Tech Industry
Xiaomi to open 1,000 customer service centers on Jan 9
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi will open 1,000 Mi Homes -- its directly operated customer service centers -- simultaneously at 10:00 a.m. on January 9, Xiaomi Group Vice President Lu Weibing said today.
Honor to launch online mall on Jan 12
Honor's online mall will go live on January 12, its latest move since parting ways with Huawei.
Bilibili reportedly planning secondary IPO in Hong Kong, could raise more than $2 billion
Chinese video platform Bilibili is preparing for a secondary listing in Hong Kong with a possible capital raising of more than $2 billion, CNBC said, citing a person familiar with the matter.
NYSE reverses decision to delist Chinese telecom giants
As to why the sudden 180-degree turn, the NYSE did not specify, saying only that the latest decision was "in light of further consultation with relevant regulatory authorities."
Didi said to be planning HK IPO in 2021, targeting $60-80 billion valuation
Didi was founded in 2012 and has raised more than 100 billion yuan in cumulative funding to date, having received backing from SoftBank, Alibaba and Tencent.
Huawei's new charger supports 135W fast charging
A new charger from Huawei has received regulatory approval, and it supports 20V/6.75A input, meaning up to 135W fast charging, according to a well-known Weibo blogger.
Xiaomi shares set a new all-time high, delivering on founder Lei Jun's promise to double investor earnings at IPO
But at one point in this U-shaped move, Xiaomi investors who participated at the IPO lost more than 50 percent of their money.
Tencent games back on Huawei AppGallery
The dispute between Huawei and Tencent may have come to an end.
Huawei removes Tencent games: a game where both sides have big stakes
It is not only the hope of Tencent or even the Chinese game industry to ease their burden as developers, but also the helplessness of Chinese Android phone makers such as Huawei.
SMIC announces resignation of Jason Cong, an independent non-executive director
SMIC, China's leading contract chip maker, announced on December 31 the resignation of Jason Cong, an independent non-executive director, effective immediately.