Showing posts with label Huawei Technologies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Huawei Technologies. Show all posts

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Image is all for Huawei’s new P9 smartphone flagship


LONDON — China’s Huawei Technologies presented its latest flagship smartphone on Wednesday, featuring a dual-lens camera co-engineered with Germany’s Leica that it hopes will set it apart from all the other Android devices on the market.

The P9, Huawei’s flagship device, is the first result of the tie-up between the world’s third biggest smartphone maker and Leica Camera AG, a 102-year-old firm whose cameras have shot some of the most famous images in the history of photography.

Huawei said consumers were increasingly focused on the photographic capability of smartphones, and the company wanted to partner the best in the field.

“Leica is the leading, premium iconic brand in cameras,” Richard Yu, chief executive of Huawei Consumer Business Group, said at a launch event in London.

The dual-lens 12 megapixel camera on the rear of the device separately captures monochrome and color images, and combines them to create more detail, depth and brighter colors than rival single lens cameras, he said.

Leica said the collaboration went far beyond just branding, with the two companies working together on lenses and image processing technology.

“A lot of people would like to have our red dot and put it on their product,” said Leica’s Chief Executive Oliver Kaltner.

“This is not what we are. We are the center of optical excellence worldwide, and we should take advantage of that knowledge.”

Photography dominated the event as professional snappers including Mary McCartney and David Guttenfelder from National Geographic took to the stage to show what the device could do.

There was little fanfare for other features, like a 5.2 inch display and Android 6.0 operating system, that are largely in line with launches from rivals such as Samsung and Xiaomi.

The P9 will be available in 29 countries from April 16, priced from 599 euros ($684), the company said.

Roberta Cozza, research director at Gartner, said Huawei’s technology was “great” but the company needed to innovate in areas like software to become a trend setter.

“They need users to pick the brand or upgrade within the brand from maybe a mid-tier, and the more they go into the premium end, the more they have to stand out as an overall experience,” she said.

Huawei, which leads the pack of Chinese smartphone makers, however is confident the P9 will help it gain ground on market leader in terms of volume Samsung and second-placed Apple.

It became the first Chinese company to ship more than 100 million smartphones, recording a 44 percent jump in devices to 108 million last year.

“We have the chance to be number two within two to three years, with market share of over 20 percent,” Yu said. “We have the chance to be number one in less than five years.”

source: interaksyon.com

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Huawei plans big push to sell its phones, wearable devices


SAN FRANCISCO/BEIJING — Two years after U.S. legislators branded it a national security threat, China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd is planning a campaign to win over U.S. consumers, rolling out new mobile phones and wearable devices backed by a marketing effort.

China’s second-largest smartphone maker, already with more than $40 billion in annual revenue from a wide range of telecom gear and products, is preparing to introduce Americans to several of its smartphones and wearable devices this year, including its youth-oriented “Honor” phone, Huawei officials told Reuters.

The company’s 2015 U.S. plans, which have not been previously reported, will encompass traditional advertising, online promotion and sports team sponsorships, said Huawei’s U.S. spokesman Bill Plummer.

Huawei is changing its approach to marketing as it tries to shed its image as a purveyor of cheap technology products – a common perception issue for many Chinese companies. It’s an important shift for a company that for years had been single-mindedly focused on engineering and relatively dismissive of consumer branding.

In December, it touted its new Honor 6 Plus phone on a billboard in New York’s Times Square. Plummer said that was “a sign of things to come.”

He declined to say how much Huawei will spend on its new marketing campaign or what sports team, or teams, it had in mind. It already sponsors London soccer club Arsenal, cricket teams in India and rugby clubs in Australia.

New smartwatch


At the Mobile World Congress over the weekend in Barcelona, Huawei took the wraps off a smartwatch that will be sold in over 20 countries including the U.S.

Huawei now intends to appeal directly to consumers with several new phone models, both low end and high end. It hopes to secure deals with carriers, selling online through marketplaces, such as the one operated by Amazon.com, and on its own fledgling gethuawei.com U.S. direct-sales website.

It’s unclear how open the carriers, who dominate U.S. sales, would be to carrying phones from Huawei, a brand that remains unknown to the majority of American smartphone users. Reviews of its high-end phones, which can cost hundreds of dollars without a plan, have been generally positive.

Still, the U.S. market is dominated by Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics. None of the four biggest U.S. carriers – Verizon, AT&T, Sprint or T-Mobile – currently sell Huawei phones on their websites and all declined to say whether they have had talks with the Chinese company.

Huawei said in 2013 it would focus on other markets after its products were labelled a national security risk in a U.S. Congressional report, which said Beijing could use Huawei equipment for spying. Huawei denied the report, but Chief Executive Ren Zhengfei, who founded the company after leaving the Chinese military, told reporters at the time he felt stuck in a U.S.-China trade war.

A White House-ordered review found no evidence of spying.

Lawmakers’ concerns revolve primarily around Huawei’s networking equipment. And analysts say that a lack of brand recognition is a bigger hurdle for Huawei’s smartphone ambitions than pressures from Washington.

Huawei currently has less than 1 percent of the U.S. market, according to research firm IDC. But it can perhaps draw inspiration from China’s ZTE Corp, which has gained 6.4 percent of the U.S. market by selling cheaper smartphones and working with second-tier carriers like Boost Mobile, according to Ramon Llamas, a research manager at IDC.

Online sales, particularly as no-contract plans that require consumers to purchase a full-price phone gain in popularity, represent perhaps the best option for Huawei, said Gartner analyst C.K. Lu, adding that he sees it having a tough time signing carriers.

“The U.S. market is tough for anybody except Apple and Samsung,” said Lu.

Huawei’s plan to broaden its U.S. offering is part of a campaign for “normalizing” perceptions of Huawei in America and elsewhere, said Plummer.

Though he declined to spell out what normalization entailed, most public discussion of the company has centered around the debate of whether its equipment allows China to spy on the United States, and until now Huawei has kept a low profile.

Other Chinese companies still prefer that route: another major Chinese handset maker, Xiaomi, has said it will take its first steps onto U.S. soil without smartphones, choosing instead to sell earphones and other accessories to test the market.

source: interaksyon.com

Monday, November 10, 2014

Meet your new mobile partner: the Huawei Mate 7


MANILA, Philippines — Initially launched in Berlin at this years IFA 2014 — a world’s leading trade show for consumer electronics — the limited edition Huawei Ascend Mate 7 Gold will be available locally on November 20.

The Ascend Mate 7 features a six-inch screen where its bezel on the sides is almost invisible, occupying more than 90 percent of the smartphone’s front panel. Such high screen-to-body ratio allows users to enjoy watching movies and playing games in a more compact and elegant-looking phone that despite its size Huawei executives would not call the Ascend Mate 7 a “phablet”.

“It’s still a smartphone,” said Al Dimapilis, marketing manager, Huawei Philippines Marketing Manager. “…And for this premium model with ‘Gold Standard Features’ it will be a limited edition, only a few hundred will be made available.”

Dimapilis is referring to the Mate 7 Gold, with an all-metal body equipped with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of internal memory, which is the flagship model for the series and is tagged at P27,890. The Black and Silver edition, both carrying 2GB of RAM and 16GB of internal memory for a much lower price point, will only be available depending on market demand.

“There are already a number of inquiries regarding the Mate 7 Gold edition,” said Dimapilis. “This is the first time that we’re launching a premium Huawei smartphone in the country.”

One main feature that Huawei executives emphasized in their introduction of the Ascend Mate 7 to a small group of media people is the smartphone’s fingerprint sensor.

The 360-degree fingerprint sensor, which is conveniently located at the back of the phone, is designed on how users normally hold a smartphone. The high pixel per inch ratio is said to achieve a quick and accurate identification, thus making fingerprint recognition almost instantaneously — or about a second, just to be accurate.

The fingerprint sensor, which could identify up to five fingerprints, will also allow users to keep private things away from the prying eyes.

The Mate 7 operates on the next generation octa-core processor aptly called eight-core Kirin SoC chipset that enables the smartphone to intelligently switch between cores to provide the perfect balance between performance and power, which is ideal for multi-tasking applications, playing games, or watching videos. Yet, in spite of the Mate 7’s high-powered processor, its battery life can last as long as two days, Huawei execs said.



Huawei Ascend Mate7 Gold specs:

Dual-SIM (nanoSIM, microSIM)
Octa-core HiSilicon Kirin 925 processor (1.8GHz quad-core Cortex-A15, 1.3GHz quad-core Cortex-A7)
Mali-T628 GPU
3GB of RAM
6-inch, full HD IPS display with Gorilla Glass 3, 1920 x 1080 resolution
32GB of storage, expandable via microSD
13-megapixel rear camera with AF, LED flash
5-megapixel front camera
3G, LTE
WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, A-GPS, USB OTG, NFC
Android 4.4 KitKat with Emotion UI (EMUI) 3.0
4100mAh battery

source: interaksyon.com



Friday, September 12, 2014

Huawei Technologies uncovers corruption in internal probe


BEIJING — Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, China’s largest telecom equipment maker, found four employees in violation of the company’s policies on corruption as part of an internal inspection, a source familiar with the matter said.

In response to the findings, Huawei has held training sessions to educate employees on how to steer clear of possible bribery, the source said, declining to be identified because he was not authorized to speak about the matter to the media.

The internal probe coincides with a government crackdown on corporate misbehavior within both foreign and domestic firms. Chief Executive Ken Hu told the Financial Times on Thursday that graft inspections were done every year and “nothing new,” adding that it only attracted media attention this year.

Huawei has declined to address the exact nature of the cases. Local financial news outlet Caixin, which first reported the inspection last week, said a total of 116 employees were implicated in soliciting and accepting bribes from outside sales agents in exchange for rebates.

“In the enterprise market, Huawei is firmly implementing an open, transparent and stable channel policy, in order to pursue fairness and justice in the market, and to fight firmly against any form of employee practice that fails to meet the standards we set for ourselves,” Huawei said in a statement this week.

source: interaksyon.com

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Huawei brings ‘premium’ to entry-level market with new Ascend Y300 phone


MANILA, Philippines — Chinese phone brand Huawei on Tuesday unveiled their latest high-caliber offering for users looking for a high-quality entry-level phone in the form of the Ascend Y300, an affordable device that already runs the latest Android OS.

Promising quality specifications that are at par with most high-end phones, the Huawei Ascend Y300 offers a trio of top-notch technical features: a capable 1 GHz dual-core Qualcomm processor, a clear 4-inch IPS display, and the latest Android Jelly Bean operating system.

The Ascend Y300 also comes with Huawei-exclusive features, such as the unique Battery Boost that extends the life of its 1730 mAh battery, as well as the latest Huawei Emotion user interface, the brand’s own UI Android layer.



All these features can be had at an affordable price of P5,490, which puts the Ascend Y300 at the same level as some of the latest locally branded phones with the same specs today.

Targeted at young consumers looking to ride on the smartphone bandwagon, Huawei said their latest offering will cater to users that have been put off by “entry-level smartphones and [their] limited features.”

“By making everything smooth, latest, and powerpacked, the Ascend Y300 increases the level of satisfaction felt to an entry-level smartphones. Anyone would be surprised and happy by Huawei Ascend Y300’s solid and premium feel,” asserted Johnson Ma, country manager at Huawei Device Philippines.

Meant to succeed the hugely popular Ascend Y200 last year, the Ascend Y300 is now available at all Huawei dealers and retailers nationwide.

Below is the complete specification list of the Huawei Ascend Y300:

    Android 4.1 Jelly Bean
    4.0-inch touch screen supporting auto rotation
    5 MP auto focus camera/0.3MP FF camera
    Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
    Bluetooth 2.1 A2DP
    GPS/AGPS
    1.0 GHz Dual core
    1730mAh battery
    G-sensor
    Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
    Ambient light sensor for auto light adjusting

source: interaksyon.com

Monday, October 8, 2012

China’s Huawei, ZTE should be kept from US: draft Congress report


WASHINGTON — China’s top telecommunications gear makers should be shut out of the U.S. market because potential Chinese state influence on them poses a security threat, the U.S. House of Representatives’ Intelligence Committee said in a draft of a report to be released on Monday.

U.S. intelligence must stay focused on efforts by Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and ZTE Corp to expand in the United States and tell the private sector as much as possible about the purported espionage threat, the panel leaders said, based on their 11-month investigation of the pair.

Employee-owned Huawei is the world’s second-biggest maker of routers, switches and other telecommunications equipment after Sweden’s Ericsson. ZTE ranks fifth.

The broadside comes as Huawei mulls a possible initial public offering, sources said, as part of a possible effort to overcome suspicions that have all but blocked its U.S. efforts, including business combinations.

Huawei spokesman William Plummer rejected the committee’s allegations in a statement emailed to Reuters.

“Baseless suggestions otherwise or purporting that Huawei is somehow uniquely vulnerable to cyber mischief ignore technical and commercial realities, recklessly threaten American jobs and innovation, do nothing to protect national security, and should be exposed as dangerous political distractions from legitimate public-private initiatives to address what are global and industry-wide cyber challenges,” he said.

For its part, ZTE released a copy of the letter it sent to the committee, stating it “profoundly disagrees” with the claim that it is directed or controlled by the Chinese government.

“ZTE should not be a focus of this investigation to the exclusion of the much larger Western vendors,” it said.

ZTE’s Hong Kong-listed shares fell as much as 3.4 percent early on Monday, lagging a 0.2 percent drop in the benchmark index. Its shares down 2.4 percent at 0229 GMT after news of the company’s earlier response to the U.S. committee.

It was not immediately clear whether the blackballing would curb mobile phone sales that both companies do with customers such as Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile EVEVE.UL.

The panel’s draft report faulted both companies for failing to satisfy the committee’s requests for documents to allay its concerns, including detailed information about formal relationships or regulatory interaction with Chinese authorities.

U.S. companies mulling purchases from Huawei should “find another vendor if you care about your intellectual property; if you care about your consumers’ privacy and you care about the national security of the United States of America,” panel chairman Mike Rogers said in comments broadcast Sunday night on the CBS News program “60 Minutes.”

Rogers and the committee’s top Democrat, C.A. Ruppersberger, have scheduled a 10 a.m. Eastern time (1400 GMT) news conference to release the final, unclassified version of their report.

“Credible allegations”

The panel said it had received credible allegations from unnamed industry experts and current and former Huawei employees suggesting Huawei, in particular, may be guilty of bribery and corruption, discriminatory behavior and copyright infringement.

The committee plans to refer such allegations to the Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security, according to the draft made available to Reuters.

“U.S. network providers and system developers are strongly encouraged to seek other vendors for their projects,” it said.

The document cited what it called long-term security risks supposedly linked with the companies’ equipment and services. But it did not provide detailed evidence, at least not in an unclassified version.

A classified annex provides “significantly more information adding to the committee’s concerns,” the draft said.

Based on classified and unclassified information, Huawei and ZTE, which are both based in Shenzhen, China, “cannot be trusted to be free of foreign state influence and thus pose a security threat to the United States and to our systems,” it said.

Huawei and ZTE are rapidly becoming “dominant global players” in the telecommunications market, which is intertwined with computerized controls for electric power grids; banking and finance systems; gas, oil and water systems and rail and shipping, the document said.

ZTE’s US telecom infrastructure equipment sales last year were less than $30 million.

In contrast, two of the larger Western vendors alone had combined U.S. sales that topped $14 billion, ZTE told the committee in its September 25 letter, an apparent reference to Espoo, Finland-based Nokia Siemens Networks NOKI.UL and Paris-based Alcatel Lucent.

“It seems self-evident that the universe of companies examined by the Committee is so small as to omit most of the equipment actually employed in the U.S. telecom infrastructure system,” the letter said.

“Means, opportunity, motive”

Huawei and ZTE may not be the only companies that present a risk to U.S. infrastructure, the committee’s draft report said, but they are the two largest Chinese-founded, Chinese-owned companies seeking to market critical network equipment to the United States. Beijing has the “means, opportunity and motive” to use them to its own ends, it added.

Top executives of both told a committee hearing on September 13 that their companies would never bow to a hypothetical Chinese government effort to exploit their products for espionage, equating any such move with corporate suicide.

“Huawei has not and will not jeopardize our global commercial success nor the integrity of our customers’ networks for any third party, government or otherwise,” senior vice president Charles Ding testified at the time.

The draft showed that the committee is calling on an interagency government group that reviews national security implications of foreign investments to block acquisitions, takeovers or mergers involving Huawei and ZTE.

In addition, it said Congress should give thorough consideration to legislation seeking to expand the role of the interagency group, known as the Committee on Foreign Investments in the United States, to include purchasing agreements.

U.S. intelligence officials have publicly denounced China as the world’s most active perpetrator of economic espionage against the United States.

Huawei has marketed its network equipment in the United States since last year. It has sold to a range of small- to medium-sized carriers nationwide, particularly in rural areas. It has marketed mobile phones through a broader range of U.S. carriers, for the last four years.

source: interaksyon.com