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HTC's first quarter results for 2013 showed its year-over-year profit drop by 98.1%, making it the smallest-ever profit for the company—the delay of the launch of the HTC One was cited as one of the factors. [28] In June 2012, HTC moved its headquarters from Taoyuan City (now Taoyuan District) to Xindian District, New Taipei City.
Discontinued its own line of mobile phones and became a national distributor for Chinese mobile brand Honor. [10] Canada: BlackBerry Limited: Ended smartphone production in 2016; brand licensing agreement with TCL Communication ended in 2020. China: Konka Indonesia: Mito Italy: Telit Malaysia: Ninetology. Now an electric bicycle branded as E-Nine
Cher Wang (Chinese: 王雪紅; pinyin: Wáng Xuěhóng; born 15 September 1958) is a Taiwanese entrepreneur.As co-founder and chairperson (since 2007 [2]) of HTC Corporation and integrated chipset maker VIA Technologies, she is one of the most successful women in computer technology. [3]
A company incorporated in any of China's special administrative regions is not considered to be incorporated in China. See the corresponding list for companies incorporated in China's special administrative regions. For further information on the types of business entities in this country and their abbreviations, see business entities in China.
Sadly, the "Dragon" moniker is a temporary handle, and the three phones are only coming to mainland China. HTC says there are plans to expand the family in the future for international ...
Peter Chou (Chinese: 周永明) or Win Than (Burmese: ဝင်းသန်း) [1] (born 24 November 1956) is a Burmese-born Taiwanese businessman and electronics engineer. He is co-founder of HTC and a former CEO of the company. Chou founded HTC with Cher Wang and H.T.Cho (卓火土) before being named CEO of HTC in 2004, succeeding H.T.Cho ...
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company suspended shipments to China-based chip designer Sophgo after a chip it made was found on a Huawei AI processor, according to two people familiar with ...
In 1994, the fixed telephone company (China Telecom) and two mobile phone telephone companies (China Mobile and China Unicom) were spun off from the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. In 2002, the fixed telephone company was split into two: China Netcom for North China and China Telecom for South China