Sony Xperia SP, Xperia T, Xperia TX, Xperia V, Samsung Galaxy S6, Galaxy Note 10.1 2014, Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 Snapdragon edition, Mi Max, Mi 3, Mi 4 and Mi 5 are the handsets for which the AOSP Oreo is available.

ASUS ZenFone 2 Laser, ZenFone Selfie, HTC One M8, One M8 Dual SIM, LeEco Le Max 2, Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus, Moto X 2014, Moto E (2015), Moto G and 4G models from 2013, Moto G 2014 LTE, Moto G 2015, Moto G5 Plus, HTC Nexus 9 WiFi, OnePlus X, OnePlus 2, OnePlus 3, OnePlus 3T, Samsung Galaxy Tab S2, Sony Xperia M2, Xiaomi Redmi 3, Redmi Note 4, Mi 4C, Mi 5S, Mi 5S Plus and Yu Yunique are some of the popular smartphones for which the Lineage OS 15.0 is available.

Android 8.0 Oreo is now seeding to Nexus 5X, Nexus 6X, Nexus Player, Pixel C, Pixel and Pixel XL devices. However, the upcoming Google Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL will be the first smartphones to arrive preinstalled with the latest Android version. Moreover, the Pixel 2 duo are expected to carry some new features that are not available on the existing version of Android 8.0. The rumor mill has already revealed plenty of information on the specifications of the Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 duo. Both phones are expected to debut on Oct. 5.

(sources)


Source: Android 8.0 Oreo Customs ROMS Arrives for Popular Samsung, Xiaomi, OnePlus, Motorola Phones & More

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Going cash free: why China is light years ahead in the online payment revolution

"Zhifubao or Weixin," asks the waitress. It's a question that catches me by surprise because I was expecting a different one: "cash or card?" It has been a simple meal at Yershari, a Xinjiang chain restaurant in Shanghai's Hongkou Plaza, and now as I eye my wallet the waitress gestures towards the cashier by the door. I can settle up the old-fashioned way over there, I'm told – the payment device she's carrying scans QR codes. "Most of our clients use their phones now," she says, with a shrug.

China is leading the world in online payments. Buying goods and services using smartphone apps that provide mobile-payment services has caught on here like nowhere else; the rate of adoption is dizzying in a country that even state media acknowledges is hurtling towards a cashless society.

When I read on Weibo that beggars in the city are using Alipay and WeChat Pay (Zhifubao and Weixin, respectively, in Putonghua) to collect handouts, I decide it's time to find out if it's possible to live in Shanghai without paper money or bank cards.

I'm already hooked up to Alipay and Tencent's WeChat Pay. They are linked to my bank account, which funds an online e-wallet. I use their services rarely, only for web purchases. But you can't engage with the amazing universe of Taobao – the gargantuan shopping platform of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group (owner of Alipay and the South China Morning Post) – if you don't have a way to pay for its gazillion products. Where else can you pick up a cast-metal Communist Party emblem, a plastic replica of an ancient Chinese opera mask and a David Beckham sex doll all in the same place?

Alipay and WeChat Pay let you shop for goods and services on the internet and in the real "bricks and mortar" world. To shop on web­sites through a desktop computer, log on to your Alipay or WeChat Pay account and verify your transactions using a pass­word. Alter­natively, scan the QR code that appears on the pay­ment page with your smartphone. If you're browsing with a smart­phone, pay using your password or a fingerprint scan, or by screen­shotting the QR code on the payment page and scanning that.

Back in the real world, at larger shops and restaurants, simply press the "pay" button in your smartphone app and a QR code appears for the vendor to scan using a point of sale (POS) device, like the one the waitress in the restaurant waved at me in vain. Smaller stores and vendors with no POS device often print and display their QR codes, which the customer can scan on their smartphone, setting the amount to be transferred to the vendor's e-wallet. Vendors that have not printed their QR code can use their own smartphone to scan a QR code produced by the customer's smartphone app after entering the amount to be transferred. Transfers between individuals in this way are simple and commis­sion free. WeChat also allows seamless transfers between contacts using the app, which is particularly convenient when, say, going Dutch at a restaurant.

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It's a payment ecosystem that has evolved at breakneck speed and every type of retailer, from supermarket to street vendor, is cashing in. McDonald's and Starbucks have self-scanning devices installed beside tills; market traders print QR codes in their homes to display alongside goods sold on their stalls.

In the interest of going beyond the usual "a day without cash" experiment, I begin with some of the toughest nuts to crack. Can I use Alipay or Tenpay (which incorporates both WeChat Pay and QQ Wallet) to settle my utility bills?

To my surprise, I can. Electricity? Check! Water? Check! Gas? Check! Landline and mobile phones? Check! Surely not govern­ment bills such as income tax? Check! Even buying a Cathay Pacific air ticket turns out to be easier with Alipay than using an inter­national credit card.

Getting around without cash is now far easier than it used to be. Shared-bike schemes such as Mobike and Ofo only accept bytes, and the same goes for taxi-hailing apps such as Didi. In a cab, you can still pay the old-fashioned way, but in Uber-esque shared cars, it's mobile payment only.

China's mobile payment systems put to the test on a cash-free day out in Shenzhen

You may not be able to use your phone to buy a bus ticket or a metro ticket, but you can purchase a stored-value card with it, and top it up. And some Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, are upgrading or have already upgraded their transport systems to allow smartphones to be used instead.

These mobile-payment systems also provide users with unexpected benefits. When visiting a public hospital, for instance, patients usually have to queue for registration and then wait (sometimes for hours) for their turn to see a doctor. Making an appointment in advance is not possible – unless you use Alipay or WeChat's HealthCare function, where you pay upfront and are given a time slot.

Over more than a month, I've hardly come across a single payment I couldn't make digitally, including goods and services I would not usually buy, such as lottery numbers and tuition fees for universities, private academies and some primary and secondary schools. There is even a "charity" button in WeChat that channels donations to good causes.

In the unlikely event you really do need cash, to feed one of a dying breed of cash-only vending machines perhaps, you will have to find a good Samaritan who is willing to exchange paper money for an online transfer. That aside, it really is possible to live a normal life in Shanghai without cash or bank cards. Leaving home with an empty wallet no longer gives me the chills – provided I have mobile network coverage and sufficient battery life, that is.

Visa and Mastercard have never been mainstream in the mainland and now even the widely used eUnionPay has been eclipsed by Alipay and Tenpay, which are accepted in many smaller outlets where cards are not.

It's just a matter of time before we won't even need a device to pay. Our fingers, our irises, even our ears will be payment devices

Luis Galán, chief executive of Chinese e-commerce consultants 2 Open

"Chinese people have jumped from using cash to using phones without the middle steps of cheques and bank cards," says Oliver Rui, a professor of finance and accounting at China Europe International Business School, in Shanghai.

The scale and the pace of this transformation have been remarkable.

According to iResearch Consulting Group, which measures online audiences in China, the gross merchandise volume (GMV) of online payments in the country reached 57.7 trillion yuan (HK$69 trillion) in 2016. That includes payments made through computers (19.2 trillion yuan) and mobile devices (38.5 trillion yuan) and amounts to about 50 times the GMV of similar transactions in the United States, which is estimated by market research firm Forrester Research at US$112 billion.

And China growth remains strong, with iResearch reporting that online payments soared in the first quarter of 2017. Mobile payments over the period grew 113.4 per cent, to 22.7 trillion yuan and other online payments reached 6.4 trillion yuan, up 56.1 per cent year on year.

Alipay and Tenpay dominate with 54 per cent and 40 per cent market share of mobile payments, respectively, as well as 30.7 per cent and 22.2 per cent of other online transactions. Payment systems popular elsewhere in the world, such as Apple Pay and PayPal, don't even warrant a namecheck in China statistics, and are relegated to the "others" category.

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On the upper levels of Alibaba's headquarters in Hangzhou, in Zhejiang province, a giant screen presides over an enormous space known as the "control room". It contains no desks, no work­stations, almost nothing else at all. Displayed on the screen are real-time transactions across the country. Most are notched up by shoppers on Taobao and Tmall – the e-commerce giant's consumer-to-consumer (C2C) and business-to-consumer (B2C) platforms – and watching the numbers climb is mesmerising.

"People trust Alipay because it's safe, convenient and easy to use," says Li Junling, vice-president of Alibaba Group. "China is often under fire for copying and infringing intel­lectual property rights, but in the internet, China is inno­vating, and online payments show how the country can lead the world."

During the planet's biggest online shopping extravaganza, China's annual Singles Day sales on November 11 – known colloquially as 11.11, or Double Eleven – Alibaba's screens light up. In just 24 hours last year, the total spend reached 120.7 billion yuan, prompting a flurry of selfies with the control-room display screen as a backdrop.

At Alibaba rival Tencent, the 2017 Lunar New Year's Eve produced its own record, with 14 billion digital hongbao ("red packets") gifted through WeChat – a 76 per cent increase on 2016. Thanks to its 889 million active users, the chat app is narrowing the gap with Alipay, while smaller players struggle for a slice of the pie.

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But "they can find their niche market because China is huge", says Rui.

If iResearch forecasts are correct, annual online transac­tions in China will reach 116.7 trillion yuan in 2019. That's almost 50 times Hong Kong's gross domestic product.

What has made this revolution possible?

"First and foremost, the fast penetration of smartphones and mobile internet," Rui says.

Government statistics reported in state-owned media show there were 731 million internet users in the mainland at the end of last year, 95.1 per cent of them using mobile phones for access and 60 per cent using computers.

According to digital-news site China Internet Watch, 469 million Chinese made online payments in 2016, a 31.2 per cent rise from 2015, and 50.3 per cent of them used phones to pay in offline retail stores.

"Young Chinese are avid gadget lovers and early tech­nology adopters," Rui explains.

China Internet Watch found Chinese people who were born in the 1980s and shop online spent an average of 120,000 yuan per person last year, making them the highest spending demographic. Those born in the 90s spent less because their budget was usually lower, but 92 per cent shopped online compared with a national average of 35 per cent.

Two-thirds of smartphone users in China now pay via mobile

"For many, cash is a thing of the past," Rui observes.

Ren Jing, an 18-year-old student from Taiyuan, the capital of Shanxi province, is a typical example.

"I now only carry a 50 yuan bill in my wallet, just in case," she says. "It has been there for months. I pay for everything with the phone, and so do my friends. It's very convenient. I don't have to worry about being robbed and it's more hygien­ic. You should see some of the notes I had. They were filthy!"

Alipay and Tenpay offer discount coupons and prizes to encourage the use of their platforms, and Ren adds, "Some­times there are promotions that make paying online cheaper than using cash or cards."

The student believes that there is room for further growth in online payments, especially in rural areas.

"Although many people there are already embracing it, cash is still king in the small village where I come from," Ren says. "For my grandparents, paying with a phone is a kind of magic. They want something they can touch."

Xu Qinqing, a middle-aged, always smiling fruit vendor who owns a small store on a corner of one of Shanghai's few remaining old streets in Hongkou, close to where I live, resisted for a few months when her 18-year-old daughter told her in 2014 that she should start accepting online payments.

"I was wary in the beginning," Xu says. "I've grown up thinking cash is the safest option. My parents won't trust anything else. With these new applications, what you own is just a number on the screen."

Xu relented, despite her initial caution, and now sells her goods via the payment apps.

"It's safer not to have a box with cash around and you can transfer money instantly without commission even to your bank account," she says, adding with a smile, "Once I went to draw the cash, just to make sure it was real."

Xu also believes the payment apps have levelled the playing field in business.

"They have enabled small stores like mine to offer customers services that were once available only to bigger establishments, like paying with something other than cash," she says. "The world has changed."

Liu Shihui is an example of how online money has helped young entrepreneurs find their feet. The 29-year-old, from Changzhou, in Jiangsu province, pays suppliers and charges clients without ever seeing a coin or using a bank.

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"I quit my nine-to-five job and opened a Taobao store and a WeChat store," she says. "I buy cakes made to order at a factory, store them briefly at home if there is stock, and sell them. I'm now my own boss and earn much more than before. Without online payments – and the rise of express delivery companies – millions of people like me wouldn't have found a different way to make a living. They gave us freedom."

But not everybody is happy with the situation. According to a report by market research provider Kapronasia, Chinese banks lost US$20 billion in credit-card fees in 2015 alone, while Alipay and Tenpay captured 28 per cent of all retail transaction fees.

"We prefer them to bank cards because they charge less commission," says Wei Zhu, the owner of a clothing store in Beijing.

A report from the Better Than Cash Alliance – a global partnership of governments, companies and international organisations aimed at accelerating the transition from cash to digital payments – predicts that by 2020, use of cash in the mainland will fall to 30 per cent of retail payments (down from 61 per cent in 2010), with use of bank cards stabilising at about 41 per cent.

The manager of a Chinese state-owned-bank branch, who does not want to be named, admits that online payments are a challenge his industry does not know how to address.

"We are losing money and, worse, customers," he says. "We have scrapped intercity withdrawal fees and we have launched similar products, but Alipay and WeChat have become a duopoly that is impossible to fight."

The biggest threat to Chinese banks, though, is not online payment systems, Rui says, but how customers can use them to invest in financial products.

The largest investment fund in China is Yu'e Bao, which is managed by Ant Financial – an affiliate of Alibaba Group – and integrated into Alipay. Yu'e Bao grew from 200 million yuan in assets under management in 2013 to 1.4 trillion yuan – serving more than 152 million customers – this year.

According to the Better Than Cash Alliance, Yu'e Bao is "a low-risk money market account similar to a bank savings account". Customers can take the money "left behind" in their digital wallets and invest it in Yu'e Bao. The amounts involved are usually small and the savings and investment scheme is particularly beneficial for people living on low incomes – it has no minimum investment, and users can withdraw at any time and at no cost.

Ye Baoxiang, a 31-year-old friend who works at a techno­logy firm, says he invested the maximum allowable 250,000 yuan (lowered to 100,000 yuan since last month) and has seen an annual yield of 3.5 per cent.

"I wish I could put all my money there, because the bank gives me peanuts to keep it sitting in its savings account," he says. "Fortunately, there are other funds coming up in the app."

However, shopkeeper Xu's early trepidation was not unwarranted. Market researcher Acuity Research Group expects 60 per cent of all payments in China to be made online by 2020, and verified via biometric sensors. And that poses security risks.

In 2012, the Norton Cybercrime Report, produced annually by Symantec Online Security, claimed that 85 per cent of Chinese users of online payment systems had fallen victim to online theft. In 2015, the Chinese government estimated the economic toll of such crimes was more than US$11 billion.

QR code scams rise in China, putting e-payment security in spotlight

Cybercriminals may also profit from the rise of the "inter­net of things", which will see billions of home appliances worldwide plugged into cyberspace.

"Your fridge will not only be able to warn you what items you should buy," Mao Hongjian, research and development director at electrical appliance manufacturer Midea, told me at the Appliance and Electronics World Expo, in Shanghai, in 2016. "It will eventually have the ability to purchase them on your behalf with services like Alipay."

Not far from Mao's booth, Shen Haiyin, then vice-president of cybersecurity solutions company Qihoo 360 Technology, acknowledged recurring issues surrounding the byte-money revolution.

"It's hard to develop theft-proof software," Shen said. "The risks online are obviously growing because operations have increased 20-fold in just four years. Fortunately, thanks to security companies, the crimes committed have grown a tiny fraction of that."

Privacy, or the lack of it, is another concern.

"I believe cash will eventually disappear in the way we know it now," says Luis Galán, founder and chief executive of Chinese e-commerce consultants 2 Open. "With current biometric systems, it's just a matter of time before we won't even need a device to pay. Our fingers, our irises, even our ears will be payment devices.

"But that means it will be possible to keep track of all the things a user buys in real time – not only what, but also where and when. That will show our habits, and this means that the user's data will keep becoming a commodity that companies can sell for different purposes, mainly marketing. It's what Facebook or Google do now, but there will be no escape. Data will be the business."

That's just one of Galán's worries.

"Obviously, all companies operating in China are bound by the mainland's laws and regulations," he says. "This basically means that the government has access to all the data that they own. It can be a wonderful tool to fight economic crimes and tax evasion. In such a world, even if some kind of illegal online currency eventually emerges, terrorists and criminals will have much more difficulty in financing their operations. But citizens, too, will be subjected to total surveillance. And that may be a problem under authoritarian regimes. It's not science fiction – it's happening already."

Alipay rolls out world's first 'Smile to Pay' facial recognition system at KFC outlet in Hangzhou

In fact, facial recognition has already arrived on the scene. This month, a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant in Hangzhou debuted Alipay's Smile to Pay service, which takes a 3D scan of a user's face who then verifies payment by inputting their phone number – no cash, no card, no phone required.

During my own surviving-without-cash experiment, those with access to Alipay and Tenpay's data can see what I bought, where I went, and sometimes even who I met. But many Chinese users seem oblivious to this invasion of privacy – perhaps they don't care.

Now, China's two main online payment companies are growing their overseas presence.

Their logos are already ubiquitous at airport duty-free shops and in shopping malls around the world as they target the 120 million Chinese tourists travelling abroad each year.

When passing through Amsterdam's Schiphol airport in April, I was surprised to see, at the tax refund window, that Alipay users could reclaim the VAT from their European shopping trips using the app. "And most Chinese tourists do, because there is less commission involved than with cash, and it's much faster than with credit cards," a cashier there said.

Alibaba's shopping platforms are also pushing into overseas markets.

"The company has revolutionised the way people in China shop and pay," says Pello Zúñiga, head of marketing for Spain at AliExpress (Alibaba Group's B2C platform overseas). "To some extent, it's a showcase of the 'Chinese dream', and now we want to take it to the rest of the world.

"Our overseas website operates with credit cards now, but we are in talks with banks to implement Alipay in Europe, too."

Zúñiga believes it's just a matter of time. Consumers already use Alipay in 28 countries and that number will rise if Ant Financial succeeds in its current bid to acquire MoneyGram, one of the world's leading money-transfer companies. Tenpay is available in 15 countries.

As for my own experiment, it has left me in little doubt that the mainland is way ahead of the curve when it comes to online payments. Travelling to Europe now feels like travelling back in time. And I wonder why Hong Kong is lagging so far behind.


Source: Going cash free: why China is light years ahead in the online payment revolution